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Active clinical trials for "Psoriasis"

Results 1341-1350 of 1714

Determination of the Efficacy and Safety of Psirelax in the Relief of the Disease in Psoriasis

Mild to Moderate Psoriasis

Psoriasis is a chronic disorder characterized by erythematous scaly patches which affect the scalp, trunk, extensor surfaces of the limbs and the genital area. The common form of psoriasis is referred to as psoriasis vulgaris. There are several variants of psoriasis such as guttate psoriasis, inverse psoriasis, pustular psoriasis and erythrodermic psoriasis. Psoriasis is highly prevalent in the general population, mainly as a result of its chronicity and the absence of a cure. The estimates of psoriasis prevalence are within the range of 0.5% to 4%. The diagnosis of psoriasis is made on a clinical base, usually by physical examination, performed by a dermatologist. Although skin biopsy may be useful in some cases, there is no laboratory test which may serve as a reference standard to the clinical diagnosis of psoriasis. Psoriasis in its mild cases per se is not associated with excess mortality, however, the disease may affect quality of life of affected patients to a substantial degree. Psoriasis may be readily apparent to others because of scales and redness of the skin. The skin may itch and scales may shed from the patients to the environment or directly on other people. Feelings of stigmatization and major changes in life-style caused by psoriasis have been documented in numerous studies. The burden of the disease may be exaggerated due to expensive therapy and complicated therapeutic regimes Patients with mild to moderate psoriasis are usually treated with topical treatments. Photo-therapy or systemic treatments are reserved to patients with moderate to severe disease. Topical corticosteroids may lead to rapid improvement in psoriasis, however rapid relapse following discontinuation is the common practice leading to chronic use. Calcipotriene ointment may also be used and requires 8 to 12 weeks of use for maximal effect and often causes local irritation, particularly when used on the face. The use is limited to 100 gr/week due to hypercalcemia that might follow systemic absorption. Vitamin A derivative tazarotene may be also be used for plaque psoriasis. Although it can produce longer remissions than topical steroids, local irritation, cost, and teratogenicity limit its use. Coal tar products may be used as steroid-sparing agents, especially useful for enhancing the efficacy of natural sunlight and phototherapy. Application can be cumbersome because of irritation, unpleasant smell, brown color that can stain clothing, and propensity to cause folliculitis. All of the above treatments are particularly problematic for the face and genital psoriasis due to the potential side effects and mainly possible severe irritation reducing patients compliance. Psirelax is a novel topical medication directed for the treatment of patients with psoriasis. The formulation of Psirelax includes the following substances: 5%-15% quince seeds jelly, 10%-40% natural base cream (e.g. Ferntree Cottage Pure Base Cream), 55%-75% mixture of natural anti-oxidants (e.g. Vitamin E, wheat germ oil, Safflower oil), natural skin softening agents (e.g. sweet almond oil, sesame oil), natural absorption aids (e.g. jojoba oil, vegetable squalene), natural tissue regenerating and protecting agents (e.g. grape seed oil, sunflower oil), natural preservatives (e.g. paraben, tea trea essential oil, thyme essential oil, grapefruit seed extract, Vitamin E) and natural thickening agents (e.g. bee wax, aloevera, medicinal Vaseline, coconut oil, guar gum, palm oil, borax) In a preliminary observation, a patient with severe psoriasis applied Psirelax three times each day during four days. The patient reported complete disappearance of the psoriatic plaques and pruritus was reduced by 70%. It was suggested to conduct an open study to assess the effect of Psirelax in patients with psoriasis vulgaris. The aim of this study is to examine the safety and efficacy of Psirelax in the treatment of psoriasis.

Completed14 enrollment criteria

A Plaque Test Comparing the Anti-psoriatic Effect of Marketed Products for Topical Use for Psoriasis...

Psoriasis Vulgaris

The purpose of the study is to compare the anti-psoriatic effect of marketed products with Daivobet® ointment in a plaque test

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Mechanism of Action Study for Psoriasis

Psoriasis

The objective of this study is to compare the mechanism of action between adalimumab and methotrexate in subjects with psoriasis.

Completed41 enrollment criteria

Efficacy and Safety of 0.25% Desoximetasone Cream (Topoxy®) in the Treatment of Scalp Psoriasis...

Scalp Psoriasis

The purpose of this study is to evaluate efficacy and safety of 0.25% Desoximetasone cream (Topoxy®) compare with 0.25% Desoximetasone cream (Topicorte®) in the treatment of scalp psoriasis.

Unknown status17 enrollment criteria

Pharmacogenomics Study on Treatment of Psoriasis Vulgaris by Methotrexate

Psoriasis Vulgaris

To investigate the influence of genetic factors on the curative effect , to find the relationships between genetic variants and the response of Methotrexate to treatment of Psoriasis Vulgaris.

Unknown status14 enrollment criteria

Microneedle Patch for Psoriatic Plaques

PsoriasisAdministration1 more

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of microneedle patch on the psoriatic plaques.

Unknown status8 enrollment criteria

Assessment of the Clinical and Ultrasound Response to Apremilast by Clinical Evaluation and by a...

Arthritis; Psoriasis (Etiology)

This study aims to evaluate more objectively, through an imaging technique such as ultrasound, changes in joints and entheses of patients with active psoriatic arthritis (PAs) who will start treatment with Apremilast after the failure of other therapies such as synthetic DMARD (metrotrexato , Leflunomide ...). The hypothesis of the study is that the technique of ultrasound can demonstrate the efficacy of Apremilast in the treatment of patients with active PAs

Unknown status23 enrollment criteria

Safety of FURESTEM-CD Inj. in Patients With Moderate to Severe Plaque-type Psoriasis

Psoriasis

Phase I clinical trial to evaluate safety of FURESTEM-CD Inj. in patients with moderate to severe in plaque-type psoriasis injection for 4weeks.

Unknown status33 enrollment criteria

Safety and Efficacy of UC-MSCs in Patients With Plaque Psoriasis

Moderate and Severe Plaque Psoriasis

This is a study in patients with moderate to severe chronic plaque psoriasis.All the participants will be randomized into three groups, high-dose UC-MSCs, low-dose UC-MSCs, or methotrexate group.This study is designed to prove that UC-MSCs is safe and effective.

Unknown status15 enrollment criteria

A Safety Study of Multiple Subcutaneous (s.c.) Injections of SHR-1314 in Adults With Moderate-to-severe...

Moderate-to-severe Plaque Psoriasis

This is a multiple dose escalating and open labeled clinical trial to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics (PK) of multiple subcutaneous (s.c.) injections of SHR-1314 in adults with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis. The primary objective of this study is to investigate the safety and tolerability of multiple doses of subcutaneous SHR-1314 in subjects with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis. Secondary objectives are to determine the pharmacokinetics (PK) and immunogenicity profile of SHR-1314 in subjects with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis.

Unknown status20 enrollment criteria
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