View clinical trials related to Takayasu Arteritis.
Filter by:The aim was to analyze the problem in patients with Takayasu Arteritis based on the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health.The sample of our study will consist of individuals between the ages of 18-65 who have been diagnosed with Takayasu Arteritis by rheumatologists and are followed by Pamukkale University Rheumatology Clinic.
The aim of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of remote ischemic conditioning ( RIC ) in the protection of cerebral ischemia in patients with Takayasu arteritis ( TAK ). The study was designed as a prospective, double-blind, exploratory randomized controlled study. The entire study included a screening period and a treatment observation period ( a total of 24 weeks ). All patients with cerebral ischemia of TAK will be randomly divided into RIC group and sham RIC group at 1:1 ratio. On the basis of receiving the conventional drug therapy, the patients will be treated with RIC or sham RIC treatment twice daily for six month. The clinical data of patients at baseline and each follow-up will be collected, including basic information, disease activity assessment, laboratory indicators, imaging indicators, treatment data, adverse events, etc.The Primary outcome is the mean cerebral blood flow improvement rate ( mCBF-IR ) of TAK patients after 24 weeks-treatment. Secondary endpoints include the incidence of major adverse cerebrovascular events ( MACE ) , the change value of arterial transit time ( ATT ) in pCASL hypoperfusion area compared with baseline, occurrence of RIC-related adverse reactions, the changes of hematological indexes and disease activity score, etc. This study will provide insights into the preliminary proof of principle, safety, and efficacy of RIC in cerebral ischemia in patients with Takayasu arteritis ( TAK ), and this data will provide parameters for future larger scale clinical trials if efficacious.
Longitudinal prospective multicenter Armenian registry of systemic autoimmune, autoinflammatory diseases with constitution of bio-banking.
This is a prospective, double-blinded, single center, randomized clinical trial. It compares the clinical efficacy and safety of thees 2 drugs in the treatment of active Takayasu's arteritis patients.
1. Evaluate the effect of medical treatment and percutaneous transluminal pulmonary angioplasty on takayasu arteritis with pulmonary artery involvement 2. evaluate the efficacy of FAPI in predicting the activity and treatment efficacy of takayasu arteritis with pulmonary artery involvement
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)
This is a prospective,open-labelled,multi-center,randomized clinical trial.It compares the clinical efficacy and safety of there 2 drugs in the treatment of relapse active Takayasu's arteritis patients.
The aim of this study is to evaluate and compare the efficacy and safety of tofacitinib and methotrexate based on prednisone therapy in patients with Takayasu arteritis
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of ustekinumab compared to placebo, in combination with oral glucocorticoid (GC) taper regimen, in participants with relapsing Takayasu Arteritis (TAK).
Takayasu arteritis (TA) is a vasculitis of unknown origin, resulting in progressive thickening and stenosis of large and medium arteries (the aorta and its major branches, and the pulmonary arteries). First line therapy of TA consists of high dose corticosteroids (CS). Between 20 and 50% of cases respond to CS alone, with subsequent resolution of symptoms and stabilization of vascular abnormalities. Although second-line agents (methotrexate, azathioprine, mercaptopurine, mycophenolate mofetil) may result in initial remission, relapses remain common when prednisone is tapered. Thus, 50% of CS-resistant or relapsing TA patients may achieve sustained remission with the addition of methotrexate. During the last decade, biologics such as anti-tumor necrosis factor alpha (anti-TNFα) and anti-interleukin-6 (anti-IL-6) have been used as third-line treatment in refractory or relapsing TA. Almost 90% of CS-methotrexate resistant TA cases responded to infliximab, an anti-TNFα, and sustained remission was obtained in 37 to 76% of the cases. Tocilizumab, an anti-IL-6 has given similar results with 68% of sustained remission in refractory TA. Irrespective of classical cardiovascular risk factors, the systemic inflammation and CS use play a pivotal role in the occurrence of cardiovascular thrombotic events (CVEs). As CVEs overlap with TA complications it is primordial to drastically taper CS in that vasculitis. We therefore hypothesize that Infliximab or Tocilizumab can achieve a remission in more than 70% of refractory/relapsing TA cases to CS associated to a second-line agent. INTOReTAK, first randomized prospective study in TA, has an original design testing Infliximab and Tocilizumab propensity to achieve over 70% of sustained remission in refractory/relapsing TA and evaluating jointly the 2 arms. The primary objective of this study is to obtain, by arm, ≥ 70% of patients at 6 months after randomization with prednisone ≤ 0.1mg/kg per day and inactive disease (NIH score ≤ 1) during the last 3 months.