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Browse 1,088 clinical trials for crohn's disease. Find studies that match your criteria and connect with research centers.
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NCT01731665
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the incidence, prevalence, clinical characteristics and prognosis of Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis over time in a district of Seoul, Korea.
NCT04131322
Loss of response of the Adalimumab biosimilar compared with the original drug.
NCT03139032
The purpose of this phase 2a, proof of concept, open-label clinical study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of etrasimod (APD334) in inflammatory bowel disease patients with active skin extra-intestinal manifestations.
NCT04119635
The incidence of Crohn's disease (CD) increased the last few years, especially in children, with 20% percent of CD patients diagnosed during childhood. The CD is a chronic disease without curative treatment, medical or surgical, and evolution is longer in children, avoid iterative digestive resections and their consequences in these patients is a major issue. The beginning of the disease at pediatric age is considered to be a poor prognostic factor and is considered to be more aggressive than that of adults: more extensive, more active and requiring more immunosuppressive treatments, with a more frequent dependence on corticosteroids and a shorter delay between the beginning of symptoms and the first surgery. After 5 years of evolution, 13 to 50% of patients with early pediatric MC have undergone intestinal resection. The Paris' classification defined 3 phenotypes or behaviors in pediatric Crohn's disease. Penetrating phenotype (B3) is a heterogeneous group defined by the presence of intra-abdominal perforation, fistulas or abscesses. The B3 phenotype is a risk factor for pejorative evolution in CD with a risk increased of surgical resection. In the pediatric population, the natural history of patients with penetrating CD is unknown. Most studies focus on CD beginning at pediatric age but with penetrating complications occurring in adulthood or pediatric penetrating CD but with relatively short follow-up. The risk of recurrence of the penetrating disease after a first complication in childhood is unknown, the factors influencing this risk also. And, there is no consensus either concerning optimal B3 management in children, and the practices are variable from specialist to specialist. After describing the pediatric population with penetrating CD, the aim of this study was to know the incidence of bowel resection for B3 episode. The secondary aims were to describe the immediate management and long-term evolution of these patients and to identify risk factors for adverse evolution.