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Active clinical trials for "Crohn Disease"

Results 911-920 of 1510

High-dose Cyclophosphamide for Severe Refractory Crohn Disease

Crohn's DiseaseCrohn Disease

This research is being done to see if people with Crohn's disease who receive high-dose cyclophosphamide have an improvement of their disease, how long the benefit may last, and how safe cyclophosphamide is. This study is for patient with medically refractory disease that is not easily amenable to surgery. Cyclophosphamide is an FDA-approved chemotherapy medication that is also frequently used to treat autoimmune illness; use of cyclophosphamide for autoimmune disease is not approved by the FDA. An autoimmune illness is when the immune system mistakenly attacks self, targeting the cells, tissues, and organs of a person's own body. There are many different autoimmune diseases and they can each affect the body is different ways. Crohn's disease is an autoimmune disease that primarily affects the small and large intestines. High dose-cyclophosphamide has been successfully used to treat Crohn's, primarily as part of a conditioning regimen for autologous stem cell transplantation. However, this therapy is limited in Crohn's because of it's serious infectious risks. This current study involves using high-dose cyclophosphamide without need for stem cell transplantation. This appears to be a safer approach in other autoimmune illnesses that have been studied.

Withdrawn16 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of the Diagnostic Value of microRNAs for Inflammatory Bowel Diseases

Ulcerative ColitisCrohn Disease2 more

The purpose of this study is to assess the diagnostic value of microRNAs in IBD colon (ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease) in adults as compared to healthy controls (and non-IBD colitis)

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Non-invasive Approaches to Identify the Cause of Fatigue in Inflammatory Bowel Disease Patients....

Crohn Disease

Crohn's disease (CD) presents with severe symptoms, but fatigue is a very predominant symptom that negatively impacts upon quality of life. Fatigue affects ~40% of patients when well and 80% of patients when the disease is active. It is the second commonest symptom that an IBD patient gets throughout their life-time. The IBD priority-setting partnership between the James Lind Alliance and the British Society of Gastroenterology has recently identified fatigue as an area of unmet clinical need and a priority research field, in which diagnosis and therapeutic intervention are lacking. Based on other diseases that present with fatigue, the cause of fatigue may be divided into peripheral fatigue, mainly driven by anomalies in muscle mass and function and central fatigue, mainly driven through decreased blood supply to the brain during exercise probably due to decreased heart and lung fitness. Research in IBD fatigue until now has been patchy with no convincing evidence that any treatment helps. There has been no research aimed at studying whole body function. It is imperative to have a better understanding of the alterations in muscle, brain, heart and lung function seen in these patients before specific treatments are researched. In this study, the investigators aim to recruit 32 CD patients, half with fatigue and half without. Subjects with active disease or with other known reasons of fatigue will be excluded. Findings in this group will be compared to 16 other healthy control volunteers of a similar age, gender and Body Mass Index. The study aims to recruit all participants over 36 months, and will target people aged from 16 to 60 years of age. Once recruited, the participants will be asked to provide their consent to take-part in 3 experiments on two separate days. These experiments have been designed to carefully consider potential fatigue burden, experimental practicality, and participant availability. Objective 1: The investigators aim to measure muscle fitness and strength by asking subjects to exercise using a stepper, whilst body mass and composition will be measured using an X-ray. This session will take 2 hours and be undertaken on one day. Objective 2: Peripheral fatigue: The investigators aim to non-invasively measure the recovery of muscle physiology after exercise by using magnetic resonance imaging after 5 min of exercise undertaken with a limb cuff. This will take ~1 hour. Objective 3: Central fatigue: while in the scanner and performing exercise, the investigators aim to non-invasively measure heart and brain blood flow before and after a few minutes of exercise using magnetic resonance imaging. This will take 2 hours. Experimental work for Objectives 2 and 3 will be undertaken on the same day. There will be ample time for recovery in between and during the different studies. There will be no further commitment from the participants required after these 2 study visits. IBD fatigue has never been studied in such detail. This unique work will allow identification of fatigue mechanisms, which can then be targeted with exercise, nutritional, or medical treatments.

Completed42 enrollment criteria

Effectiveness of Vedolizumab in CD Patients Naïve to Anti-TNF

Crohn Disease

Anti-cytokine antibodies, such as Infliximab (an anti TNF alfa chimeric antibody) and Adalimumab (an anti TNF alfa humanize antibody), have been developed and used in clinical practice for the treatment of patients with Crohn disease (CD). Unfortunately, their efficacy is limited. Based on these concepts, a new drug has been developed for IBD treatment. Vedolizumab (VDZ) is able to recognize the α4β7 heterodimer, and selectively blocks gut lymphocyte trafficking. The hypothesis of this study is that VDZ therapy may be to halt CD disease progression during time and modifying its natural history, using Lemann Index.

