View clinical trials related to Hand Osteoarthritis.
Filter by:In response to the high prevalence of synovitis in hand osteoarthritis (OA) and its association with pain, there's a compelling rationale for investigating the efficacy of MTX in managing inflammatory erosive hand OA. Recent guidelines highlight the need for large, well-designed trials to assess the effectiveness of MTX. A recent trial (METHODS study) showed promising pain reduction with MTX, but due to pandemic-related protocol changes, the duration of the study was limited to six months. The ongoing MERINO trial randomizes participants to MTX or placebo for one year. After completing the MERINO trial, several participants asked for MTX open label. In the subsequent MERINO:2 study, participants completing the trial will be invited to a structured follow-up after one year, including electronic questionnaires and hand radiographs, providing valuable long-term data on the effects of MTX in hand OA. Together, these trials aim to fill gaps in understanding the long-term impact of MTX in hand OA, particularly on structural progression.
The goal of this trial is to evaluate the efficacy of an integrated self-management programme in improving clinical outcomes in patients with hand osteoarthritis (OA). This is an open-labelled, randomized controlled trial with an objective to determine the efficacy of an integrated self-management programme versus routine clinical care for participants with symptomatic hand OA. Participants will be randomized into early intervention group and routine clinical care groups in a 1:1 ratio. Patients who randomized into early intervention group will receive 8 week integrated self-management programme delivered by occupational therapists and rheumatology nurse on hand OA management. Patients who randomized into routine clinical care group will receive usual clinical care for OA for 26 weeks and then receive an identical 8 weeks integrated self-management programme. The primary outcome is the improvement in pain at 26 weeks between the two groups.
Hand osteoarthritis is one of the most common arthritis, resulting in pain in finger and thumb base joints. The disease is characterized by pain and stiffness of the affected joints and is the most common cause of disability in aged people. Currently limited therapy options are available. Synovial inflammation is involved in the joint pain. Iguratimod is a small disease-modifying compound that can influence anti-inflammatory pathways in models of rheumatoid arthritis. It has an anabolic effect on the bone metabolism of infected joint by osteoclastogenesis inhibition and osteoblast differentiation. The investigators hypothesize that Iguratimod will alleviate pain of patient with inflammatory hand osteoarthritis, and that a beneficial effect of Iguratimod on pain will be accompanied by a decrease of synovial inflammation.