View clinical trials related to Rheumatoid Arthritis.
Filter by:This is a prospective, multicenter clinical study designed to facilitate the collection and evaluation of surgical workflow efficiency, patient pain and function outcome and adverse events data. This study might include Persona, Nexgen and Vanguard product families using the ROSA Total Knee Robotic system or conventional instrumentation. The primary objective is to evaluate the accuracy of implant alignment for ROSA Total Knee robotic instrumentation compared to conventional instrumentation.
Objectives: To elucidate the effects of achieving sustained simple disease activity index (SDAI) remission in the progression of joint space outcomes using high-resolution peripheral quantitative CT (HR-pQCT) in patients with early rheumatoid arthritis (ERA), and what the independent effects of erosion /JSW progression are on patient's function. Hypothesis to be tested: Effective control of inflammation in ERA patients who can achieve sustained SDAI remission will have less progression of joint damage then patients who cannot achieve sustained SDAI remission. Design and subjects: 110 consecutive ERA patients will participate in this 1-year prospective, hospital-based, cohort study. Study instruments Metacarpophalangeal joints 2-4 will be measured using HR-pQCT Interventions All participants will receive 1-year tight-control treatment according to a standardized protocol aiming at SDAI remission. Physical function will be assessed by Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ) at each visit. HR-pQCT and radiographs will be performed at baseline, 6 (HR-pQCT only) and 12 months. Quantitative analysis of joint space width (JSW) and volume, erosion number and volume, and marginal osteosclerosis (bone apposition at the base of the erosion) will be evaluated by HR-pQCT. Radiographic progression will be scored using van der Heijde-Sharp (SvdH) score. Outcome measures: The primary outcome is the change in JSW and volume over a period of 12 months. Main secondary outcomes include changes in the i) number and size of erosion, ii) SvdH score and iii) HAQ over a period of 12 months. Expected results: Patients who can achieve sustained SDAI remission will have less joint damage and functional loss compared
A potential application of therapeutic drug monitoring is to predict efficacy after switch to another biological in the case of inefficacy of the previous TNF-inhibitor (TNFi) in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients. It has been shown that when antidrug antibodies against adalimumab are detected (resulting in lower drug serum concentrations) in patients failing adalimumab, a normal response to a next TNF blocker can be anticipated. However, when clinical response is unsatisfactory and no antidrug antibodies against the first TNFi are detected (generally drug levels are adequate in this case), this predicts a lower response to a next TNFi. This means drug resistant failure in the former, compared to class resistant failure in latter category of patients. The current RA treatment strategy after failure of the first TNF-inhibitor is to start either a second TNFi or a non-TNFi. However, by channelling patients with sufficient adalimumab concentration to a non-TNFi will provide higher chance of disease control. Patients with very low or undetectable drug levels have an equal or potential higher chance of disease control with a drug of the same class (i.e. another TNFi).
The overall goal of this study is to identify risk and prognosis factors of Interstitial Lung Disease (ILD) in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA).
BERTHA study´s primary objective is to characterize Rheumatoid Arthritis-associated Interstitial Lung Disease (RA-ILD) progression and to define a combination of biomarkers, genetic and clinical variables capable of identifying patients at risk of RA-ILD progression
The purpose of this study is to evaluate whether the risk of serious infections in rheumatoid arthritis patients with tocilizumab is higher than in those with tumor necrosis factor inhibitors using the nationwide real-world data.
This is a single cohort, prospective study of performance and safety of the Vanguard Deep Dish Rotating Platform (DD RP) cementless fixation with the goal to acquire clinical outcomes data and evaluate the performance of the device in an Austrian patient population
This study will evaluate the safety and efficacy of SKI-O-703 compared with placebo, in patients with active rheumatoid arthritis (RA) who have had an inadequate response to conventional synthetic disease-modifying agents. Patients will be randomly assigned to one of 4 groups and will receive one of three doses of SKI-O-703 or placebo, administered orally twice daily for 12 weeks.
Hypothesis: The spa therapy treatment could improve health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in subjects with knee and/or hip osteoarthritis, and patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Main objective: Analyze if HRQOL in patients with knee and/or hip osteoarthritis, and patients with rheumatoid arthritis is modified by spa therapy treatment in the spa of Fitero (Spain). Design: Prospective observational study Participants: Fitero's spa users aged between 45-80 years old, diagnosed with knee and/or hip osteoarthritis, and also with rheumatoid arthritis. At least 40 patients of each type will be included in the study. Participants must be receiving a treatment of at least ten days. Main Variable: The scores obtained in the Euroqol5Dimensions-5Levels questionnaire (EQ-5D-5L) (for all subjects), the Western Ontario MacMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) questionnaire, for subjects with knee and/or hip osteoarthritis, and the Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ), for subjects with rheumatoid arthritis. Other variables: sociodemographic, anthropometric, clinics, and related with spa treatment. Follow-up duration: 9 months.
This post-marketing study is designed to compare the safety of baricitinib versus tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitors with respect to venous thromboembolic events (VTEs) when given to participants with rheumatoid arthritis.