View clinical trials related to Crohn Disease.
Filter by:The primary objective of the study is to estimate the treatment effect of PDA001 (evaluating 3 different PDA001 dosings) versus placebo in subjects with moderate-to-severe Crohn's Disease. The secondary objective of the study is to assess the safety and tolerability of PDA001 versus placebo in the above-mentioned patient population.
This study is looking at the advantage of establishing surgical drainage for Crohn's fistulas and abscesses prior to starting medical therapy.
In a dose escalation study we will determine the safety and preliminary efficacy of allogeneic bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (bmMSCs) in the induction of response for active fistulizing Crohn's Disease (CD).
This is an open-label, single dose, randomized, five-period, crossover study in healthy volunteers to assess the relative bioavailability of four GSK developed oral formulations of GSK1605786 relative to the capsule formulation administered in the ChemoCentryx Phase IIb, PROTECT-1 Study and ChemoCentryx Thorough QT/QTc Study. Approximately 24 subjects will be randomized to receive a single 500 mg dose of each of the five formulations of GSK1605786 after a standard breakfast. Serial pharmacokinetic samples will be collected following each dose and safety assessments will be performed. The relative bioavailability of the GSK capsule formulation will be compared to the ChemoCentryx formulation while the relative bioavailability the three other formulations will be compared to the GSK capsule formulation intended for use in a GlaxoSmithKline Phase IIb study.
Background and Rationale: Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a major burden to individuals and society. Ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease (CD) are the 2 major inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). They share some pathologic and clinical features but overall their pathogenesis is not resolved and diagnosis is sometimes difficult. The incidence rates range from 3.1 to 14.6 cases per 100,000 person year for Crohn's disease to 2.2 to 14.3 cases per 100,000 person years for ulcerative colitis and prevalence ranges up to 201/100,000 for Crohn's disease and up to 246/100,000 persons for ulcerative colitis. Powerful biological therapies were recently introduced for the treatment of CD. They offer superior treatment for the treatment of steroid refractory patients. Interestingly newer studies suggest that these therapies might also be beneficial if not superior if used at earlier stages of the disease. But presently limitations of these treatments need to be considered and biomarkers that could better direct these treatments are urgently needed. One present limitation is that these new therapies, though being beneficial in a large number of CD patients, will not be beneficial to all CD patients. Presently treatment responders and non-responders can not be identified prior to the treatment with the biological adalimumab representing an important unmet clinical need. Since adalimumab treatment can be accompanied by serious, potentially lethal, side effects, it would be a major advantage if future biomarkers could predict whether an individual will or will not respond to one or the other treatment. Furthermore with treatments available being associated with high costs to patients and society, as the treatment with adalimumab is, biomarkers that would help to identify potential treatment-responders or non-responders would support their targeted use and would be appreciated by all stakeholders. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is a method that generates comprehensive metabolic profiles from human biofluids, and these metabolomic profiles may be useful to identify biomarkers with discriminative and predictive power in CD. Thereby amongst other factors serum metabolites are affected by inflammation and urine metabolites are affected by gut flora and thus one or a combination of both may be a valuable tool in CD. Aim: The investigators aim is to identify metabolomic predictors of clinical response to adalimumab treatment in CD patients in order to direct future treatment to a group of patients that is expected to benefit most. Methods: Metabolomic profiling together with the collection of clinical data will be performed in patients with IBD prior to treatment with biological therapy and for up to 6 month thereafter. In the study the investigators follow 50 patients with Crohn's Disease, naive to treatment with biologics. Metabolomic profiling will be performed 1 week prior to the treatment with adalimumab and then every 4 weeks for 6 month. In order to be reliable and reproducible, sampling will be performed in the morning after an overnight fasting period. On the days of serum/urine collection the following data will be collected: CBC, ESR, CRP, Calprotectin, ASCA/pANCA, IL-10, TNFα, IFNγ, Crohn's disease Activity Index, present medication and OTC, Dietary and lifestyle history including 24 hour dietary recall, alcohol intake, smoking and exercise. Multivariate analysis will be performed to identify patterns in the metabolomic profile that predict response or non-response to adalimumab treatment. To summarize, IBD is a major burden to patients and society. Adalimumab treatment is helpful in steroid refractory patients. Novel biomarkers that help physicians to decide which patient might benefit from adalimumab treatment may be powerful tools to optimize directing these powerful but expensive and side effect bearing therapies towards the patient that might benefit most. Metabolomic profiling may be the tool that helps us to identify these patients.
Purpose: The main objective of this study is to determine endomicroscopic features of Crohn´s disease. Background: Crohn´s disease is an inflammatory disease of the intestines that may affect any part of the gastrointestinal tract from anus to mouth, causing a wide variety of symptoms. Diagnosis is based on several histologic features including transmural pattern of inflammation, crypt abscesses and granulomas. Confocal laser endomicroscopy (CLE) is rapidly emerging as a valuable tool for gastrointestinal endoscopic imaging, enabling the endoscopist to obtain an "optical biopsy" of the gastrointestinal mucosa during the endoscopic procedure. Scope: In patients with Crohn´s disease.
This clinical trial hypothesize that Gut Microbiota (bacteria, viruses, fungi)play a major role in the occurrence and progression of many chronic gastrointestinal diseases like Irritable Bowel Syndrome, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases and Colo-Rectal Cancer. Hence, aims to study the spectrum of such microbiota in these patients as compared to normal subjects, by utilizing metagenomic techniques rather than cultural methods.
The study aims at showing that the susceptibility in the stress is more raised at the person affected digestive pathologies (SII or IBD) in forgiveness than healthy subjects.
Despite the advent of newer biologic therapies such as infliximab for Crohn's disease, a form of autoimmune inflammatory bowel disease, a proportion of patients are refractory to such therapy and require surgery. The hypothesis is that mesenchymal stromal cell therapy using third party human cultured cells will be safe and effective
This study aims to evaluate the efficacy of 9 mg budesonide once daily (OD) versus 3 mg budesonide three-times daily (TID) for the induction of remission in Crohn's disease.