View clinical trials related to Plaque Psoriasis.
Filter by:This is an open-label, long-term safety study of roflumilast (ARQ-151) 0.3% cream in subjects with chronic plaque psoriasis involving up to 25% total Body Surface Area (BSA). Study medication will be applied by the qualifying subjects topically once daily for 52 weeks at home. Periodic clinic visits will include assessments for clinical safety, application site reactions, and disease improvement or progression.
This Phase 3 study (Study 305) has been designed to determine and compare the efficacy and safety of 188-0551 Spray and Vehicle Spray applied twice daily for up to four weeks in subjects with plaque psoriasis. Subjects will be instructed to apply the test article (188-0551 Spray or Vehicle Spray) to all psoriasis plaques within the designated Treatment Area twice daily for four weeks (Study Day 29), unless the investigator verifies the subject's psoriasis has cleared at Day 15, then test article application will be for 2 weeks (Study Day 15).
This Phase 3 study (Study 307) has been designed to determine and compare the efficacy and safety of 188-0551 Spray and Vehicle Spray applied twice daily for up to four weeks in subjects with plaque psoriasis. Subjects will be instructed to apply the test article (188-0551 Spray or Vehicle Spray) to all psoriasis plaques within the designated Treatment Area twice daily for four weeks (Study Day 29), unless the investigator verifies the subject's psoriasis has cleared at Day 15, then test article application will be for 2 weeks (Study Day 15).
An Open-Label study to assess safety
This is a parallel group, double blind, vehicle-controlled study in which roflumilast (ARQ-151) cream 0.3%, roflumilast cream 0.15%, or vehicle cream is applied once daily (QD) for 84 days to subjects with chronic plaque psoriasis involving between 2 and 20% body surface area.
Corticosteroid therapy, including intralesional and topical applications, has many indications within the fields of Dermatology, Plastic Surgery, and Orthopedics. However, these injections can be quite painful, which leads many patients to discontinue treatment. Often, the injection involves a mixture of local anesthetic and corticosteroids despite a lack of evidence that the use of lidocaine improves pain. Due to the acidic pH, the lidocaine component of the injection can actually cause a significant burning sensation during the procedure. Lidocaine does not have anti-inflammatory properties and does not treat the underlying pathology. By including another medication, lidocaine also adds cost and risk to the procedure. The purpose of this study is to see if removing lidocaine from intralesional injections decreases the pain of injection.
The aim of this study is to evaluate safety, tolerability, and efficacy of PRCL-02 in moderate to severe chronic plaque psoriasis
This randomized, double-blinded dose-finding study evaluates four dose levels of ABY-035, in comparison to placebo, in subjects with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. The study consists of 52-week Core study and two optional 52-week periods, Extension and Prolongation of Extension. The Core study consists of three periods: Induction (placebo-controlled, Week 0-12), Optimization (Week 12-24), and Individualization (Week 24-52).
The primary purpose of this study is to assess efficacy, safety and tolerability of a 2 mL pre-filled auto-injector (AI) of 300 mg secukinumab in patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis
The purpose of this study is to compare the efficacy and safety of ixekizumab to guselkumab in participants with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis.