View clinical trials related to Dermatitis.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to determine whether etrasimod is a safe and effective treatment for moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis (AD).
This is a research study where all subjects will receive study medication to understand how the body processes the study medication, and to determine the PK, safety and efficacy of ARQ-151 cream 0.15% or 0.05% in adolescent and pediatric subjects with mild to moderate AD. At entry, subjects in Cohorts 1-3 will have 1.5-35% Body Surface Area involvement (excluding the scalp, palms, soles) and mild or moderate atopic dermatitis (AD) based on vIGA-AD. Cohort 2 and Cohort 3 will be performed in parallel and may commence after results are available from ARQ-151-212, a Phase 2 study evaluating ARQ-151 cream 0.05% and 0.15% administered once a day for 4 weeks in adolescents and adults with mild to moderate AD affecting 1.5% to 35% BSA. For the maximal usage PK study (Cohorts 4-8), subjects will have BSA involvement (excluding the scalp, palms, soles) of ≥ 35% in subjects 3 months old to 11 years old (inclusive) or ≥25% in subjects 12 to <17 years old with mild or moderate AD . Seven groups will be evaluated, including: - Cohort 1: ARQ-151 cream 0.15% in adolescents (12-17 years old; inclusive) - Cohort 2: ARQ-151 cream 0.15% in children 6-11 years old (inclusive) - Cohort 3: ARQ-151 cream 0.15% in children 2-5 years old (inclusive; will be performed in parallel with Cohort 2) - Cohort 4: ARQ-151 cream 0.15% in adolescents 12 to <17 years old - Cohort 5: ARQ-151 cream 0.15% in children 6-11 years old (inclusive) - Cohort 6: ARQ-151 cream 0.15% in children 2-5 years old (inclusive) - Cohort 7: ARQ-151 cream 0.05% in children 2-5 years old (inclusive) - Cohort 8: ARQ-151 cream 0.05% in children 3 months old to less than 2 years old Subjects will apply ARQ-151 cream 0.15% or 0.05% once a day for 28 days to all AD affected areas and any newly appearing AD lesions that arise during the study, except on the scalp.
This is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group study which is 52 weeks in duration. The study is designed to confirm the safety and efficacy of lebrikizumab as monotherapy for treatment of moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis utilizing a 16-week induction treatment period and a 36-week long-term maintenance treatment period.
Study of the prevalence and risk factors of occupational dermatitis in the hands of caregivers and hospital staff of the Brest CHRU.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the skin irritation potential of PF-07038124 ointment and vehicle (placebo) in Part A following multiple-doses applied topically to healthy participants. In Part B, the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetic (PK), and skin irritation potential of PF-07038124 will be evaluated. In Part A, the highest concentration of 0.06% PF-07038124 will be applied to normal skin with a small surface area of 20 cm2 (0.1% body surface area [BSA]), while Part B will evaluate application of PF-07038124 and vehicle (placebo) to a surface area of 2000 cm2 (10% BSA) and 4000 cm2 (20% BSA). These data will provide support for clinical development in participants with mild to moderate AD.
It is intended to evaluate the effect of a marketed cream (Alantel®) based on natural products at high concentrations for the preventive and curative treatment (early stages) of radiation-induced dermatitis in cancer patients. For this, an experimental, prospective, controlled clinical trial, with two parallel arms, double blind, multicentre, will be carried out in which doctors will recruit 78 patients aged 14 years or over in Primary Care consultations. more, diagnosed with cancer, and having received radiotherapeutic cancer treatment, being randomly assigned to the experimental group (cosmetic cream) or the control group (emollient and moisturizing cream). The main variable will be the incidence rate of mild post-translational dermatitis and its improvement or cure once it has been established.
The investigators believe that the emerging epidemiological evidence connecting topical use of corticosteroids to the development of type 2 diabetes and osteoporosis point to potentially massive, yet clinically unacknowledged problems associated with topical corticosteroid treatment. Using state-of-the-art methodology, the present study will delineate the impact of topical corticosteroid use on insulin sensitivity and bone turnover markers in patients with atopic dermatitis and, thus, provide important data that may have implications for millions of people using topical corticosteroids.
The aim of this prospective, uncontrolled clinical study is to evaluate the clinical effect of Ectoin® Dermatitis Cream-EHK02 on skin hydration and transepidermal water loss (TEWL) in subjects with atopic dermatitis after single and multiple applications. Furthermore, data concerning the subjective impression of the study preparation should be collected.
This was a parallel group, double blind, vehicle-controlled study assessed the safety and efficacy of roflumilast foam (ARQ-154) vs placebo foam in participants with seborrheic dermatitis.
This is a Phase 2a, randomized, double blind, vehicle controlled, parallel group, proof of concept study that will include participants with stasis dermatitis without active skin ulceration, who will receive crisaborole ointment 2% or vehicle twice daily for 6 weeks.