Boosting Biologics in UC
Ulcerative ColitisInflammatory Bowel DiseasesThis study evaluates the safety of the probiotic compound IDOFORM TRAVEL® in patients with ulcerative colitis undergoing anti-TNF treatment with insufficient clinical response. Furthermore, the study aims to explore the composition of the bacteria of the gut as well as the immunological activity in patients with ulcerative colitis undergoing anti-TNF treatment, aiming to identify differences between groups of patients responding and not responding adequately to treatment. The project will explore whether probiotics have beneficial effects as adjuvant therapy in ulcerative colitis patients with insufficient response to anti-TNF treatment.
A Study of Combination Therapy With Guselkumab and Golimumab in Participants With Moderately to...
ColitisUlcerativeThe purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of JNJ-78934804 as compared to guselkumab and golimumab in participants with moderately to severely active ulcerative colitis who have had an inadequate initial response, loss of response, or intolerance to one or more approved advanced therapy.
A Master Protocol (AMAZ): A Study of Mirikizumab (LY3074828) in Pediatric Participants With Ulcerative...
Ulcerative ColitisUlcerative Colitis Chronic2 moreThe main purpose of this study is to evaluate the long-term efficacy of mirikizumab in pediatric participants with ulcerative colitis (UC) or Crohn's disease (CD). The study will last about 172 weeks and may include up to 44 visits.
Study Evaluating Efficacy and Safety of Amiselimod (MT-1303) in Mild to Moderate Ulcerative Colitis...
Ulcerative ColitisThe study will assess the efficacy and safety of oral MT-1303 compared to placebo at 12 weeks as the induction treatment in subjects with active mild to moderate ulcerative colitis (UC), as well as maintenance treatment with open-label MT-1303 for up to 36 weeks.
Study of ExoFlo for the Treatment of Medically Refractory Ulcerative Colitis
Ulcerative ColitisInflammatory Bowel DiseasesProtocol Summary Title: A Phase I study of ExoFlo, an ex vivo culture-expanded adult allogeneic bone marrow mesenchymal stem cell derived extracellular vesicle isolate product, for the treatment of medically refractory ulcerative colitis. Short Title: ExoFlo for ulcerative colitis Phase: 1 Methodology: Open label Study Duration: 24 months Subject Participation: 58 weeks Single or Multi-Site: Multi-Site
Protein and Magnesium in Ulcerative Colitis
Inflammatory Bowel DiseasesColitis4 moreThe aim of the study is to improve the quality of nutritional therapy for patients admitted with Acute Severe Ulcerative Colitis (ASUC) treated with high-dose steroids. This study consists of two randomized interventions and one observational part regarding protein, magnesium, and metabolic stress. First an interventional part aims to explore the effect of a high-protein diet during and after admission on different parameters regarding protein turnover.Second the study aims to explore the degree of magnesium depletion in ASUC. In case of magnesium depletion, the study aims to investigate whether oral magnesium supplementation can regain body stores of magnesium. Last the study aims to observe the degree of metabolic stress, including, the degree of insulin resistance, in ASUC during admission and under treatment with high-dose steroids compared to three weeks after discharge.
Chronotherapy of 5-Aminosalicylic Acid in Ulcerative Colitis
Ulcerative ColitisThe hypothesis of this study is that appropriate time of day of administration of oral, once daily 5-ASA therapy in alignment with the host circadian rhythms will improve subclinical inflammation and microbial structure/function and increase mucosal 5-ASA levels. All subjects will be randomized to once daily 5-ASA medications at two different times of the day: between 06:00 - 10:00 h or 18:00 - 22:00 h. Three disease assessments will performed at: 1) enrollment just before randomization; 2) month 3, at the completion of first arm (Condition 1), and 3) month 6, after completion of the second arm (Condition 2). During these study time points, participants will be asked to complete questionnaires, track their 5-ASA medication usage, provide a stool sample, blood draw, urine test, wear a watch to measure sleep patterns, and complete a flexible sigmoidoscopy.
Pharmacologic Weight Loss as Adjunct Therapy for Ulcerative Colitis in Obese Patients
ColitisUlcerative1 moreApproximately 20-40% of patients with ulcerative colitis (UC) are obese. The investigators have demonstrated that obesity adversely impacts disease course in patients with UC, leading to higher risk of persistently active disease, surgery, hospitalization, and treatment failure, particularly in biologic-treated patients. Intentional weight loss is effective in improving disease outcomes in patients with inflammatory arthritis, but there is limited data on its impact in UC. While dietary interventions for weight loss have limited efficacy and endoscopic bariatric interventions may be too invasive in patients with UC with active gastrointestinal symptoms, pharmacological weight loss with a highly effective oral agent may be a novel strategy to induce weight loss and augment the efficacy of biologic therapy in UC. Hence, the investigators are conducting a pilot, phase 2A, 22-week, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial of phentermine-topiramate in obese patients with active UC starting on a new biologic agent (infliximab, adalimumab, golimumab, vedolizumab). The overall objective is to (1) evaluate the efficacy, safety and tolerability of phentermine-topiramate, and (2) to assess the impact of pharmacological weight loss on clinical outcomes, inflammatory burden and biologic trough concentration in patients with UC. The central hypothesis is that phentermine-topiramate will be safe, effective, and well tolerated in patients with UC, and weight loss would achieve higher rates of clinical and biochemical remission, and higher biologic trough concentration.
Fecal Microbiota Transplantation and Newly Diagnosed Ulcerative Colitis (UC)
Ulcerative ColitisIn this FinUC study we are trying to find out the efficacy and safety of the Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) in newly diagnosed active ulcerative colitis patients. The study group with newly diagnosed active ulcerative colitis receive an FMT via colonoscopy from a tested general donor, frozen and thawed from a fecal bank at week 0 and at week 4 as an enema at the study nurse´s visit. The control group will be given colored water. The main aim of the FinUC study is to determine how the FMT change of the gut microbiota composition in newly diagnosed active ulcerative colitis patients. The other aim is to determine efficacy and mechanisms of fecal microbiota transplantation.
De-escalation of Anti-TNF Therapy in Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Inflammatory Bowel DiseasesCrohn Disease2 moreBACKGROUND/RATIONALE: Treatment outcomes of patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) have improved enormously during the past decade due to the use of anti-tumour necrosis factor (anti-TNF) therapy. As a result, 67 to 91% of paediatric patients and 66% of adult patients is still in sustained remission two years after the initiation of anti-TNF therapy. Prolonged use of anti-TNFs comes with disadvantages such as dose dependent susceptibility to infections and dermatological adverse effects. Preliminary, mostly uncontrolled studies suggest that dose reduction by dosing interval lengthening is a realistic option in a relevant proportion of patients with IBD, provided that intensive follow-up is applied. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether a faecal calprotectin (FC) guided strategy of anti-TNF dosing interval lengthening is non-inferior in maintaining remission in patients with IBD, compared with an unchanged dosing interval.