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Active clinical trials for "Inflammatory Bowel Diseases"

Results 141-150 of 1072

Vedolizumab Study With Inflammatory Bowel Disease Patients in Germany

Inflammatory Bowel DiseasesTreatment

This study on biologics (Vedolizumab/anti-TNF) in the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients in Germany extends the prospective documentation of efficacy in induction and maintenance therapy of anti-TNF to the use of Vedolizumab with a particular interest in the construction of a multifactorial model to predict long-term responses and favorable disease outcome or to predict severe side effects caused by therapy with biologics. Little data are available on the efficacy and safety of biologics in Germany in a real world situation. While the increasing use of anti-TNF-alpha antibodies in IBD-patients the new therapy with Vedolizumab opens up new opportunities in IBD-therapy, it may also pose new options and problems in terms of efficacy and predictors of response and potential side effects.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

Xylitol Use for Decolonization of C. Difficile in Patients With IBD

Inflammatory Bowel DiseasesClostridioides Difficile Infection

This is a randomized placebo controlled study to assess the safety and efficacy of xylitol as an oral therapeutic for decolonization of C. difficile in IBD patients. A total of 72 patients who meet eligibility criteria will be randomized 1:1 to either the xylitol or sucralose (placebo) arm. Both arms will receive a dose comprising five capsules BID for four weeks. Microbiome assessment and C. difficile testing will be performed at baseline, week 4, 8, 26, and 52.

Not yet recruiting10 enrollment criteria

A Randomized Crossover Trial of Bright Light Therapy in Crohn's Disease on Intestinal Barrier Homeostasis...

Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Crohn's Disease (CD) and Ulcerative Colitis (UC), collectively known as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), are two of the most significant chronic conditions of the gastrointestinal tract (GIT) and affects over 1.5 million individuals in the U.S. Recently, there has been an increased understanding of the importance of sleep and sleep disruption in IBD as a potentially modifiable risk factor. We, therefore, hypothesize that intervening with morning bright light therapy (BLT) in IBD patients with CM will decrease intestinal permeability and pro-inflammatory cytokines, positively impact intestinal microbiota, and improve quality of life (QoL).

Recruiting13 enrollment criteria

Development of Novel Fecal Microbial Biomarkers for Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Inflammatory Bowel DiseasesUlcerative Colitis2 more

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), including Crohn's disease (CD) and Ulcerative colitis (UC), is a chronic idiopathic inflammatory condition of the intestine. Endoscopy has been used to monitor the disease, but it is time-consuming, costly, invasive, and associated with certain risks of morbidity. Many patients are reluctant to undergo repeated endoscopic examinations, particularly when their disease is quiescent. Acute phase reactants have been used to monitor disease including C-reactive protein and stool leucocyte markers including fecal calprotectin, but their sensitivity and specificity in correlating to intestinal inflammation activity are low. Clinical challenge of patient heterogeneity in disease phenotype and response to therapy has compounded discovery of disease-related biomarkers. In IBD, altered fecal microbiota signatures have been consistently reported which included a reduction in biodiversity with lower proportions of Firmicutes and increases in Proteobacteria and Bacteroidetes phylum members. Moreover, overall bacterial diversity is consistently decreased in IBD patients compared to controls. Even though a number of fecal biomarkers have been evaluated for their utility for disease diagnosis in IBD, to date none has been accurate enough for clinical application. Therefore, identification and validation of a non-invasive biomarker which can be easily applied in disease diagnosis and prognosis is warranted to provide an earlier opportunity to intervene. In this study, it aims to develop a metagenomics-based model using fecal microbial biomarkers for differentiating IBD patients from healthy controls, and then validate these fecal microbial biomarkers in different populations.

Recruiting19 enrollment criteria

Precision Diagnostics of Functional and Organic Intestinal Pathology Based on Cellular and Molecular...

