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Familial Mediterranean Fever clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05448391 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Familial Mediterranean Fever

A Study to Evaluate RIST4721 in Familial Mediterranean Fever (FMF)

Start date: September 13, 2022
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

A 12-week Open-label, Single-arm, Phase 2 Study to Evaluate the Safety and Efficacy of RIST4721 in Subjects with Familial Mediterranean Fever followed by an additional Open-label Extension Phase.

NCT ID: NCT02535962 Withdrawn - Pharyngitis Clinical Trials

Probiotics and Corticosteroids for Treating Periodic Fever, Aphthous Stomatitis, Pharyngitis, Cervical Adenitis (PFAPA)

PFAPA
Start date: October 2016
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of study is to see if adding probiotics to corticosteroid treatment for children with PFAPA could improve the health and daily of patients through reduction in febrile period frequency and length, along with concomitant reduction of associated symptoms. Current standard of care incorporates the administration of corticosteroids; however, while limiting the symptoms associated with PFAPA, corticosteroid use has been shown to increase the frequency at which these symptoms occur. Investigators hypothesize that administration of probiotics along with corticosteroids will work to decrease the frequency at which the febrile episodes occur. Additionally, probiotics may decrease the maximal fever experienced during these episodes, amount of corticosteroid needed to control the symptoms, average length of the episodes, and the number of patients who ultimately undergo tonsillectomy due to unsuccessful treatment with medication.

NCT ID: NCT02021084 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Familial Mediterranean Fever (FMF )

The Effect of Probiotics on Response to Therapy and on Adverse Effect in Patients Treated With Colchicine for Familial Mediterranean Fever.

Start date: December 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Colchicine is the drug of choice to treat patients with Familial Mediterranean Fever (FMF ), some of the patients treated with colchicine may suffer from gastrointestinal (GIT) adverse effect such as diarrhea and abdominal pain especially in the higher dose. 5-10% of the patients with FMF that have been treated with colchicine may have partial or no response to this therapy. Aim of our study: the aim of our study is :.1to evaluate the efficacy of probiotics in reducing the number of adverse effect in patients with FMF that are being treated with colchicine and suffering from GIT adverse effect. .2 To evaluate the efficacy of probiotics in reducing the number of FMF attacks in children with FMF that has been treated with colchicine with only partial response. Methods: the study will be done among children (5-17 years old) with FMF that are currently followed in the pediatric rheumatology clinic at Mayer children hospital Israel Haifa that are being treated with colchicine and suffering from either GIT adverse effect or partial response to colchicine. The study is design to be double blind placebo control, in the first 3 month patients will be with no therapy and will be required to record all there FMF episodes and their GIT adverse effect, in the second period the patients will be randomly divided into two groups 1.patients that will received placebo (group 1) and the 2. Probiotics group - patients will received probiotics (Bio -25 including 11 types of bacteria L.acidophilus, B.bifidum , L.rhamnosus, L.lactis, L.casei, B.breve, B.thermophilus, B.longum, L.paracseis, L.plantarum, B.infantis), both for three month, during this period patient will be required to record their gastrointestinal symptoms and other symptoms that may be related to FMF.

NCT ID: NCT00323440 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Familial Mediterranean Fever

Inflammatory Proteins in Familial Mediterranean Fever During Attack and Remission

Start date: August 2008
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is a genetic disease, caused by mutations in the FMF gene, entitled MEFV. The disease is characterized by painful attacks of inflammation in sites lined by serous membranes (e.g. abdominal pain caused by inflammation of the peritoneum, a serous membrane surrounding all internal organs within the abdomen). Continuous colchicine treatment prevents attacks in most patients. The pathogenesis of the disease, what leads to the attacks and how colchicine helps, are questions not yet resolved. Elucidating the role of the inflammatory proteins is an important step towards the understanding of these questions. To date only small numbers of cytokines and inflammatory proteins have been studied individually. We propose to study a large number of these proteins in the RNA and protein levels addressing the interaction between them and the effect of colchicine on their expression. Blood samples will be drawn from consenting patients in remission, during attacks, under and without colchicine treatment. (20 patients in each category).Twenty healthy volunteers will donate control blood samples for the study. RNA will be produced from the neutrophils, and cytokines and various proteins' RNA expression will be determined. Major expressed proteins will be measured in the same samples and the results will be analyzed with regard to the activity of the disease, MEFV mutations and colchicine treatment status. The information obtained by the study may allow us to determine the sequence of events associated with FMF attack development, and perhaps take us one step further in the understanding of the pathogenesis of the disease.