View clinical trials related to Eczema.
Filter by:A Phase I/IIa Randomized, Double-Blind, Vehicle-Controlled Clinical Trial with Separate Open-Label Active Treatment Phase Evaluating the Safety, Pharmacokinetics and Efficacy of FMX114 Gel in the Treatment of Mild-to-Moderate Atopic Dermatitis in Adults
This Phase 1 study will investigate the safety and tolerability of EDP1867 in healthy volunteers, participants with atopic dermatitis, and, optionally, in participants with psoriasis and/or asthma.
This is a clinical study in adult participants with moderate to severe atopic dermatitis (AD). The purpose of the study is to test a new medicine (LEO 138559) given by injection to see if it works to treat AD and what the side effects are when compared with a placebo injection with no medical ingredient. The study will last up to 36 weeks for each participant. The study will include a treatment period of 16 weeks, during which the participants will receive the injections, followed by a period of 16 weeks without treatment with the main purpose of continuing safety evaluations. The participants will regularly visit the clinic for tests and the study doctor will evaluate their AD. The participants will also be asked to answer questions about their AD symptoms and quality of life.
The purpose of the study is to assess the efficacy and safety of ruxolitinib cream in children with Atopic Dermatitis. This is a randomized, double-blind, Vehicle Controlled study. Participants will be randomized 2:2:1 to blinded treatment with ruxolitinib cream 0.75% ,1.5% , or vehicle cream, with stratification by baseline IGA score and age. At Week 8, efficacy will be evaluated. Participants who complete Week 8 assessments with no additional safety concerns will continue into the 44-week Long Term Safety (LTS) period with the same treatment regimen, except those initially randomized to vehicle cream will be rerandomized (1:1) in a blinded manner to 1 of the 2 active treatment groups (ruxolitinib cream 0.75% or 1.5%).
This experimental non-randomized clinical study is aimed at comparing the efficacy and safety assessment of the proposed topical therapy algorithms with the use of topical calcineurin inhibitors in reducing the severity of atopic dermatitis and the degree of development of transcutaneous sensitization in children of the first year of life.
This is a multi-center, randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled multiple dose escalation study to evaluate the safety, tolerance, PK, PD, immunogenicity and preliminary efficacy of subcutaneously CM310 in moderate-severe AD subjects.
This is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter Phase 3 study that will enroll approximately 330 subjects aged 12 to 75 years old with moderate to severe atopic dermatitis.
This is a 16-week study in adult participants with chronic hand eczema (CHE). The participants will visit the clinic regularly to have the study doctor assess their CHE and to answer questions about itch, pain, CHE symptoms, and quality of life. The purpose is to assess how delgocitinib cream works to treat CHE when compared to a placebo cream with no active substance.
This is a 16-week study in adult participants with chronic hand eczema (CHE). The participants will visit the clinic regularly to have the study doctor assess their CHE and to answer questions about itch, pain, CHE symptoms, and quality of life. The purpose is to assess how delgocitinib cream works to treat CHE when compared to a placebo cream with no active substance.
This study will assess the safety and efficacy of ARQ-151 cream vs vehicle applied once a day for 4 weeks by subjects with atopic dermatitis (eczema).