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Inflammatory Bowel Diseases clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Inflammatory Bowel Diseases.

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NCT ID: NCT05810805 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Inflammatory Bowel Diseases

Measurement and Analysis of Gas Composition in Digestive Tract

Start date: April 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this study is to detect the concentration of various gases,including hydrogen, methane, hydrogen sulfide, nitric oxide in different parts of the digestive tract by a safe and direct method, and to establish a human digestive tract gas profiles. Analyze the differences in gas components in different segments of the digestive tract in patients with different diseases, and analyze the correlation between specific gases and digestive tract diseases and non-specific symptoms.

NCT ID: NCT05738915 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Inflammatory Bowel Diseases

Role of C-Reactive Protein /Albumin Ratio in Evaluation of Disease Activity in Patients With Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Start date: February 15, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Role of C-Reactive Protein /Albumin Ratio in evaluation of Disease Activity in Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease.

NCT ID: NCT05725369 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Inflammatory Bowel Diseases

The Effects of Combined Lifestyle Intervention (CLI) in Patients With Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD)

GLI-IBD
Start date: February 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

A single-center observational study to investigate the effects of combined lifestyle intervention (CLI, in Dutch: gecombineerde leefstijlinterventie, GLI) in patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease.

NCT ID: NCT05719766 Not yet recruiting - Ulcerative Colitis Clinical Trials

Effect of Incentive Integrated E-IBD Chronic Disease Management Model on the Quality of Life in IBD Patients

Start date: April 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to prospectively explore the effect of incentive-integrated E-IBD (electronic inflammatory bowel disease) chronic disease management model on the improvement of IBD quality of life, and provide a more effective chronic disease management model for improving the quality of life and social participation of IBD patients.The investigators firstly identify the IBD patients in need of empowerment disease activities through the questionnaire .Then, the investigators feedback the patients' education content according to their needs found.Based on the social support network of patient organization and the medical support network of tertiary medical institutions, the investigators complete the empowerment process of IBD patients' self-management initiative and self-management ability, through the internet. Finally ,the investigators evaluate the quality of life(QoL), social participation,disease self-management level via questionnaire . The primary outcome is the improvement of QoL score after three months' intervention.

NCT ID: NCT05715099 Not yet recruiting - Ulcerative Colitis Clinical Trials

Saffron as Anti Inflammatory In Patients With Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Start date: March 30, 2023
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Nutritional Saffron supplement has been widely used as food supplement and has known anti-depressant and anti-inflammatory activities. The investigators use saffron extract in Egyptian patients with ulcerative colitis for 8 weeks.

NCT ID: NCT05705232 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for IBD-Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Inflammatory Marker in Ibd and Peripheral Arthritis

Start date: July 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The Objective Of This Study Is To Estimate The Correlation Between Disease Activity In IBD, Inflammatory Markers And Peripheral Arthritis After Exclusion Of Other Causes Arthritis

NCT ID: NCT05693311 Not yet recruiting - IBD Clinical Trials

Inflammatory Bowel Disease Related Joint Manifestations

Start date: March 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The main purpose of this research is to identify incidence of jiunt manifestations by its both types axial and periphral in IBD patients, its types , relation to IBD activity, lines of treatment using and how they are effective in prevention and in treatment of these joint manifestations.