Withdrawn15 enrollment criteria

Postoperative REcurrence and DynamICs of T Cell Subsets in Crohn's Disease

Crohn Disease

It is assumed that gut inflammation and lesions characterizing flares of Crohn's disease (CD) result from an aberrant T-cell mediated immune responses characterized by a complex balance between peripheral and lamina propria regulatory and effector T cell subsets. Because most of CD patients who undergo a surgery experienced a postoperative endoscopic recurrence of the disease (70 % at one year) leading to a clinical recurrence (10 % per year), the "model" of postoperative recurrence in CD represents a privileged situation that mimicks what happens in the gut of CD patients in clinical remission before the occurrence of further flares. It is likely that the same factors which underlie the immunopathogenesis of CD at its early stages also contribute to disease recurrence in the postoperative setting. Indeed, the postoperative state is performed for intent of disease remission and this situation represents probably an ideal setting to investigate the dynamics of most of T cell subsets in the peripheral and mucosal compartments because one may argue that removal of the diseased segment of bowel resets the disease to its earliest phases, providing an interesting window to better understand which T cell subsets predispose to disease recurrence. That is the reason why this model will be used in the present project i) to understand better the immunopathogenesis of CD relapse; ii) to identify novel and promising immune cell-associated biomarkers capable to predict relapse of the disease and finally iii) to identify potential specific therapeutic target associated with T cell subsets involved in the initiation of disease.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

A Study of Efficacy and Safety of Mongersen (GED-0301) for the Treatment of Adult and Adolescent...

Crohn Disease

The purpose of study is to test the effect of an experimental medication GED-0301(mongersen) and evaluate its safety in patients (≥ 12 years of age) with active Crohn's disease. The study will test GED-0301 compare to placebo for 12 weeks. The study treatment is blinded which means that patients and the study doctor will not know which treatment has been assigned. Patients in this study will be allowed treatment with stable doses of oral aminosalicylates, oral corticosteroids, immunosupressants and antibiotics for the treatment of Crohn's disease. Adolescent patients will also be allowed treatment with stable doses of exclusive enteral nutrition and growth hormone. All patients who complete the study will have the option to enter a long term active treatment study.

Withdrawn13 enrollment criteria

Ciprofloxacin for the Prevention of Postoperative Endoscopic Recurrence in Crohn's Disease

Crohn's Disease

Despite extensive medical treatment, surgical resection is required in approximately 70% of the patients at some time. However, recurrence of the disease after operation occurs in the majority of patients and is a serious limitation of surgical management. Therapeutic options to maintain postoperative clinical remission are urgently needed. Several drugs including mesalazine, antibiotics (metronidazole, ornidazole) and azathioprine or 6-mercaptopurine have been studied in the past. But the efficacy is very limited (mesalazine), overshadowed by intolerability during long-term therapy (metronidazole, ornidazole) or inconclusive (azathioprine or 6-mercaptopurine). Research demonstrating the absence of inflammation in patients with diverting ileostomy and the clinical benefit of a postoperative antibiotic therapy using metronidazole or ornidazole implicates a role of the resident bacterial flora in the postoperative relapse. Ciprofloxacin has a broad antibacterial spectrum. More interestingly it also suppresses E. coli strains, which can be found in high numbers in early and chronic ileal lesions of Crohn's disease patients Ciprofloxacin has demonstrated beneficial effects in the therapy of inflammatory bowel diseases, but the available data of the effectiveness of ciprofloxacin allow only a very limited judgement of the safety and tolerability of a 6 months therapy of ciprofloxacin. Therefore an exploratory multicenter prospective, placebo-controlled trial is planned to analyze the safety and tolerability of a 6 months therapy with ciprofloxacin compared to placebo in 40 patients (randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio) undergoing ileocecal resection (or resection of parts of the colon). If this therapeutic regimen demonstrates tolerability, a second larger study improving the superiority of ciprofloxacin versus placebo can be initiated.

Completed29 enrollment criteria

Evaluate Efficacy of Certolizumab in Crohn's Patients With Draining Fistulas

Crohn Disease

To investigate the clinical efficacy of certolizumab pegol for fistula closure in Crohn's disease subjects with active draining fistulas.

Withdrawn4 enrollment criteria

Cannabidiol Usage as an Adjunct Therapy for Crohn's Disease

Crohn DiseaseInflammatory Bowel Diseases1 more

To date, few studies have assessed the efficacy and safety of Cannabinoids, compounds derived from the Cannabis plant, in patients with Crohn's disease. Our study seeks to pilot a randomized, placebo-controlled trial assessing the efficacy and safety of oral cannabinoids as an adjunct therapy in patients with Crohn's disease.

Withdrawn9 enrollment criteria

A Study of Oral Foralumab in Participants With Moderate to Severely Active Crohn's Disease

Crohn's Disease

The primary objective of this study is to establish the safety and tolerability of multiple ascending doses (MAD) of foralumab enteric coated capsules administered orally, once daily for 5 days per week over 2 weeks in participants with moderate to severely active Crohn's Disease (CD).

Withdrawn31 enrollment criteria
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