Loading clinical trials...
Browse 521 clinical trials for crohn's disease. Find studies that match your criteria and connect with research centers.
Find trials near:
Showing 61-80 of 521 trials
NCT04673357
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of ustekinumab dosing in inducing clinical remission (Global) and in maintaining clinical remission (US); to evaluate the safety profile and ustekinumab exposure (pharmacokinetics \[PK\]) in pediatric participants with moderately to severely active Crohn's disease.
NCT07247994
screen for neurologic and psychiatric disorders in children and adolescents with IBD.
NCT07118878
In patients with Crohn's disease (CD), fibrosis of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract can result in stricture (stenosis) formation and obstruction of the GI tract, causing obstructive symptoms and often requiring surgical intervention. There are currently no approved therapies for treating fibrostenotic Crohn's disease (FSCD) and therefore, there is an urgent need for safe and effective antifibrotic therapies. AGMB-129 has shown to be safe in healthy participants with single doses up to 1200 mg and multiple doses up to 200 mg twice daily (BID) for 10 days, and in FSCD patients with multiple doses up to 200 mg BID for 12 weeks. This Phase 1 study will explore the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics (PK) of other daily doses of AGMB-129 in healthy participants to inform on dose selection (nominal dose and dosing frequency) for subsequent clinical trials.
NCT07224113
This study explores whether simple nutrition education can help children and teens with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) eat fewer ultra-processed foods (UPFs). UPFs include packaged snacks, sugary drinks, and fast food-items that are high in added sugars, fats, and artificial ingredients. Participants will complete online food recalls to measure what they eat and will then receive either nutrition handouts alone or handouts plus a short educational video about UPFs. Researchers will compare changes in UPF intake between the two groups after several weeks and ask families how useful and acceptable they found the materials. The goal is to identify an effective, practical way to support healthier eating habits and long-term gut health in pediatric IBD.
NCT04751396
This study learn how easily patients can use an educational tool that will be created for patients with melanoma and pre-existing autoimmune diseases who receive or will receive immune checkpoint inhibitor drugs. Patients will be asked their opinions about the design, accessibility, and content of the tool. Researchers will use the information collected to improve the educational materials that will help patients make future decisions about their treatment.
NCT07033208
The goal of this research is to learn how a new device called the wireless thermal capsule (WTC) can collect thermal data to help see diseases that happen in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, such as Crohn's Disease.
NCT03752970
This is a study in adults with Crohn's Disease who also have fistulas near the anus. The study has 2 parts. The first part is to find out more about what causes the fistulas. In this part of the study, tissue samples are taken from patients. The second part of the study tests whether a medicine called spesolimab (BI 655130) helps patients with Crohn's Disease. Participants get study medication for 24 weeks. The participants are put into 2 groups. It is decided by chance who gets into which group. One group gets an intravenous drip that contains spesolimab every 4 weeks. The other group gets a placebo drip every 4 weeks. The placebo drip looks like the spesolimab drip, but contains no medicine. The doctors regularly examine fistulas of the participants. The results of the fistula examinations are compared between the groups. The doctors also check the general health of the patients.
NCT05439772
This is a pilot randomized-controlled trial assessing the utility of ondansetron for improving pediatric pre-colonoscopy bowel prep outcomes using the boston bowel preparation score, as well as assessing the impact on patient experience of bowel preparation.
NCT03162549
This prospective, non-interventional research registry is designed to study the comparative effectiveness and comparative safety of approved treatments for IBD in a cohort of patients cared for by gastroenterologists across North America. Secondary objectives include analyzing the epidemiology and natural history of the disease, its comorbidities, and current treatment practices.
