View clinical trials related to Relapsing Polychondritis.
Filter by:The incidence in pediatrics is very low (about 3.5 per million per year according to a 2015 study) and therefore the data on the pathology very poor, especially on the therapeutic level. Without appropriate treatment, the disabling sequelae, even involving the vital prognosis, are significant. However, in paediatrics, therapeutic habits have been extrapolated from adult data and lack precision. Existing treatments are almost composed of immunomodulatory and/or immunosuppressive treatments. Different therapeutic lines have been introduced over the years and a better understanding of the pathology. More recently, biotherapies have been introduced in this pathology, but data on their effectiveness remain limited. Data on the evolution under therapy in children are thus still poor. Complications related to the pathology that can jeopardize the vital prognosis and the response to treatment for this pathology deserve to be studied in order to be known and if possible avoided. The aim of the study is to describe French practices and compare the lines of treatment proposed for juvenile atrophic polychondritis.
Vasculitis occur when the body's immune system, rather than protecting the body, attacks blood vessels, causing injury to the vessel and the part of the body it supplies with blood. Vasculitis is rare, and there are a number of different types, which can affect both adults and children. We treat vasculitis with steroids and drugs aiming to damp down the activity of the immune system, but they often cause side effects. Some patients do not improve with this treatment, or cannot tolerate it and their vasculitis worsens; this is known as refractory vasculitis. Patients with refractory vasculitis are at high risk of health complications from the disease and its therapy and are in need of newer more effective treatments with fewer side effects. Biologics are drugs which are designed to precisely target parts of the immune system and may have fewer side effects. Biologics have been used for several years to treat vasculitis, particularly anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA)-associated vasculitis or AAV. However, for many of the rarer types of vasculitis, and especially those vasculitis disease types that are not ANCA-associated, there is little information to support use of biologic therapies as effective treatments. The purpose of this trial is to find out whether biologics are effective and represent value for money for participants with refractory vasculitis. The trial will include patients with Non-ANCA-associated vasculitis (NAAV)
Relapsing polychondritis (RP) is a rare systemic inflammatory disease characterized by recurrent inflammation of cartilage including ears, nose, tracheobronchial tree, chest wall and joints. Less commonly, it can cause inflammation of eyes, vasculature, nervous system, skin and inner ear. The purpose of this study is to study the pathogenesis of RP.
Relapsing polychondritis (RP) is a rare, systemic autoimmune disorder characterized by episodic inflammation of cartilaginous structures. Pro-inflammatory chemokines involved in the recruitment of monocytes and modulation of macrophage function, such as monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, macrophage inflammatory protein 1β, and interleukin (IL)-8, are significantly elevated in active RP compared with controls.The activation of monocytes and macrophages may play an important role in the pathophysiology of RP. The levels of serum Th1 cytokines (interferon, IL-2 (IL-2) and IL-12 (IL-12) were significantly correlated with disease status,which suggested that RP may be a Th1-mediated disease process. IL-2 is a kind of lymphocyte growth factor. At lower doses, regulatory T cells exhibit dominant amplification because of their more sensitivity to IL-2. Regulatory T cells can inhibit the growth of effector T cells and then play an immunosuppressive role. The investigators hypothesized that low-dose IL-2 could be a novel therapy in active RP patients. This clinical study will explore the efficacy and immunological evaluation of low dose IL-2 in the treatment of RP.
Patient Power is a patient research network and database (registry) to collect prospective information about demographics, self-reported diagnoses and medications, and willingness to participate in research from participants with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), spondyloarthritis (SpA), other musculoskeletal conditions, chronic neurological conditions like migraine, chronic pulmonary conditions like Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD), asthma, autoimmune dermatological conditions such as psoriasis, and other chronic inflammatory or immune-mediated conditions. In addition, since patients with chronic conditions often have other co-morbidities like cardiovascular health and obesity-related metabolic disorders, these conditions will also be included. Participants will provide information from their smartphones or personal computers. The information will be used by researchers and clinicians to help patients and their providers make better, more informed decisions about treatment of chronic conditions.
Background: - Vasculitis is a group of diseases that inflame and damage blood vessels and tissue. It can cause many medical problems. Few tests can diagnose the disease, and none can reliably predict a relapse. Researchers want to study people s genes and follow people over time to see how the disease affects them. Objective: - To learn the signs, symptoms, imaging tests, genetic markers, and blood tests that can help identify people with vasculitis and predict what will happen to them over time. Eligibility: - People age 3 and older who have or are thought to have vasculitis, or are related to someone with it. - Healthy volunteers. Design: - Participants will be evaluated by a doctor who has expertise caring for patients with vasculitis. - Participants will give a blood sample. Some will give a urine sample. - Some participants may have brushings or biopsies taken from the inside lining of the nose. - Images of participants blood vessels may be taken using scans. For some scans, participants will lie on a table that moves in and out of a cylinder that takes pictures. For some scans, a contrast agent may be injected into an arm vein. Other scans may use a radioactive form of sugar. Healthy minors will not have scans. - Some participants will answer questionnaires. - Some participants will have their tests done at NIH. Others will have their doctor take the blood, saliva, or cheek swab samples and send them to NIH. - Some participants will have one visit lasting 1-2 (but sometimes up to 4) days. Some participants may have follow-up visits every 3 - 6 months, indefinitely.
The purpose of this study is to test the safety of the study drug abatacept and see what effects (good and bad) it has in patients with relapsing polychondritis.
This is a study for one patient with severe relapsing polychondritis which has been unresponsive to other more conventional medications including prednisone, methotrexate, anakinra and TNF inhibitors. Tolerability, and efficacy of the drug, Tocilizumab will be monitored by clinical assessment and bloodwork.
Relapsing polychondritis (RP) is a rare, immune-mediated disease associated with inflammation in cartilaginous structures and other tissues throughout the body. Prognosis can be poor, especially in cases where there is acute involvement of the laryngotracheal cartilages leading to airway destruction, which are resistant to treatments such as corticosteroids, immunosuppressive or cytotoxic drugs. The pathogenesis remains unclear although it is thought that autoimmune reactions to antigens present in cartilages, such as type II collagen and matrilin may evoke symptoms. There are no known clinical or laboratory measures that predict the expression of specific disease manifestations or the overall disease course. Two recently published case reports have shown an association with elevated serum IL-6 levels and relapsing polychondritis. In these case reports, both patients with refractory relapsing polychondritis were treated with tocilizumab, a humanized monoclonal antibody to the Interleukin 6 receptor, and achieved sustained response to the drug. This single patient trial aims to evaluate the response to Tocilizumab in an eight year old boy with relapsing polychondritis who has been shown to have elevated serum IL-6 levels and who has responded poorly to conventional therapies. The study hypothesis is that Tocilizumab will be able to control the disease in this patient.