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Scleroderma, Diffuse clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT01729611 Completed - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Hypertension

Endothelial Function in Patients With Scleroderma or Cirrhosis With and Without Pulmonary Hypertension

Start date: December 2013
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a condition characterized by an increased pulmonary vascular resistance that can lead to right heart failure and death. Several diseases are known etiologies of PAH including scleroderma and cirrhosis. The presence of PAH in the context of systemic sclerosis or cirrhosis has a dramatic impact on prognosis and survival of the connective tissue or liver disease. Despite advances in the diagnosis of PAH, echocardiography remains a necessary test for screening PAH in patients with scleroderma or cirrhosis. However, echocardiography is less than ideal for diagnosing PAH and predicting treatment response. Thus, there is a pressing need to identify methodologies that can accurately and non-invasively recognize the presence of PAH in patients with scleroderma and cirrhosis. Hypothesis: 1. To measure endothelial function and exhaled gases in patients with scleroderma and cirrhosis. To assess whether they correlate with the presence or the development of PAH. 2. The degree of local (forearm) capillary vasodilation during treprostinil iontophoresis identifies patients who will develop PAH and in those already diagnosed PAH predicts response to PAH-specific therapies.

NCT ID: NCT01697254 Completed - Clinical trials for Systemic Lupus Erythematosus

The CARRA Registry

CARRA Registry
Start date: August 2009
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

This CARRA Registry study will create a foundational database for rheumatic diseases of childhood using a novel informatics infrastructure developed as part of the larger clinical project. The creation of a CARRA-wide informatics infrastructure will enable efficient, observational, disease-related data capture across all CARRA sites for pediatric rheumatic diseases. The CARRA Registry study will demonstrate the feasibility of expanding to more data intensive registries for observational studies, comparative effectiveness research, pharmaceutical clinical trials and translational research.

NCT ID: NCT01673633 Completed - Systemic Sclerosis Clinical Trials

Sacroiliitis in Systemic Sclerosis

Start date: January 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

One of the major problems of systemic sclerosis (SSc) patients is suggested to be articular involvement. Mostly involved joints in SSc were reported as wrist, carpometacarpal-interphalangeal, foot, knee, hip and shoulder however there have been little knowledge on sacroiliac joint. Here the investigators plan a study on the involvement of this joint in SSc.

NCT ID: NCT01670565 Completed - Systemic Sclerosis Clinical Trials

Belimumab for the Treatment of Diffuse Cutaneous Systemic Sclerosis

Start date: August 2012
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This is a 48 week, phase IIa, single center, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, proof-of-concept pilot study. All participants will first be treated with mycophenolate mofetil (MMF, Cellcept) and titrated up to a dose of 2 grams/day. Following this period, half will be given either a belimumab (Benlysta®) or placebo intravenous infusion to treat early diffuse cutaneous systemic sclerosis. Belimumab/MMF is expected to improve disease activity measured by an improvement in skin thickening and stability of pulmonary function test measurements when compared to patients treated with placebo/MMF.

NCT ID: NCT01667042 Completed - Scleroderma Lung Clinical Trials

Scleroderma Lung: Role of Gastroesophageal Reflux, Microaspiration and Cough

Start date: August 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

This is a mechanistic research study to evaluate the relationship between cough, reflux, and aspiration in patients with systemic sclerosis (scleroderma).

NCT ID: NCT01651143 Completed - Systemic Sclerosis Clinical Trials

Proof of Biological Activity of SAR100842 in Systemic Sclerosis

Start date: January 2013
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Primary Objective: - To evaluate safety and tolerability of 8-week oral administration of SAR100842 in patients with diffuse, cutaneous systemic sclerosis. Secondary Objectives: - To evaluate the pharmacodynamic effect of SAR100842 in patients with systemic sclerosis as measured by disease related biomarkers and Lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) receptor signaling markers in blood and skin - To explore the effect of SAR100842 on skin thickness in patients with systemic sclerosis as measured by the Modified Rodnan Skin score (mRSS) - To explore the effect of SAR100842 on quality of life as measured by the Scleroderma Modified Health Assessment Questionnaire (SHAQ).

NCT ID: NCT01570764 Completed - Systemic Sclerosis Clinical Trials

Cyclophosphamide Systemic Sclerosis Associated Interstitial Lung Disease

SCLEROCYC
Start date: January 14, 2013
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

By including in this study patients with significant worsening of their lung volumes and / or their DLCO (carbon monoxide diffusing capacity) in the previous year, on the basis of an open retrospective study we recently conducted, we hope to demonstrate that a strategy combining prednisone and intravenous cyclophosphamide therapy is accompanied by an increase in the frequency stabilization / improvement of lung volumes and / or DLCO of patients at 12 months of 15% in the placebo and prednisone cyclophosphamide 50% in cyclophosphamide and prednisone.We also hope to demonstrate significant decrease in the number of patients excluded for failure in the CYC arm as compared to the placebo arm.

