View clinical trials related to Psoriasis.
Filter by:It is known from the COMET-trial that patients who start Enbrel treatment early have a great chance of reaching clinical remission and radiographic nonprogression. It is still unclear, however, how many patients with early arthritis achieve remission and radiographic nonprogression under the conditions of routine rheumatologic care and the local recommendations of Enbrel treatment (pre-treatment of at least 2 DMARDs, one of them MTX). Therefore, no robust x-ray data are available to show/demonstrate - the average extent of x-ray damage in routine patients on Enbrel outside clinical studies. - if the outstanding effect on structural damage of Enbrel can be reproduced in routine practice. - that the 'Silent Progressor' is an issue relevant not only in clinical trials, but also for day-to-day decision making. - the optimal onset of Enbrel treatment in the course of the disease to prevent radiographic damage
The purpose of this study is to evaluate different dose levels of IMO-3100 compared to placebo administered for 4 weeks to patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis.
PSOBIOTEQ is a national multicentric prospective cohort of cutaneous psoriasis patients receiving systemic treatment (biotherapy or DMARDs) for moderate to severe cutaneous psoriasis. It is resulting from the merging of two studies that share the same study population but address different objectives: PSOBIO, developed by academic dermatologists and epidemiologists and supported by the National Drug Agency (AGENCE NATIONALE DE SECURITE DU MEDICAMENT ET DES PRODUITS DE SANTE,ANSM) and the ministry of health (PHRC 2009) focusing on safety issues, and Pso-TEQ, developed by industrials at the request of the French Transparency Commission (HAUTE AUTORITE DE SANTE) focusing on utilisation issues. The overall general objective of PSOBIO is to assess "in real life" the safety and efficacy of biotherapies in the treatment of cutaneous psoriasis in comparison with major conventional systemic therapy while Pso-TEQ has a descriptive objective concerning the modalities of use of biological therapies "in real life" and long-term benefit.
This is a double-blind, multicenter, vehicle-controlled, parallel group comparison study to determine and compare the efficacy and safety of HBP Lotion 0.05% and Vehicle Lotion applied twice daily for two weeks in subjects with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. Eligible subjects will be randomized (1:1) to one of two treatment groups - HBP Lotion 0.05% or Vehicle Lotion. The maximum amount of test article to be applied per week should not exceed 50 grams.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the anti-psoriatic effect of Daivobet® gel applied then removed after 10 minutes (+/- 2 minutes), Daivobet® gel applied then removed after 20 minutes (+/- 2 minutes) compared with Daivobet® gel and Daivobet® gel vehicle applied for 24 hours (+/- 2 hours), using the psoriasis plaque test modified from the method developed by KJ Dumas and JR Scholtz.
A Phase 2 Maximal Use Systemic Exposure (MUSE) study evaluating the safety and efficacy of LEO 90100 used once daily in subjects with extensive psoriasis vulgaris.
This study will assess the safety and efficacy of ixekizumab (LY2439821) compared to etanercept and placebo in participants with moderate to severe chronic plaque psoriasis.
The overall purpose of this study is to support the development of a DLX105 topical formulation for the indication mild to moderate psoriasis vulgaris.
A Topical Treatment Optimisation Programme (TTOP) has been developed by the sponsor together with Patient Boards and an Expert Advisory Board to overcome non-adherence problems.
The purpose of this study is to explore the safety and tolerability of multiple doses of ASKP1240 compared to placebo and determine Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics in subjects with moderate to severe psoriasis.