View clinical trials related to Hidradenitis Suppurativa.
Filter by:Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is a common chronic skin disease where patients experience inflamed painful nodules and chronic suppurating tunnels under the skin that often leave mutilating scars. Symptoms typically begin during adolescence and patients struggle with pain, pruritus, malodor and purulent discharge compromising work life, physical exercise, and sexual habits. Consequently, the risk of social exclusion, anxiety, depression, and suicide is increased among patients suffering from HS. Creams, tablets, and injections aim to gain disease control, yet are sometimes not sufficient. Once HS tunnels have formed, surgical intervention is often required. Recently, emergence of flexible diode laser fibers has enabled treatment of tunnels from within. The technique has been tested for perianal tunnels and in few studies also for HS tunnels with promising results. Overall, the laser fiber technique is still new, and knowledge of optimal treatment settings is sparse. However, there is reason to believe that intralesional laser fiber treatment of HS tunnels may provide a new tissue-sparing alternative to conventional surgical techniques with a potential to produce fewer side effects, less scaring, shorter downtime after surgery and possibly, also improved inflammatory control. This study aims to investigate the efficacy and safety of laser fiber treatment of HS tunnels. Method The project is carried out at the Dermatological Department, Roskilde University Hospital under the leadership of principal investigator Professor DmSc Gregor Jemec. A prospective cohort study of intralesional laser fiber treatment of HS fistulas is planned. After signing informed consent, patients with two comparable HS tunnels in typical areas will draw lot to receive experimental laser fiber treatment of one tunnel while the other tunnel serve as control. Efficacy will be monitored by pain scores, ultrasound, clinical photos, clinical measures of disease activity, quality-of-life scores, and skin biopsies. Patients will be followed 2, 6, 12 weeks and if possible, also 52 weeks after treatment. After 12 weeks, patients will be offered laser fiber treatment or standard of care surgery to the untreated control tunnel.
The reason for this study is to see if the study drug LY3041658 is effective in participants with moderate-to-severe hidradenitis suppurativa (HS).
To evaluate the efficacy and safety of INCB054707 in participants with hidradenitis suppurativa over a 16-week placebo-controlled treatment period followed by a 36-week open-label extension period. All eligible participants will be invited to continue treatment for an additional 48-week Long-term extension period (also open label).
The product, HidraWear AX (www.hidrawear.com) is and adhesive free wound dressing system for the every day home care of Hidradenitis Suppurativa (HS), a debilitating disease of the skin for which there are limited wound dressing products. This is a study to assess the use HidraWear Ax vs current product and method of use, and to determine the impact on patients' quality of life.
This non-intervention study will identify the biomarker profiles in hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) and atopic dermatitis (AD) (as a comparator) that would have the most utility in interventional studies evaluating efficacy during therapeutic intervention. Study data will also be used to correlate cellular/molecular changes in blood (cells and serum), and tissue, with clinical/histopathological phenotypes.
Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is an inflammatory skin disease that causes painful lesions in the axilla (underarm), inguinal (groin) and anogenital (anal and genital) regions. This study will evaluate how well upadacitinib compared to placebo (no medicine) works to treat hidradenitis suppurativa in adult participants with moderate to severe disease. The study will assess change in disease signs and symptoms.
Investigators hypothesize that ruxolitinib 1.5% cream is an effective therapy for HS participants through inhibition of inflammatory activity. Investigators aim to: - Demonstrate the clinical efficacy of ruxolitinib 1.5% cream in decreasing the clinical disease activity after 16 weeks of treatment. - Investigate the impact of ruxolitinib 1.5% cream on skin inflammation through translational analyses of skin biopsy samples.
This is a survey study being conducted to describe how subjects with Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) respond to treatment with gentian violet. The study will rely primarily on qualitative survey responses and quantitative changes in skin appearance.
The objective of this case series is to monitor time and outcome of healing of wounds associated with HS using Endoform [ovine forestomach], Hydrofera Blue [methylene blue and gentian violet], and Hypafix tape. a combination methylene blue, gentian violet, and ovine forestomach wound care product.
The current surgical management for severe Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) involves wide excision of affected skin, resulting in a large soft tissue defect. The soft tissue defect will then be managed with Negative Pressure Wound Therapy (NPWT) to promote healthy granulation tissue formation for wound coverage with Split skin graft (SSG). This long interval between excision and reconstruction could result in long in-patient stay, increased risk of hospital acquired infection and reduced patients' quality of life. The investigators wish to evaluate the use of Negative Pressure Wound Therapy with instillation (NPWTi), which has potential to allow early wound coverage with SSG, as an alternative to the current standard of care. The investigators hypothesise that NPWTi reduces bacterial load on the wound and allows early wound coverage hence improves patient satisfaction and reduces cost and length of hospital stay.