View clinical trials related to Crohn Disease.
Filter by:This study plans to enroll 10 patients aged 13-17 years of age with refractory perianal fistulizing disease. Patients will be treated by direct injection to the fistula tract(s) with 75 million allogeneic bone marrow derived mesenchymal stem cells at baseline and again after 3 months if not completely healed.
Dietary therapy involving the Crohn's disease exclusion diet (CDED) is an evolving strategy to target the microbiome and innate immunity in order to reduce inflammation and promote healing. The goal of the current pilot study is to evaluate the added benefit of treatment with Ustekinumab combined with CDED in anti TNF exposed patients compared to treatment with Ustekinumab alone in term of achieving remission.
Vedolizumab is a medicine that helps to reduce inflammation and pain in the digestive system. In this study, children and teenagers with moderate to severe Crohn's disease will be treated with vedolizumab. The main aim of the study is to check if participants achieve remission after treatment with the vedolizumab. Remission means symptoms improve or disappear and an endoscopy shows no signs of inflammation. Participants will receive 3 infusions of vedolizumab over 6 weeks. Then, those who have a clinical response will receive either a high dose or low dose of vedolizumab once every 8 weeks. They will receive the same dose every time.
This research is a multicenter French randomized and single blinded phase III clinical trial evaluating two treatment strategies among Crohn's disease (CD) patients. The main objective is to assess if the addition of Crohn's Disease Exclusion Diet (CDED) to ongoing standard medication is superior to reduce the rate of relapses over 12 months compared to standard medication alone in children/adolescents with unstable CD responding with remission after a 2-months course of CDED
This is a comparative pragmatic trial in patients with UC and CD on maintenance treatment with IFX. All IBD patients from cohort A with maintenance IFX treatment at a referral IBD clinic are prospectively included between June and August 2018. An ultra-proactive IFX TDM algorithm is applied as follows. All patients have an ELISA TL measurement at baseline, of which the result determined the follow-up pathway: (A) TL between 3-7μg/mL: continuation at same dose and interval; (B) TL >7μg/mL: interval prolongation allowed; (C) TL <3μg/mL: interval shortening with minimum 2 weeks, with the next IFX TL measured using a POCT. (i) If the POCT showed an IFX TL <3μg/mL, dose was optimized ad hoc using a linear dosing formula (Dosen = (TL target * Dose n-1) / TL measured), followed by a new POCT test at next visit with the same interval. (ii) If the POCT showed an IFX TL ≥3µg/mL, no additional dose was given and routine TL testing with ELISA was retaken at next visit. At every visit this algorithm was reapplied to all patients. The patients from cohort A will be compared with the patients from cohort B. The patients in cohort B receive maintenance IFX treatment at a referral IBD clinic during the same period. Dose adjustment are done based on standard of care reactive TDM of IFX and clinical symptoms. Data will be collected retrospectively to avoid treatment optimization bias.
Crohn's disease (CD) is a chronic recurrent intestinal inflammation involving the whole digestive tract, with high disability rate, high surgical rate and high recurrent rate postoperatively. Preventing postoperative recurrence in CD patients is an important clinical problem needed urgent intervention. Azathioprine (AZA) and infliximab (IFX) effectively prevent postoperative recurrence in CD patients, but the postoperative recurrence rate is still as high as 41%. Oral supplement of n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (n-3 PUFA) owns the advantages of high compliance and low economic cost. We aim to evaluate the effect of routine treatment (AZA/IFX) combined with long-term dietary n-3PUFA on the prevention and treatment of postoperative recurrence of CD, which help optimize the treatment strategy for the prevention of postoperative recurrence.
The MUSIC study is a multi-centre, longitudinal study set in the real world IBD clinical setting to investigate and develop a new biomarker approach that aims to inform both patients and clinicians of the current state of the affected gut lining (how inflamed or whether the bowel wall has completely healed). This new biomarker approach will study a panel of molecular signs in IBD patients' blood, stools and biopsies that will be correlated to the current gold standard of direct gut visual examination using ileo-colonoscopy and flexible sigmoidoscopy tests (a fibre-optic examination of the lower small bowel and large bowel). Here, the state and appearances of IBD patients' gut lining will be assessed over one year in response to treatment given to them by their NHS IBD consultant. This approach will focus on the role of damage associated molecular patterns (DAMPs), also known as 'danger signals'. DAMPs are found in our own cells and are released during tissue stress or injury. Like signals from bacteria, they can trigger inflammation. In the MUSIC study, blood, stool, saliva and gut samples obtained from participants during active IBD and in clinical remission will be used in order to understand how DAMPs contribute to the development of gut inflammation.
An 8-week yoga intervention to determine the feasibility and acceptability of yoga as a supplemental therapy in the management of inflammatory bowel disease in the adolescent population.
Evaluation of the feasibility, acceptability, patient satisfaction and economic benefits of smartphone video-based telehealth in the management of Crohn's disease patients
This study learn how easily patients can use an educational tool that will be created for patients with melanoma and pre-existing autoimmune diseases who receive or will receive immune checkpoint inhibitor drugs. Patients will be asked their opinions about the design, accessibility, and content of the tool. Researchers will use the information collected to improve the educational materials that will help patients make future decisions about their treatment.