View clinical trials related to Psoriasis.
Filter by:Evaluate the effects of topical C-82 in a psoriasis plaque test.
This study will evaluate the clinical efficacy, the patients quality of life, and safety of oral apremilast 30 mg twice daily (BID) compared to placebo, in adult patients with moderate plaque psoriasis during the 16 week Placebo controlled Phase and then upto 1 year in the Extension Phase of the trial.
At least 20 psoriasis patients will be compared to at least 20 participants without psoriasis Bacterial genomic DNA will be extracted from stool samples of participants. The intestinal bacterial populations will be compared in order to examine whether there are differences between the groups.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the anti-psoriatic effect of LP0113 aerosol spray compared to Daivobet® gel, LEO 90100 aerosol foam, betamethasone dipropionate in the aerosol spray vehicle, calcipotriol in the aerosol spray vehicle and aerosol spray vehicle.
The objectives of this study are to evaluate the therapeutic efficacy and safety of DSXS and a Placebo in patients with moderate to severe scalp psoriasis.
12 weeks open label with Otezla® and NUVB, followed by 6 month double blind Otezla® (apremilast) or placebo to subjects who obtain PASI 75 at week 12 of phototherapy
To demonstrate in the patient pool of PASI 90 responders at Week 24 that secukinumab 300 mg s.c. when administered at a longer dosing interval is non-inferior to secukinumab 300 mg s.c. every 4 weeks treatment with respect to maintaining a PASI 90 response rate at Week 52.
Study GT-030 is a phase 2a, single-center, open-label study of subjects with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis
This study will compare the safety and efficacy of Apremilast 30mg to placebo in subjects with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis involving palms and/or soles. Apremilast will be administered orally twice daily for 16 to 32 weeks, and will be compared against placebo (dummy drug with no active ingredient). This study will enroll approximately 100 adult subjects with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis involving palms and/or soles in approximately 20 centers in US and Canada. To be eligible, subjects must have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis involving palms or soles, with lesions covering at least 10% of the surface of palms and soles at the baseline visit. Study treatments will be assigned randomly (like flipping a coin) at a 1:1 ratio, meaning that there will be a 1 in 2 chance of either receiving Apremilast or placebo during the first 16 weeks. Subjects will not know which of the two treatments they receive. The study doctor, the study staff will not know which treatment they receive either. All subjects will receive Apremilast from Week 16 to Week 32. Subjects will be asked to complete questionnaires about their hand and feet pain, their quality of life, their general health and the impact of psoriasis on their work. Medical photographs of palms and soles will be taken for subjects at selected study sites only. At Baseline and Week 16 visits, for willing subjects at certain study sites, skin biopsies can be taken. The biopsies will be analyzed for the presence of antibodies, antigens or certain cellular messengers that can be quantified. It is also possible to study the skin cellular structure and organization. A total of 3 biopsies will be taken: At Baseline visit, one biopsy from psoriasis on palms or soles and one biopsy from normal skin of palms or soles will be collected. At Week 16 visit, only one biopsy from psoriasis on palms or soles will be collected.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the potential effects of a single dose of 200 milligram (mg) guselkumab on the plasma concentrations of a cocktail of representative probe substrates of Cytochrome P450 isozymes (CYP3A4, CYP2C9, CYP2C19, CYP2D6, and CYP1A2) in participants with moderate to severe psoriasis.