View clinical trials related to Crohn Disease.
Filter by:The purpose of the study is to determine whether an investigational compound, ALX-0600, is safe and effective in treating Crohn's Disease.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether CCX282-B is effective in treating patients with moderate to severe Crohn's Disease.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether administration of a synbiotic, comprised on inulin and a bifidobacterial probiotic will colonise the gut wall and down-regulate TNF-alpha and other pro-inflammatory cytokines in the mucosa of Crohn's patients with active disease to reduce mucosal inflammation and induce remission.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether mesalazine or budesonide is more active in the treatment of active Crohn's disease.
The aim of the study will be to investigate the effect of certolizumab pegol on the intestinal mucosa in active Crohn's disease.
Human mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), derived from healthy adult volunteer human donors, can be obtained from bone marrow donation and cultured in the laboratory. MSCs have shown the ability to find injured tissue, reduce and control inflammation, and assist in tissue repair. Prochymal™ MSCs will be infused into patients with moderate-to-severe Crohn's disease. Infusions will occur on two separate days, 7-10 days apart. Patients will be monitored for reduced Crohn's disease symptoms.
This is a multi-centre, randomized, double-blind, dose response clinical study of CDP870 in patients with Crohn's disease.
The purpose of this study is to characterize the skeletal deficits and risk factors for impaired skeletal development in children requiring glucocorticoid therapy. We will compare the bone health of children treated with prednisone for nephrotic syndrome (NS with those treated with prednisone for Crohn's Disease (CD). Childhood NS usually responds to prednisone and is not characterized by pathologies that can impact on bone. In contrast, CD is treated with prednisone, but is independently associated with poor growth and maturation, nutritional deficiencies and inflammation. Due to the differences in the diseases, this comparison will allow us to distinguish between the prednisone-related and disease-related effects on bone in the two disease states.
The study is being undertaken to evaluate whether delayed-release medications, designed to begin to open in the lower intestinal tract, the main site of Crohn's Disease, are more effective than standard systemically delivered drugs to promote remission or response in CD patients. It is hypothesized that the delayed-release medications will go right to the injured tissue and heal the disease more quickly. The delayed-release test drugs are 6-mercaptopurine (at a dose of 40 mg daily) or calcitriol (at a dose of 5 mcg three times a week) versus Purinethol (6-MP at a dose of 1-2 mg/kg body weight daily). Calcitriol is a synthetically manufactured replica of a natural substance in the body that is derived from Vitamin D. There is much medical evidence that shows that lack of Vitamin D can be a possible risk factor in developing autoimmune disorders, including Crohn's Disease. Moreover, calcitriol has been shown in animal models to improve the symptoms of Crohn's Disease.
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the long-term tolerability and safety of natalizumab when administered a dose of 300 mg intravenously (IV) to subjects with Crohn's Disease who have previously participated in studies CD251, CD301, CD303, CD306, or CD307.