NCT ID: NCT05689892 Not yet recruiting - Ulcerative Colitis Clinical Trials

Shared Decision Making in Paediatric Inflammatory Bowel Disease

SDM-IBD
Start date: January 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this mixed-methods prospective cohort study is to assess the impact of shared decision-making (SDM) on newly diagnosed pediatric inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients and their families. Patient and familial decisional conflict regarding the choice and course of treatment is shown to be high, especially for the newer class of IBD treatments called biologic agents. SDM intervention comprises of coaching with a decision coach (DC) on all aspects of treatment and care, along with educational decision aids (DA) provided and adapted from Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. The main aims of this study are: 1. to determine if SDM intervention has an impact on patient and parental decision making in pediatric IBD treatments, mainly by assessing decisional conflict and decision satisfaction/regret. 2. to adapt and assess the acceptability of DA in a Canadian academic center. Participants who have been recommended a new biologic as part of their clinical care for IBD will be recruited to the SDM intervention group. The participants will have DC sessions until a final treatment decision is made, will be given DAs, and will be followed by baseline and post-intervention surveys to assess decisional conflict and satisfaction/regret. The comparator group will include participants who have been recommended and have commenced a new biologic within the last 12 months. Outcome metrics will evaluate the impact on parental and patient decisional conflict following SDM intervention, and decisional satisfaction/regret 6-12 months from therapy start.

NCT ID: NCT05663671 Not yet recruiting - Ulcerative Colitis Clinical Trials

Evaluate Established Anti-DEFA5 mAbs Diagnostic Efficacy and Safety in IBD

Start date: June 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Investigators propose to validate efficacy and safety of the detection of DEFA5 in the diagnosis of the colonic IBD using longitudinal vs. cross-sectional studies of known patient clinical data to correlate with their endoscopy biopsy data. 30% of colonic IBD patients cannot be accurately diagnosed (CC vs. UC) in a timely manner even when a state-of-the-art classification system of combined clinical, endoscopic, radiologic and histologic tools are used. When the diagnostic classification for these two diseases is inconclusive, the condition is termed indeterminate colitis (IC). Here, the central medical challenge is the discrimination of IBD into the specific subtypes with high accuracy, as it greatly effects surgical care of patients. Diagnostic accuracy of IC into either authentic UC or CC is of utmost importance when determining a patient's candidacy for RPC-IPAA surgery, the standard curative surgical procedure for UC. Further, incorrect diagnosis and treatment carry potential morbidity from inappropriate and unnecessary surgery and costs. The success outcomes of RPC-IPAA surgery and convalescence depend on correct diagnosis. To address IBD diagnosis ambiguity and delays in IBD clinical settings, investigators developed a proteomic signature to discriminate between UC and CC patients that also will predict the outcome of IC patients for their eventual progress to either UC or CC. Our published data has shown robust evidence supporting presence of human alpha-defensin 5 (DEFA5) in areas of the colon mucosa with aberrant expression of apparent Paneth cell-like cells (PCLCs) or crypt cell-like cells (CCLCs), which identifies an area of colonic ileal metaplasia, consistent with the diagnosis of CC. DEFA5 bioassay discriminated CC and UC in a cohort of all IC patients with accuracy. A fit logistic model with group CC and UC as the outcome and the DEFA5 as independent variable differentiator with a positive predictive value of 96%. These findings were obtained solely from colectomy specimens for both the discovery and validation analyses. Investigators believe that use of endoscopy biopsies would be indifferent, which is the purpose of this prospective patient centered clinical study. Investigators propose to demonstrate that UC and CC, the two unsolved medical subtypes of pathology with no drugs for a cure, can accurately be distinguished molecularly by examining CCLCs-secreted DEFA5 in colonic endoscopy biopsies instantly. Our proposal is highly innovative, as it highlights the robustness of DEFA5 and its clinical relevance to IBD is both in science and the anticipated impact, as investigators seek to better understand difficulty to determine 'subtypes" and translate that to improve diagnosis, treatment, clinical outcomes, and quality of life for patients and the realm of clinical care. DEFA5 immunoreactivity in colonic endoscopy biopsies could be a rapid potential diagnostic signature to resolve IC into authentic UC and CC with a first clinic endoscopy biopsy. IC is likely to be eliminated for good.

NCT ID: NCT05659953 Not yet recruiting - Crohn Disease Clinical Trials

LMT503 First-in-human SAD, MAD, and FE Study

Start date: April 1, 2024
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This is a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study, consisting of a single ascending dose (SAD) part with integrated food effect (FE) arm, and a multiple ascending dose (MAD) part to assess the safety, tolerability, and PK of ascending single and multiple oral doses of LMT503. The study will start with the SAD part.