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Active clinical trials for "Crohn Disease"

Results 1291-1300 of 1510

Stricture Definition and Treatment (STRIDENT) Observational Study.

Inflammatory Bowel DiseasesCrohn Disease2 more

Two thirds of patients with Crohn's disease require intestinal surgery at some time in their life. Intestinal strictures, that is narrowing of the bowel due to inflammation and scarring, are the most common reason for surgery. Despite the high frequency, associated disability, and cost there are no are no treatment strategies that aim to improve the outcome of this disease complication. The STRIDENT (stricture definition and treatment) studies aim to determine biochemical and imaging features associated with the development of strictures and in related STRIDENT studies develop strategies for treatment.

Terminated7 enrollment criteria

Contrast Enhanced Ultrasonography (CEUS) of Patients With Crohn's Disease

Crohn's Disease

The purpose of this study is investigate if high frequency sonography and contrast enhanced sonography can be used to predict remission in patients with deterioration of Crohn's disease treated with steroids or tumor necrosis factor (TNF) alfa inhibitors.

Terminated9 enrollment criteria

Impact of Infliximab in Fistulizing Crohn's Disease on Health Care Resources (Study P04204)(TERMINATED)...

Crohn Disease

A multi-centre retrospective review of fistulizing Crohn's disease (CD) patient charts will capture data to measure health care resource utilization associated with the use of Infliximab for treatment of CD. Three health science centres/hospitals from Ontario are targeted to participate in the study, each site is expected to provide 30-40 patient charts with a target of 108 charts total.

Terminated6 enrollment criteria

Identification by Cytometry by Mass of Predictive Immunological Profiles of Answer to Treatmentby...

Crohn Disease

Crohn disease is an inflammatory chronic disease of the bowel the complex physiopathology of which brings in immunological, genetic and environmental factors. At present, the appeal to biotherapics anti-TNFa (infliximab and adalimumab) or anti-IL-12/23 (ustekinumab) in MC represents a major therapeutic progress at the origin of a significant improvement of the symptoms, the healing of the intestinal hurts and the quality of life. Considering the new immunological targets of these biotherapics, the investigators put the hypothesis that an immunological profile (impulsive person and\or tissular) specific of the patients with one MC is associated with the answer to biotherapics. So, before beginning the treatment the patients expressing strongly the pro-inflammatory cytokine TNFa, would more may be answering machines in anti-TNFa and those with whom the immunological profile is very marked towards the way Th1/Th17 would more may answer favorably the ustekinumab. The identification of immunological profiles capable of predicting before treatment the answer under biotherapics could establish in MC but also in other inflammatory diseases a major step forward to guide the coverage.

Withdrawn18 enrollment criteria

CD INFORM: Investigating Natalizumab Through Further Observational Research and Monitoring

Crohn's Disease

The primary objective of the study is to determine the incidence and pattern of serious and/or clinically significant infections, malignancies, and other serious adverse event (SAE) in participants with Crohn's Disease (CD) treated with natalizumab. The secondary objective of this study in this study population is to evaluate disease severity over time in participants with CD treated with natalizumab based on changes in the Harvey-Bradshaw Index (HBI).

Terminated5 enrollment criteria

Volatiles in Exhaled Breath and Blood in Crohn's Disease: Validation Cohort

Crohn's Disease

This study evaluates the use of exhaled air analysis as tool to monitor the disease activity in Crohn's Disease (CD). This study is a validation of the previous findings. In this study the participant will be asked to donate exhaled air, blood samples and fecal samples. The breath samples will be used to measure various volatile metabolites in breath. The breath air will be next used to validate the previous findings. The blood samples will be used to define the origin of volatile metabolites in breath. Finally, the potential of exhaled breath analysis as non-invasive marker of diseases activity will be compared to established fecal calprotectin.