Inflammatory Bowel DiseasesIrritable Bowel Syndrome1 more

Differential diagnosis of functional and organic intestinal pathology is carried out in line with approved clinical guidelines and includes a significant list of interventions. However, considering the possibility of an "overlap" between functional and organic diseases, as well as the non-specificity of a number of assessment parameters, it is advisably to define new diagnostic approaches and reliable cell and molecular markers, that will update and ensure the precision diagnostics of intestinal diseases. The integrative functional, cell and molecular markers will create the basis and possibilities for the personalized selection of patient therapy. The study is intended to develop the methods of precision diagnostics based on cellular-molecular profiling with an assessment of functional parameters of the intestine in functional and organic intestinal diseases.

Recruiting24 enrollment criteria

Therapeutic Monitoring of Infliximab and Adalimumab

Inflammatory Bowel Diseases

Anti tumor necrosis factor (TNF agents), particularly infliximab and adalimumab, changed the way chronic inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) refractory to conventional therapies is treated, including in pediatric patients. However, approximately 10-30% of patients do not respond to initial therapy and up to 50% lose response over time. Variability in response to therapy may be influenced by multiple interacting factors at different levels. Recent studies showed that measurement of serum infliximab concentrations during induction therapy predicts treatment effects at one year. Therefore, therapeutic monitoring of infliximab is proposed as a useful strategy to improve clinical outcomes and optimize healthcare resources. Most commercially available methods for infliximab quantification are based on the ELISA assay, which has an assay time of at least 8 hours. Recently, commercial point-of-care devices became available with assay times of less than one hour, enabling real-time therapeutic drug monitoring; however, validation of these devices in clinical settings and comparison with standard assays are still needed, particularly in pediatric patients. In addition, some studies suggest that loss of response in patients treated with anti-TNFs may be partly due to the emergence of specific anti-drug antibodies (AAFs). A limitation of the most widely used ELISA assays is the inability to quantify drug and AAF when they are simultaneously present. Recently, innovative ELISA assays have become available to overcome this problem. However, there is a lack of comparative studies between the classical and the specific method in terms of clinical response in pediatric patients. In patients who do not respond to infliximab, especially if they have high levels of AAF, guidelines call for the use of adalimumab. For this drug, the evidence in the literature regarding therapeutic monitoring of adalimumab concentrations and association with response in pediatric patients is still very preliminary. This study, carried out in in pediatric patients with IBD, aims to: validate the "point of care" infliximab assay by comparing it with reference ELISA assays; evaluate the correlation of infliximab and AAF levels, as measured by the innovative ELISA assays, with response to therapy, compared to traditional assays. evaluate the association between adalimumab and AAF levels and response to therapy

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Gallstones and Risk of Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Inflammatory Bowel Diseases

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the association between gallstone disease and the risk of inflammatory bowel disease.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Dietary Intervention for Inflammatory Bowel Disease Remission

Inflammatory Bowel Diseases

To compare adding dietary intervention based on MD to dietary intervention based on IBD-AID on induction of disease remission of IBD patients receiving pharmacotherapy. To compare patients' adherence to dietary intervention based on MD to dietary intervention based on IBD-AID, and the impact of adherence on induction of remission among patients with IBD receiving pharmacotherapy.

Not yet recruiting6 enrollment criteria

Influence of HLA-DQA1*05 Genotype in Adults With Anti-TNF Treatment With Proactive Therapeutic Drug...

Drug MonitoringInflammatory Bowel Diseases

HLA-DQA1*05 variant carriers are at risk of developing antibodies against infliximab and adalimumab with reduced TNF antagonist persistence. The impact of proactive therapeutic drug monitoring (PTDM) on this association has been barely assessed. Therefor, we propose a cohort study including adult patients with Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis treated with TNF antagonists under proactive therapeutic drug monitoring. Our hypothesis is that, proactive therapeutic drug monitoring could be an alternative to combination treatment with immunomodulators to increase TNF-antagonists' persistence in HLA-DQA1*05 carriers.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

Saffron as Anti Inflammatory In Patients With Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Ulcerative Colitis

Nutritional Saffron supplement has been widely used as food supplement and has known anti-depressant and anti-inflammatory activities. The investigators use saffron extract in Egyptian patients with ulcerative colitis for 8 weeks.

Not yet recruiting14 enrollment criteria
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