NCT ID: NCT01553981 Completed - Clinical trials for Lung Diseases, Interstitial

A Trial of Tadalafil in Interstitial Lung Disease of Scleroderma

Start date: March 2012
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Systemic sclerosis (SSc, scleroderma) is a multisystem autoimmune rheumatic disease that causes inflammation, vascular damage and fibrosis. Besides involvement of skin, fibrosis also affects lung and heart. Although advances in understanding in pathophysiology and use of immunosuppressive therapy has brought significant improvement in outcome of other autoimmune diseases, scleroderma still remains as a disease with high mortality and 10 yr survival rate has improved only from 54% to 66% during last 25 years1. The frequency of deaths due to renal crisis significantly decreased (mainly due to effectiveness of ACE Inhibitors), from 42% to 6% of scleroderma-related deaths (p 0.001), whereas the proportion of patients with scleroderma who died of pulmonary fibrosis increased (due to lack of significant treatment) from 6% to 33% (p 0.001). However, presently, trials with immunosuppressive drugs including cyclophosphamide and other targeted molecules like Bosentan and Imatinib mesylate have shown very modest results at the best and given the risk of toxicity. The investigators have conducted three clinical trials with PDE5 inhibitor Tadalafil in the refractory Raynaud's phenomenon (RP) in SSc over last 3 years and had found good response in RP, healing of digital ulcers, prevention of new digital ulcers and also observed improvement in skin tightening, endothelial dysfunction and improvement of quality of life. The investigators therefore hypothesize that tadalafil may have an efficacy in improving the ILD of SSc. The investigators therefore design this double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial of oral Tadalafil (20 mg alternate day) in patients with SSc having ILD. Patients will be randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to receive either Tadalafil or matched placebo and will be followed up for 6 months. Prednisolone (if required for indications other than ILD) will be allowed up to 10 mg/d in all patients. Patient/s requiring more than 10 mg/d of prednisolone or equivalent dose of steroid will be excluded from the study. Patients who will fail on therapy during the study will be excluded from the study and will be asked to choose any therapeutic option from the rescue protocol. Patients with FVC ≤ 70% predicted or DLCO ≤ 70 % of predicted, Evidence of ILD on HRCT will be enrolled. The primary objective of the study will be the change in FVC (expressed as a percentage of the predicted value) from baseline values at the end of 6-months of treatment. The secondary objectives will be improvement in dyspnea, improvement in 6 min walk distance, change in DLCO, change in total lung capacity, change in the disability index of the Health Assessment Questionnaire (S HAQ), and change quality of life (SF-36), levels of NT pro-BNP and fibrosis markers.

NCT ID: NCT01538719 Completed - Systemic Sclerosis Clinical Trials

IL1-TRAP, Rilonacept, in Systemic Sclerosis

Start date: December 2011
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Scleroderma,also known as systemic sclerosis (SSc), is a multisystem disease affecting skin and other tissues including joints, muscles, lungs, the gastrointestinal tract and kidneys and tissue fibrosis is widespread. SSc presents special problems for developing therapies due to the heterogeneous clinical presentation, the variability of disease progression and the difficulty quantifying the extent of disease. For most disease manifestations, treatment is primarily symptomatic and generally inadequate. This study will utilize a 4-gene biomarker of skin disease as the primary efficacy outcome in a short duration, placebo-controlled clinical trial of rilonacept, designed to provide preliminary data for a larger trial. These gene biomarkers should provide a strong surrogate for such trials in the future and, if IL-1 is indeed the cytokine leading to fibrosis in this disease, provide a highly significant start to finding a therapeutic for SSc that for the first time might dramatically affect fibrosis. A central hypothesis of this study is that IL-1 inhibition will downregulate the 4-gene biomarker over a relatively short period of time, much shorter than is historically thought necessary to see changes in the MRSS, a skin score measurement tool. Entry criteria will include the recent onset of diffuse cutaneous SSc as this is the population most likely to show progressive skin disease and also the population examined in previous studies showing correlations between MRSS and the 4-gene biomarker. Secondary outcomes will include other validated measures of SSc disease activity. MRSS and SSc health assessment questionnaire (SHAQ), will be followed during the trial. This study will also test the effect of rilonacept on global skin gene expression using microarray analyses of skin biopsies. In addition, serum biomarkers of SSc disease activity (COMP, THS-1 and IFI44) and a biomarker of inflammasome activation (CRP) will be tested before and after treatment.

NCT ID: NCT01532869 Completed - Sclerosis, Systemic Clinical Trials

A Study of RoActemra/Actemra (Tocilizumab) Versus Placebo in Patients With Systemic Sclerosis

Start date: March 2012
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, two-arm, parallel-group study will evaluate the efficacy and safety of RoActemra/Actemra (tocilizumab) in patients with systemic sclerosis. Patients will be randomized to receive either RoActemra/Actemra 162 mg subcutaneously weekly or placebo for 48 weeks. From Week 49 to Week 96, all patients will receive open-label RoActemra/Actemra 162 mg subcutaneously weekly. Anticipated time on study treatment is 96 weeks.