View clinical trials related to JIA.
Filter by:To implement and evaluate a patient-and family-centered Juvenile Arthritis Support Program during one year (JASP-1) for children recently diagnosed with JIA and their parents and after 12 months compare satistaction with care and health outcomes with a control group receiving standard care.
1. This study aims to determine the serum levels of interleukin-17A (IL-17A) in children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) 2. Analyze the correlation between IL-17A values and disease activity, certain clinical features, and laboratory markers of inflammation.
In the THUIS study, JIA patients in clinical remission will skip one 3-monthly hospital control visit and instead monitor their disease activity at home. Outcomes at 6 months will be compared to those from a historical cohort.
The iParent2Parent program matches parents of children living with arthritis with a trained parent mentor who will provide parents of children newly diagnosed with arthritis: practical coping advice and social support through shared lived experiences. This study will compare two groups of parents: those who are in the iParent2Parent program and those in the control group (no mentor).
The proposed study is a stratified, block-randomized, double-masked, controlled trial to determine the feasibility of discontinuing adalimumab treatment in patients with quiescent uveitis associated with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) or chronic anterior uveitis (CAU).
This is a global registry, to evaluate the long-term safety of Humira® in patients with moderate to severe polyarticular Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis (JIA), that are treated as recommended in the Humira® product label. Patients treated with MTX will be considered a reference group. Patients will be followed in both the Humira® and Methotrexate (MTX) arms for 10 years from the enrollment date into one of the treatment arms.