NCT03992469
Crohn's disease (CD) is the major form of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) affecting adults. It is a life-long disease characterized by chronic and relapsing inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract. CD has multiple clinical phenotypes and disease severities that determine which therapy the study team utilizes. Currently, there are numerous treatment options for subjects with moderate-severe CD, but few that are approved to treat and maintain remission for the one-third of patients who present with mild-to-moderate disease. The study team hypothesizes that Butanol Purified Food Allergy Herbal Formula-2 (B-FAHF-2) will be safe and effective for maintaining remission of mild-to-moderate CD and can fill this therapeutic void. CD affects 241 per 100,000 adults in the United States and the incidence in both adults and children has increased in the past 60 years. One such potential therapy is Food Allergy Herbal Formula-2 (FAHF-2) which was originally developed to treat food allergy and has received FDA investigational new drug approval under the botanical drug title for treating patients with multiple food allergies. A completed phase I study showed that FAHF-2 is safe and well tolerated. A Phase II trial revealed that a high pill burden with FAHF-2 caused poor compliance. A butanol purified form of FAHF-2 (B-FAHF-2) is a more concentrated form of FAHF-2 which has also received an IND (FDA IND#77,468) and reduces the pill burden and improves compliance. Interestingly, the herbal components in B-FAHF-2 have long been used in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) to treat gastrointestinal disorders including colitis. The study team has shown that B-FAHF-2 non-toxically inhibits TNF-#, a major inflammatory cytokine involved in CD, as well as multiple other pro-inflammatory cytokines produced by human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) and intestinal mucosa from subjects with CD. In addition, the study team has shown that FAHF-2 prevents disease progression in a murine model of colitis. The study team hypothesizes that E-B-FAHF-2 will be safe and effective for treating mild-to-moderate CD and can fill this therapeutic void. The study team proposes to investigate the safety and tolerability of B-FAHF-2 in subjects with mild-to-moderate CD. The goal is to establish safety and tolerability and explore efficacy at maintaining remission in this select patient population. Importantly, the study team will also determine the immunotherapeutic effects of E-B-FAHF-2 on PBMCs and intestinal mucosa to determine if there are immunologic alterations that would indicate that controlled efficacy evaluations of E-B-FAHF-2 are warranted. The new IND number is 143453. The FDA has completed their safety review of this protocol and has concluded that the study team's clinical trial may proceed with the proposed clinical investigation for Crohn's disease.
NCT05733702
This study is part of the Clinnova program. This is a prospective cohort study including patients with IBD recruited at the time of a treatment change. At least 800 participants (recruited in France, Germany and Luxembourg) will be enrolled, of which 100 participants are expected to be recruited in Luxembourg with the present study protocol. The mission of Clinnova is to support the digitalization of healthcare and precision medicine by creating a data-enabling environment for accessing, sharing and analyzing interoperable, high-quality health data. The main hypothesis is that treatment change decided by clinicians is predictable using objective surrogate markers derived from clinical, epidemiological, and omics data. Identifying these objective markers may facilitate future treatment decisions, provide new insights on the molecular causes for differential treatment response, pathogenesis and progression, and potential pointers for improved personalized therapeutic interventions.
NCT06100289
The main aim of this study is to learn how the body of a child or teenager with moderately to severely active ulcerative colitis (UC) or Crohn's disease (CD) processes vedolizumab (pharmacokinetics) given just under the skin subcutaneously (SC). The participants will be treated with vedolizumab for up to 34 weeks. During the study, participants will visit their study clinic several times.
NCT07179965
Aims: This study aimed to assess nutritional status, dietary habits, meal patterns, gastrointestinal symptoms, quality of life, and depression in Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) patients. Methods: Data were collected at a university hospital using the 24-Hour Dietary Recall, IBD Quality of Life Questionnaire, Beck Depression Inventory II, and the Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Scale.
NCT05425901
This study is carried out in patients with IBD and healthy subjects requiring ileocolonoscopy as part of routine care (disease monitoring or polyp/colon cancer screening). It aims the generation and culturing of organoids from digestive biopsies recovered from healthy and/or pathological (inflammatory) ileal and/or colonic mucosa during an ileo-colonoscopy. These cultures will make it possible to validate the organoid production method used in the context of the research (primary objective). In a second phase (secondary objectives), the study will aim to setup a screening tool by irradiating the organoids (step one) and then evaluate in vitro the regenerative activity of treatments dedicated to improve inflammatory bowel diseases and acute radiation enteritis (step two).
NCT06456593
This study has 3 treatment phases, a 12-Week Induction Phase, a 40-Week Maintenance Phase, and a 48-Week Extension Phase. The objective is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of obefazimod compared to placebo as induction and maintenance therapy in subjects with moderately to severely active CD after inadequate response (no response, loss of response, or intolerance) to conventional therapies and/or advanced therapies. The primary objective for the 48-Week Extension Phase is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of obefazimod compared with placebo in subjects who are enrolled in the Extension Phase.
