View clinical trials related to Colitis.
Filter by:The goal of this study is to learn if tilpisertib fosmecarbil (formerly known as GS-5290) is effective and safe in treating participants with moderate to severe ulcerative colitis. The study will compare participants in different treatment groups treated with tilpisertib fosmecarbil with participants treated with placebo. The primary objective of this study is to demonstrate the efficacy of tilpisertib fosmecarbil, compared to placebo control, in achieving Clinical Response at Week 12.
Primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) is a progressive disease of the biliary tree, which represents one of the most frequent indications for orthotopic liver transplantation (OLTx) in developed countries. There are several lines of evidence that dietary gluten/gliadin displays chronic pro-inflammatory, LPS-like properties. Recent evidence demonstrated the protective effect of gluten- free diet (GFD) in autoimmune diseases like type 1 diabetes, irritable bowel syndrome, non-celiac gluten sensitivity and some neurological disorders. This study is intended to explore therapeutic effect of GFD on PSC and IBD in prospective self-controlled mono-centric intervention study. Hypothesis: Avoidance of gluten in diet will reduce progression, symptoms and intestinal inflammation in PSC and UC patients.
Provide pre-approval single patient Expanded Access (Compassionate Use) of Etrasimod for patients.
The aim of this study is to evaluate the effect on urine color by adding household bleach to fresh urine sample among pediatric UC subjects treated with 5ASA
The goal of this placebo-controlled randomised multicenter trial is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of anaerobic prepared donor fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) compared to autologous FMT in patient with ulcerative colitis. Participants will receive 4 treatments with frozen FMT via both upper and lower gastro-intestinal route (infusion via duodenal tube and enemas). Donors are selected based on microbiota profile.
A pilot study investigating if orally administrated faecal microbiota transplantation capsules have the potential to treat active microscopic colitis.
For the last years the aim of the management of ulcerative colitis (UC) has become more ambitious including not only clinical remission but also the achievement of biological remission, endoscopic and histological healing, which are associated with less flares, hospitalizations and surgeries. About 50% of the patients with UC followed in routine are treated by 5-aminosalicylate acid (5-ASA) (oral and/or topical). The aim of the study is to describe the different levels of remission (clinical, endoscopic, histological) in UC patients treated only by 5-ASA, that report to be in clinical remission during a routine follow-up visit. The factors associated with different levels of remission (demographic, 5-ASA regimen, biologic, endoscopic, histologic) will be studied. Adherence and quality of life will be examined through patient questionnaires.
Ulcerative colitis (UC) is one of the most common types of chronic and non-specific inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). It is characterized by cytokine-induced continuous and diffuse inflammatory infiltrations into the rectum's mucosa and extends proximally to the colon. Patients with UC predominantly have bloody diarrhea, abdominal pain, fecal urgency, and tenesmus, which extremely alters their quality of life. Although the precise pathological mechanism of UC remains unclear, several studies have been outlined many factors that could involve in the pathogenesis of UC, including, but not limited to, initiation of the inflammatory response, disruption of oxidant/antioxidant status, dysregulation of the immune response, alteration of gut microbiota, and delaying epithelial barrier healing. Loss of intestinal barrier function and dysregulated immune response are the key events during colitis development
Chronic intestinal hypoxia and accompanying mucosal inflammation is a hallmark of ulcerative colitis (UC). Hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) involves breathing 100% oxygen under increased atmospheric pressure to increase tissue oxygenation. Two small prospective randomized controlled trials have demonstrated that the delivery of HBOT to UC patients hospitalized for acute moderate to severe flares results in improved remission rates and avoidance of in-hospital progression to biologics, small molecules, or colectomy. In this larger trial the study aims to confirm the treatment benefits of HBOT for hospitalized UC patients and study the immune-microbe mechanisms underpinning treatment response.
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy (as measured by induction of remission) of two dose levels (low and high) per age group (5 to <12 and 12 to ≤17 years) of budesonide rectal foam as compared to an equivalent volume of rectally administered placebo foam over the same dosing schedule, in pediatric subjects with active, mild to moderate distal ulcerative colitis (UC).