Terminated7 enrollment criteria

Counseling to Optimize Adherence in Expectant Mothers With Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Inflammatory Bowel DiseasesMedication Adherence2 more

Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) is a chronic inflammatory disorder of the gastrointestinal tract that comprises two subtypes, Crohn's disease (CD) and Ulcerative Colitis (UC). Because the risk of IBD is greatest during the third decade of life, its impact for women is during the reproductive years. Women with inflammatory bowel disease are at a 2-fold higher risk of adverse outcomes during pregnancy as compared to the general population. Pregnancy is an especially vulnerable time for women with IBD, and out of misguided concerns that medications may confer unnecessary harms to their fetus, many women often stop taking life savings medications; without realizing that this sub-optimal adherence could actually lead to life threatening complications for them and their fetus. Counseling pregnant women with IBD is therefore an important step in improving medication adherence. The investigators hypothesize that counseling sessions with an IBD nurse that incorporates motivational interviewing and telemedicine-based follow-up sessions tailored to individual needs will improve medication adherence and pregnancy outcomes. The following specific aims are to be addressed by this multi-center randomized clinical trial comparing individual nurse-based counseling to standard of care: Specific Aim #1: To assess whether patient-centered counseling incorporating motivational interviewing and telemedicine-based follow-up by an IBD nurse leads to improved medication adherence during pregnancy and pregnancy outcomes Specific Aim #2: To validate the use of self-reported medication adherence during pregnancy in the IBD population

Unknown status11 enrollment criteria

Study of Inflammatory Markers (VNN1) in Crohn Disease and Ulcerative Colitis.

Inflammatory Bowel Disease (Crohn's Disease and Ulcerative Colitis)

Inflammatory Bowel diseases (IBD) include Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis. IBD's precise origin is unknown until now. Today, the current hypothesis of the disease pathogenesis is that IBD result from a dysregulated mucosal immune response to the gut microbial flora in genetically susceptible hosts. The intestinal homeostasis depends on interactions between immune and epithelial cells. Epithelial cells are the first line of defense, are tightly connected to the underlying gut associated lymphoid tissue and their alteration results in loss of tissue homeostasis. Vanin-1 (Vnn1 in mice, VNN1 in humans) is an epithelial pantheinase which regulates the cell response to stress. This ectoenzyme hydrolyses the vitamin B5-derivative pantetheine to provide cysteamine to tissues and regenerate pantothenate. Previous studies have shown that Vnn1 KO mice were more resistant to experimental colitis and administration of cystamine (oxidized form of cysteamine) restored their susceptibility to colitis. Furthermore, analysis of VNN1 expression in IBD patients show that high VNN1 expression is associated with severe clinical features. Thus, analysis of VNN1 expression could represent a good prognostic marker. In a recent published article, we characterized among a retrospective cohort of 500 IBD patients and controls new SNPs (single nucleotide polymorphisms) in the VNN1 promoter and showed their association with IBD incidence and high VNN1 expression. This suggested that the VNN1gene might be a new predisposition marker of IBD. In mouse, Vnn1 expression is tightly regulated by activation of PPARa and PPARg transcription factors. Interestingly, one of the SNPs identified in patients participates to a PPARg binding site. Interestingly, drugs related to the family of 5-ASA which are commonly used in IBD, have PPARgamma agonist potential. Therefore, quantifying VNN1 levels in patients under 5-ASA therapy might help predicting response to therapy and select patients with the highest benefit for this therapy. The purpose of this new project is to extend our initial analysis. The study will be prospective, monocentric and controlled. Its primary objective is to evaluate the level of VNN1 expression in the colonic mucosa between IBD patients and control subjects to confirm the correlation between high VNN1 expression and IBD. In relation with its prospective nature, we will also try to associate VNN1 expression level with specific endophenotypes (severity and/or localization of the lesions, quality of the response to therapy). Finally, we will screen patients for the previously identified SNPs to integrate this information in the interpretation of the results of expression analysis. This study is planned on 2 years. Two groups of patients will be constituted: one group will include IBD patients followed in the " Service de Gastro-entérologie du Pr Grimaud à l'Hôpital Nord " and the other group will constitute the control cohort including persons who were proposed a screening colonoscopy for familial history of colon cancer or polyps, or for Irritable Bowel Syndrome. The investigator will have to fill a questionnaire for each included patient, collecting information about age, sex, past medical history, taken medicine, digestive symptoms and colonoscopy indication. IBD patients will have a first set of biopsies (n = 10) and blood samples collected under general anesthesia during a colonoscopy planned in their IBD usual follow-up; a second set of similar samples will be collected within the next 12 months if an endoscopic control is medically justified. The control subjects will have only one set of biopsy and blood samples collected under general anesthesia during their colonoscopy. In the particular case of IBD patients who require surgery, a small piece of the resection will be collected ex-vivo on both healthy and pathologic areas. The blood sample will serve for quantification of the VNN1 seric pantheteinase activity and SNP's genetic study. The colonic biopsies will be obtained in duplicates from 5 different ileocolonic areas, one for histopathological analysis and the other for transcriptional analysis by qRT-PCR. The surgical samples will be used for transcriptional activity, tissue pantheteinase activity and constitution of TMA (Tissue MicroArrays) bank for immunohistochemistry. Expected benefits are to validate a new IBD prognostic marker for disease severity or potentially for evaluation of the therapeutic response.

