View clinical trials related to Synovitis.
Filter by:This study, designed as a proof of concept study of MCS110 in pigmented villonodular synovitis, assessed the clinical response to MCS110 treatment in Pigmented Villonodular Synovitis (PVNS) patients, after a single or multiple intravenous doses of MCS110, using magnetic resonance imaging to assess tumor volume, and evaluated the pharmacokinetics/pharmacodynamics, safety and tolerability in this population.
This research study is being conducted to determine if taking oral (by mouth in pill form) Apatone®B (a combination of Vitamins C and K3) will reduce chronic joint discomfort and improve function of non-infected symptomatic postoperative total joint replacements.
The purpose of this study is to explore the efficacy of nilotinib as a treatment of patients with progressive or relapsing pigmented villo-nodular synovitis / tenosynovial giant cell tumour (PVNS/TGCT) who cannot be treated by surgery. The primary objective of the study will be to determine the efficacy of 12 weeks (3 months) of nilotinib treatment as measured by the non progression rate (Complete response + Partial Response + Stable disease according to Response Evaluation Criteria In Solid Tumours - RECIST version 1.1) in patients with progressive or relapsing PVNS/TGCT who cannot be treated by surgery. this study is an international, multicentre, non-randomized, open-label phase II clinical trial with a Bayesian design. A maximum sample size of 50 patients will be included in the study
The purpose of this study is to determine whether Certolizumab pegol can rapidly reduce the inflammatory changes and inhibit erosions on hand and wrist MRI in patients with active moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis.
The CIRAS study will investigate postmenopausal breast cancer patients with hand pain and compare those receiving aromatase inhibitors (cases) to breast cancer patients with hand pain not receiving aromatase inhibitors (controls) in order assess whether this syndrome is an inflammatory arthritis.
To assess the therapeutic efficacy, of the clinical response of intraarticular (IA) etanercept (E) 12.5 mg or placebo (P: NaCl) injections into single knee arthritic joint of patients with refractory knee joint synovitis (KJS), administered once every two week, for eight weeks, with cross over after 2 weeks, in two groups of randomly assigned patients, for whom traditional systemic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs) is insufficient or inappropriate. The primary outcome measure is the Thompson articular index of KJS disease activity.
The purpose of this study is to determine the effect of a chondroitin sulphate conventional treatment on the degree of severity of synovitis, as measured by magnetic resonance in patients with knee OA with clinical synovitis.
This study will evaluate the 2-5 year outcome of a cohort of 250 patients with early synovitis, who were recruited into protocol 94-AR-0194 (The Pathogenesis of Inflammatory Synovitis: A Study of Early Arthritis). Clinical, radiographic, and functional outcome parameters, particularly those relating to articular damage and functional loss, will be evaluated and related back to clinical, serologic, immunogenetic, and pathologic variables identified at the onset of the arthropathy. A model will be generated which incorporates and weighs the variables in order to determine diagnostic and prognostic markers in the early stages of arthritis. Synovial tissue samples have been obtained from the entire cohort at the initial visit of protocol 94-AR-0194. Studies of these biopsies have so far demonstrated evidence for the presence of infectious agents in a proportion of the samples, and have generated information regarding the cytokine profiles in the early stages of synovitis. In an attempt to further define the pathogenetic mechanisms of synovitis longitudinally, biopsies will be repeated on selected subsets of the cohort. Specific questions to be answered relate to the persistence of microbial agents in the synovium, and to the evolution of cellular and molecular mechanisms which mediate the invasive, destructive potential of the synovial lesion. It is anticipated that these studies should prove valuable to clinicians who are attempting to stratify patients for therapeutic strategies, early in their disease course. They should also prove valuable in enhancing the understanding of the pathogenetic mechanisms of synovitis.
The safety profile and efficacy of combination therapy will be evaluated using methotrexate (MTX) and the nucleoside analog fludarabine in 40 patients with severe refractory rheumatoid arthritis. The patients enrolled will be those who have experienced inadequate disease control with MTX alone or in combination with other immunosuppressive drugs such as sulfasalazine (SSZ), cyclosporin A (CsA), or hydroxychloroquine (HCQ). In this randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled trial, patients will be maintained on oral MTX at 17.5 mg/week to which either placebo or subcutaneous fludarabine at 30 mg/m(2) daily for three consecutive days per month will be added for four months. The fludarabine (or placebo) treatment period will be followed by two months of follow-up, at which time patients will be evaluated for response. Patients will be monitored for adverse effects/tolerability, disease activity, and changes in synovial volume as measured by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Additionally synovial biopsies will be obtained before and after treatment for investigation of infiltrating cell numbers and phenotypes, cytokine profiles, Th1 versus Th2 responses, and angiogenesis.
This study will evaluate patients with inflammatory forms of arthritis within the first year of onset. The study will attempt to clarify factors that may predict disease course such as evolution into rheumatoid arthritis (RA) or other chronic inflammatory arthropathies. Synovial biopsies and synovial fluid will be obtained to search for microbial agents and other initiating and modulating factors that may be most readily distinguished early in the disease and to determine the stage of disease at which certain immunologic and hormonal changes become evident. The study will also search for genetic and other features that may be associated with specific forms of inflammatory arthropathies that might predict the subsequent clinical disease course or response to different agents used in treatment of RA, Reiter's syndrome and other types of chronic inflammatory arthropathies.