NCT06925061
MAINTAIN-POP is a Phase 2, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter study of the impact of oral administration of EXL01 in the prevention of post-operative endoscopic recurrence of Crohn's disease after surgery. Approximately 80 eligible patients will be randomized 1:1 to receive oral EXL01 or placebo with or without SoC treatment (based on investigator decision) for up to 24 weeks or until a study or treatment discontinuation criterion is met. Randomisation will be stratified on post-surgical treatment (none vs anti-TNF), and on smoking status (non-smoker vs smoker). The primary objective is to compare the distribution of endoscopic modified Rutgeerts scores, as centrally assessed, at 6 months post-surgery in patients with CD treated with EXL01 to patients treated with placebo. Endoscopic recurrence will be assessed using the endoscopic score assessed by central reading at Week 24 after surgery. All participants will be followed for safety until 4 weeks after end of treatment.
NCT07172945
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (IBD), including Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC), are chronic, disabling conditions affecting young adults, marked by flare-ups and remissions. Traditionally, IBD was treated with immunosuppressants like thiopurines, but new biological treatments, such as anti-TNFa antibodies (e.g., infliximab, adalimumab), have transformed management. Biologics often combine with thiopurines but come with risks, like increased chances of skin cancers and lymphomas, especially for prolonged use in young patients. Recently, newer biologics (e.g., ustekinumab, vedolizumab) and small molecules like JAK inhibitors have expanded treatment options. The exact cause of IBD remains unknown, though an inappropriate immune response to the intestinal microbiota in genetically predisposed individuals is suspected. Dysbiosis, or imbalance in gut microbiota, has been linked to IBD, with reductions in 'beneficial' bacteria and increases in harmful ones. Certain bacteria, like Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, may serve as markers for disease activity or progression. Due to the heterogeneity of UC and CD, it is crucial to identify early predictive factors for complications and treatment response. This study aims to identify biological markers of disease course and complications in IBD and to deepen understanding of its pathophysiological mechanisms.
NCT07169123
The study looks at how eating salt affects gut health in people with Crohn's disease. The aim of the study is to find out whether eating more salt increases the breakdown of proteins in the gut and if this makes inflammation and symptoms worse. By studying the link between salt, gut bacteria and inflammation, the study hopes to improve diet advice for people with Crohn's disease. This research may help find specific foods that affect the disease and lead to better, more personalized nutrition plans.
NCT07161297
The goal of this clinical trial is to compare two sedation regimens-remimazolam and midazolam-for colonoscopy in adult patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), including Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Does remimazolam provide patient satisfaction that is non-inferior to midazolam during colonoscopy? * Does remimazolam allow faster recovery and discharge readiness compared to midazolam? Researchers will compare sedation with remimazolam plus fentanyl to sedation with midazolam plus fentanyl to see if remimazolam improves patient experience and procedural efficiency. Participants will: * Receive either remimazolam or midazolam, each combined with fentanyl, during their scheduled colonoscopy * Complete a short questionnaire to rate their satisfaction after the procedure * Be assessed for recovery using a standardized discharge score at 10 and 20 minutes after the procedure
NCT04978493
This study is open to adults, aged 18-75 years, with moderate to severe Crohn's disease. The purpose of this study is to find out whether BI 706321 combined with ustekinumab helps people with Crohn's disease. BI 706321 is a medicine being developed to treat Crohn's disease. Ustekinumab is a medicine already used to treat Crohn's disease. Participants are put into 2 groups randomly, which means by chance. One group gets BI 706321 and ustekinumab. The other group gets placebo and ustekinumab. Participants take BI 706321 or placebo as tablets every day. Placebo tablets look like BI 706321 tablets but do not contain any medicine. Ustekinumab is given as an infusion into a vein once at the beginning of the study. After that, ustekinumab is given as an injection under the skin every 2 months. Participants take BI 706321 or placebo in combination with ustekinumab for 3 months. After that, participants receive only ustekinumab for another 9 months. Participants are in the study for about 1 year. During this time, they visit the study site about 13 times. At 3 of the visits, doctors do a colonoscopy to examine the bowel. The results from the colonoscopies are compared between the 2 groups. The doctors also regularly check participants' health and take note of any unwanted effects.