View clinical trials related to Psoriasis.
Filter by:Psoriasis (PsO) is a chronic disease characterized by marked inflammation of the skin that results in thick, red, scaly plaques. This study will assess how safe and effective risankizumab is in adult participants with moderate to severe genital psoriasis or moderate to severe scalp psoriasis. Adverse events and change in disease signs and symptoms will be monitored. Risankizumab (Skyrizi) is a drug being studied for the treatment of moderate to severe genital psoriasis or moderate to severe scalp psoriasis. Approximately 200 participants with moderate to severe genital psoriasis or moderate to severe scalp psoriasis will be enrolled across approximately 45 sites globally. The study will be broken up into 2 sub-studies by disease location, participants with moderate to severe genital psoriasis (Study G) and moderate to severe scalp psoriasis (Study S). In both sub-studies participants will receive subcutaneous (SC) injections of risankizumab during the 52 week treatment period, or SC injections of placebo risankizumab during the 16 week treatment period followed by SC injections of risankizumab during the 36 week treatment period, with an 8-week follow-up period after the 52 week treatment period. There may be higher treatment burden for participants in this trial compared to their standard of care. Participants will attend regular visits during the study at a hospital or clinic. The effect of the treatment will be checked by medical assessments, blood tests, checking for side effects and completing questionnaires.
The first-in-human study will be performed in healthy volunteers and patients with a chronic inflammatory skin disease. The primary objective is to evaluate the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of increasing doses of AX-202 infusion.
A retrospective analysis based on database was conducted to evaluate the correlation between covid-19 infection and the condition and treatment of psoriasis patients.
The IMMagine study aims to validate the newly developed CLCI instrument (DermCLCI-p) in moderate to severe psoriasis (PsO) patients, who will be started on Risankizumb (RZB) treatment and will be enrolled into the validation study up to 28 weeks. The treatment decision for RZB must be made independent of this study enrollment.
The goal of this observational study is to investigate whether the density of Demodex mites is higher in psoriasis patients treated with biologic agents compared to treatment-naive or topically treated patients. The main question[s]it aims to answer are: - Are Demodex mites higher in psoriasis patients treated with biologic agents? - In which localization and with what intensity was demodicosis most common? Participants will be assessed using standardized skin surface biopsy technique in four localization on their face . Researchers will compare demodex intensity per cm² to see if the biologic treatments effects demodex intensity on psoriasis patients.
Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory disease that affects between 2% and 4% of the French population.Some specific localizations are more difficult to manage, such as the scalp, nails, genital region and palmoplantar localizations. Tildrakizumab, an anti-interleukin-23 (IL-23) monoclonal antibody, has demonstrated efficacy and safety in the treatment of patients with moderate to severe psoriasis. Real-life data on the efficacy of Tildrakizumab in unselected patients with these difficult-to-treat locations are still limited. The aim of the ZODIPSO study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Tildrakizumab in patients presented difficult to treat locations in psoriasis : nail, scalp, genital and palmoplantar. The main objective is to assess the overall response and the specific response to Tildrakizumab at these specific areas up to W52.
Although it is well known that the clinical expression and course of chronic inflammatory skin diseases are highly variable, there are insufficient epidemiological data on this, and the factors that determine the manifestation, clinical features and course are also largely unknown. There are currently no reliable markers that could predict or delineate patient subgroups to support patient management. The aim of this project is to identify clinical and molecular factors that correlate with disease, disease subtypes and progression through in-depth long-term clinical characterization of patients with chronic inflammatory skin diseases and examination of individual biomaterials.
The purpose of the Phase IV study is to investigate the effects of both Volume and Citrate on Injection Site Pain (ISP), adherence, patient satisfaction, Quality of Life, and Disease Assessment in the Canadian Adalimumab Market. The phase IV study is an observational, pan-Canadian, multidisciplinary study aiming to enroll 600 patients across 50-70 sites across 3 different Therapeutic Areas (GI, Rheum, Derm).
The goal of this research is to test a novel centralized care coordinator program to assist patients with psoriatic disease in lowering their risk of cardiovascular disease through the application of standard of care approaches to improving modifiable cardiovascular risk factors.
This study aims to assess the effect of adding N-acetyl cysteine (NAC) alone or in combination with Vitamin E to conventional therapy in improving the clinical outcome, oxidative stress, and inflammation in patients with mild psoriasis vulgaris