View clinical trials related to Psoriasis.
Filter by:The main purpose of this study is to investigate the safety and tolerability of the study drug known as LY3041658 in participants with certain types of skin diseases. The study will measure how the body absorbs, breaks down and gets rid of LY3041658. It will last about 127 days for each participant, not including screening. This study is for research purposes only, and is not intended to treat any medical condition.
A study of LEO 32731 in the treatment of psoriasis vulgaris
A Multi-Center, Double-Blind, Randomized, Vehicle-Controlled, Parallel-Group Study Comparing Tazarotene Cream 0.05% to TAZORAC® (tazarotene) Cream 0.05% and Both Active Treatments to a Vehicle Control in the Treatment of Stable Plaque Psoriasis
This study aims to assess how the Enstilar® aerosol foam performs in daily real-life practice with regards to effectiveness and convenience of application to psoriasis plaques on body and extremities. In addition the profiles of patients prescribed Enstilar® will be described, and preceeding, concomitant and follow-up management will be mapped. The study will be conducted in about 100 dermatology clinics all over Germany,
The objective of this Phase 2 trial is to determine the efficacy and safety of LYC-30937-EC in patients with moderate plaque-type psoriasis.
Medical adherence to topical corticosteroid products in psoriasis patients is a main determinant for poor treatment effect. The investigators aim to test if a multifaceted intervention delivered in an app (MyPso QualityCareTM owned by Leo Pharma) for smartphones combined with an Electronic Monitor (EM) (Teslo) can improve medical adherence among psoriasis patients treated with a topical calcipotriol/betamethasone dipropionate foam combination (Cal/BD) (Enstilar©). The study is classified as a phase 4 study, since it is studied if improved use of Enstilar© results in improved treatment outcomes. Link to published study protocol: https://bmcdermatol.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12895-018-0071-3 Link to published results from the study: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/bjd.16667
This study aims to describe the patient population being treated and evaluate their treatment adherence and treatment outcomes during treatment of scalp psoriasis with Daivobet® gel Applicator for 4 weeks.
This is a phase 2, randomized, placebo-controlled, 2-period study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of belumosudil in adult subjects with moderate to severe chronic plaque psoriasis who are candidates for systemic therapy or phototherapy.
To evaluate the efficacy and to compare efficacy and safety of BI 695501 versus Humira in patients with moderate to severe chronic plaque psoriasis.
Response to psoriasis treatment is variable in large part because of poor adherence treatments. Studies using electronic monitors have assessed adherence to topical and injectable psoriasis treatments and to biologics, yielding critically important insights. Adherence to oral psoriasis treatments is not as well characterized but is also critical, as the therapeutic windows for these treatments are narrower than for other psoriasis treatment options. The proposed study will assess patients' adherence to oral psoriasis treatment (primarily methotrexate) and will also collect pilot data on an intervention to improve adherence. The primary hypothesis of the investigators study is that adherence to oral psoriasis treatment is poor and that a reporting intervention may improve adherence to oral psoriasis treatment. In the investigator-blinded, 6-month prospective study, patients will be randomized to standard-of-care treatment or standard-of-care supplemented with the weekly online reporting intervention. Adherence will be assessed using electronic monitors. This randomized trial will permit the investigators to determine adherence to oral psoriasis treatment, assess the relationship between adherence and psoriasis outcomes, identify factors that are associated with adherence to oral psoriasis treatment (including physician trust, confidence in the treatment plan, and depression), and obtain preliminary data on the impact of an Internet-reporting measure on patients' adherence to oral psoriasis treatment .