View clinical trials related to Gout.
Filter by:The aim of this 12-month randomized multi-regional double-blind parallel group allopurinol and placebo-controlled phase 3 study is to assess the efficacy and safety of three different doses of Tigulixostat in gout patients with hyperuricemia.
The aim of this 6-month randomized multi-regional double-blind parallel group placebo-controlled phase 3 study is to assess the efficacy and safety of three different doses of Tigulixostat in gout patients with hyperuricemia.
Gout is the most frequent inflammatory arthritis in men after 40 years, with a prevalence of 0.9% in France. This disease is characterized by deposits of sodium urate crystals in joints, tendons and soft tissues, which can be detected by ultrasound examination. To date, there was no study assessing inflammatory, structural and deposit lesions due to gout in joints and tendons, since the standardization of ultrasound definitions of gout by the OMERACT (Outcome Measures in Rheumatology) in 2015. The objective of this study is t estimate the prevalence and severity of ultrasound inflammatory lesions (synovitis, tenosynovitis, soft tissues abnormalities), structural lesions (osteophytes, erosions) and abnormalities due to sodium urate deposits (double contour, aggregates, tophi) in patients with gout.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate whether immune cells and their subtypes in peripheral blood affects the asymptomatic hyperuricemia, gout flare, intercritical gout and advanced gout.
SHR4640 tablets is a highly selective and potent URAT1 inhibitors,study number is SHR4640-203. The primary purpose of the study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of the combination of SHR4640 and febuxostat compared with placebo and febuxostat in primary gout and hyperuricemia subjects with inadequate control on febuxostat for 12 weeks.
Gout is caused by a reaction to urate crystals that results in attacks of severe joint pain. Medicines that lower urate levels can prevent gout flares, however it takes time for this benefit to be felt, and paradoxically starting treatment with large doses of urate lowering treatment risks provoking attacks of gout. Medical guidelines disagree on the best way to overcome these challenges with many recommending medicine dose adjustment based on regular urate testing but a general practice guideline suggesting more simply increasing the medicine dose in those patients that continue to suffer flares. In reality most patients are not treated at all, and many of those that are treated never receive an effective dose of treatment. We have developed a supported self-management approach to gout in which patients monitor their own urate levels using a finger prick test, and then receive advice on adjusting their treatment dose to achieve target urate levels through a smartphone app (Gout SMART). A trial of this approach has shown that it results in much better control of urate levels after 6 months than usual care, and suggests that it also leads to fewer flares. We would now like to confirm that this approach is effective in reducing flares of gout over 2 years by randomising patients to either treatment-to-target urate using our self-monitoring approach, or to treatment guided by symptoms only.
Gout is a chronic disease of deposition of monosodium urate crystals, which form in the presence of increased urate concentrations. Gout is closely related to hyperuricaemia. Urate deposits in the joint, causing joint swelling, pain, movement disorders, affecting a significant portion of the population worldwide annually. The underlying pathophysiology of gout is multifactorial, complex, and poorly understood. Thus, gout remains one of the major therapeutic challenges. Currently, western medicine treatment of gout flare includes colchicine, NSAIDs and glucocorticoids. These drugs act as analgesics, anti-inflammatory and uric acid lowering drugs. Besides, management of gout and prevention of acute flares of gout make a crucial part in gout management. To obtain uricemia target, urate lowering treatment (ULT) has been widely used in conventional management of gout. Allopurinol, probenecid and febuxostat are some of the examples of ULT. Although researchers have carried out various studies on this disease, there are severe side effects for patients with gout. Therefore, it is necessary to explore new treatments for gout with good efficacy and less side effects. Chinese medicine (CM) is nowadays widely used for managing gout in China and other East Asian countries. Our principal Investigator (Prof. Zhi-xiu Lin), a highly experienced Registered Chinese Medicine Practitioner working at the School of Chinese Medicine, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, has been using a herbal formula (HKIIM-KU formula) to treat patients with gout in Hong Kong for many years. This formula has been observed to be effective in relieving and preventing gout and its related clinical manifestations. Hence, a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, multicenter clinical trial will be employed in this study, and it would be able to provide robust clinical evidence on the efficacy and safety of HKIIM-KU formula for gout.
This research programme seeks to combine the resources of NHS primary care, with the leading spectroscopic work in low-magnetic fields of the Wilson Group (Nottingham Trent University) to demonstrate the potential for benchtop Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy in human clinical pathology. This is an instrument assessment study for point of care viability which will also result in enhanced patient care (pending their consent) in blood screenings and metabolic health data.
Aquatic Exercise and traditional physical therapy are effective methods of treatment for gout and hypertension in menopausal women.
The study is being conducted to evaluate the efficacy and safety of HR091506 tablets for treatment of primary gout with hyperuricemia in adults, and to compare the results with febuxostat tablets in the same doses.