Unknown status7 enrollment criteria

Preemptive HLA Genotyping for the Safe Use of Infliximab-combination Therapy in Inflammatory Bowel...

Inflammatory Bowel DiseasesUlcerative Colitis1 more

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a common disease in Canada, leading to significant morbidity as a result of remitting and relapsing intestinal inflammation. Currently, tumor necrosis factor (TNF) antagonists such as infliximab, make up 30% of the biologic agents available to individuals with IBD. There is a high risk of losing response or having a hypersensitivity reaction to infliximab, necessitating treatment discontinuation. This is due, in part, to the formation of anti-drug antibodies (ADAs). ADA formation can result in loss of response to therapy which may eliminate an intestine-saving therapy and increases their risk of progressing to surgical resection. There are few tools clinicians can implement to minimize the risk of ADA formation. The current approach is to add a second drug (known as combination therapy), specifically an immunomodulator (methotrexate or azathioprine), exposing the patient to additional medication-related risks, intensive monitoring with bi-weekly blood work and potential side effects including infection and malignancy. Preliminary data from our group as well as others suggests that individuals who carry a variant in the class 2 human leukocyte antigen (HLA) gene (HLADQA1*05A>G, rs2097432) are more likely to form ADAs to infliximab. Pre-emptive screening for this variant may allow clinicians to more selectively use combination therapy, recommending it only in IBD patients at high risk of developing ADAs to infliximab. Additionally, this may result in fewer drug-associated adverse events. With this project, we aim to explore the value of prospective HLADQA1*05 screening (pharmacogenomic screening) in IBD patients being considered for treatment with infliximab and using the result to guide the application of combination therapy compared to IBD patients treated with infliximab (with or without a second agent) as per current practice. We will assess the incidence of infliximab ADA formation, as well as the incidence of infliximab loss of response, treatment discontinuation, and adverse drug events. Additionally, we will assess the time to each of these events.

Unknown status9 enrollment criteria

Digital Nutrition Therapy for Patients With IBD

Crohn DiseaseUlcerative Colitis

Background: Alberta's Center of Excellence for Nutrition in Digestive Diseases (Ascend) is dedicated to generating new discoveries regarding the link between nutrition and digestive diseases and mobilizing existing research to change the way physicians treat conditions such as inflammatory bowel disease, cirrhosis and intestinal failure. Ascend is a collaboration of excellence within the Department of Medicine, Division of Gastroenterology at both the University of Calgary and University of Alberta. Dr. Raman, PI, is the Director of Ascend. One of Ascend's primary initiatives is the development of a digital health platform for patients living with both Crohn's disease (CD) and Ulcerative colitis (UC). Dr. Raman and her team have developed an app called LyfeMD, by translating leading scientific research into a practical and engaging digital format. LyfeMD is meant to help people live and thrive while managing their inflammatory disease with holistic, easy-to-implement, evidence based lifestyle therapies. LyfeMD is one app with multiple features - ranging from customized diet using anti-inflammatory principles identified from recent research led by Dr. Raman's team, and exercise plans to mindfulness and stress reduction programs. It helps patients make therapeutic diet choices to treat inflammation and provides stress reduction strategies when they feel unwell. The LyfeMD app also supports patients to maintain remission even when they're feeling well with trusted resources designed to keep them symptom free. In addition to delivering personalized and interactive support, the app uses behavior science to help patients change their habits, improve their health and reduce the burden IBD places on their lives. With proprietary research and a team made up of internationally recognized leaders in the gastrointestinal field, LyfeMD is poised to be the trusted digital health solution for people living with IBD.

Unknown status6 enrollment criteria
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