35 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions
Pegloticase treatment for chronic refractory gout is limited by immunogenicity. The investigators propose the REduCing Immunogenicity to PegloticasE (RECIPE) trial to begin to investigate the question of whether a short course of immune modulating therapy with mycophenolate mofetil can significantly and safely attenuate immunogenicity to pegloticase and ensure patients afflicted with chronic refractory gout have better treatment outcomes and improved quality of life.
This is an open label multicenter study to evaluate the safety and tolerability of multiple doses (3 monthly IV infusions) of SEL-212 ( a combination of pegsiticase (SEL-037) and SVP-rapamycin (SEL-110)) followed by multiple doses (2 monthly IV infusions) of pegsiticase (SEL-037) alone for a total of 5 treatment cycles in subjects with symptomatic gout and hyperuricemia. Additional participants will be treated with multiple doses ( 5 monthly IV infusions) of pegsiticase (SEL-037) alone. Participants will be monitored for safety endpoints through the 5th treatment cycle plus 30 days .Pharmacokinetic samples will be drawn at pre-determined time points in addition to weekly serum uric acid levels.
This study will assess the serum uric acid lowering effect and safety of AR882 in gout patients at two doses compared to placebo over 12 months
This study will assess the serum uric acid lowering effect and safety of AR882 in gout patients at two doses compared to placebo over 12 months
This study will assess the serum urate lowering effect, tophi reduction, and safety of AR882 alone and in combination with allopurinol in patients with tophaceous gout at two doses compared to allopurinol over 24 weeks.
This study will assess the serum uric acid lowering effect and safety of AR882 in gout patients at two doses compared to placebo over 12 weeks.
A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, dose-escalation study will be conducted in healthy volunteers. This study will evaluate the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics (PK) of ABP-745 following single (Part 1) and multiple (Part 2) oral doses.
The purpose of this Phase IIa study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability and pharmacodynamics of ALLN-346 in subjects with hyperuricemia and gout, and with mild to moderate chronic kidney disease.
The primary purpose of this study is to observe patients being treated with pegloticase in a standard healthcare setting in order to evaluate the frequency and severity of infusion reactions, anaphylaxis and immune complex related events. Additionally, serious adverse events associated with pegloticase therapy will be identified.
The 24-week, dose-ranging, multi-center, double-blind, double-dummy, active-controlled core study investigated the prophylactic effect of canakinumab on the signs and symptoms of acute flares in chronic gout patients initiating allopurinol therapy. The core study was followed by a 24-week open-label, multicenter extension study to assess the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of canakinumab in patients with gout who were given canakinumab at the time of gout flare.
This is one of two replicate randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel arm trials to determine the safety and efficacy of two different dose levels of SEL-212 compared to placebo. 112 and 153 patients, stratified as to the presence or absence of tophi, were randomized in a 1:1:1 allocation ratio prior to Baseline to receive treatment with one of two dose levels of SEL-212 or placebo every 28 days for approximately 6 months in each trial respectively (SEL-212/301 and SEL-212/302). Analysis of primary and key efficacy were performed at Day 28 of Treatment Period 6. Safety was monitored throughout the study.
This is one of two replicate randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel arm trials to determine the safety and efficacy of two different dose levels of SEL-212 compared to placebo. 112 and 153 patients, stratified as to the presence or absence of tophi, were randomized in a 1:1:1 allocation ratio prior to Baseline to receive treatment with one of two dose levels of SEL-212 or placebo every 28 days for approximately 6 months in each trial respectively (SEL-212/301 and SEL-212/302). Analysis of primary and key efficacy will be performed at Day 28 of Treatment Period 6. Safety was monitored throughout the study.
This is a randomized, parallel-arm, multicenter study to compare the safety and efficacy profiles of SEL-212 and KRYSTEXXA®. Participants will be randomized 1:1 to receive treatment with SEL-212 or KRYSTEXXA® for 6 months. Efficacy assessments, as measured by serum uric acid (SUA) levels, will be conducted at intervals that are appropriate to determine treatment effect differences. Safety will be monitored throughout the study.
Subjects will undergo a placebo and allopurinol phase to better understand the effects of the reduced function BCRP Q141K variant on allopurinol pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics.
The purpose of the study is to evaluate the safety and clinical effect of re-exposure to a 24 week course of treatment of pegloticase i.v. in subjects whose last exposure to pegloticase i.v. was at least one year before study entry. This study is limited to four study centers in the US.
This trial is to assess efficacy, safety, blood levels and bodily effects of up to 2 dose levels of intravenous (IV) pegloticase (KRYSTEXXA) infusions at every 4 week intervals (Q4 Weeks) for up to 6 months (Day 1 to 24 weeks with an optional 24 - 48 weeks treatment duration) when given in combination with weekly oral doses of methotrexate (MTX). The goal is to identify an appropriate dose to be administered every 4 weeks to be used for future clinical trials for patients with chronic gout that does not adequately respond to conventional therapy.
The study consists of 24-week double-blind trial to evaluate the non-inferiority of the efficacy and safety of pegloticase Q4W with MTX versus pegloticase Q2W with MTX, followed by a 24-week open-label extension of pegloticase Q4W with MTX, in participants with uncontrolled refractory gout. The main objective of the study is to evaluate the effect of pegloticase 16 mg administered Q4W with MTX versus pegloticase 8 mg administered Q2W with MTX, on the response rate during Month 6, as measured by the sustained normalization of sUA to \< 6 mg/dL for at least 80% of the time.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of a high zone tolerizing regimen of pegloticase on clinical outcome, as defined by an serum uric acid level \<6 mg/dL, in patients with chronic, refractory gout.
This is an open-label extension phase of two double-blind, placebo-controled Phase 3 protocols evaluating PEG-uricase in the treatment of hyperuricemic subjects with symptomatic gout. The purpose of this study is to provide a continuation of treatment to subjects completing the double-blind studies and obtain long-term safety and efficacy data.
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety, tolerability and efficiency of pegloticase administered with a shorter infusion duration in participants with uncontrolled gout receiving methotrexate.
The aim of this study is to test the effectiveness of a pharmacist-staffed, protocol-based chronic disease management program compared to patients receiving usual care in achieving a target serum uric acid level in patients with recurrent gout.
This study evaluates the safety and efficacy of lesinurad administered with an XOI versus a placebo plus an XOI in gout participants who have moderate renal impairment and who are not at target level of serum urate (sUA).
This trial will compare two effective therapies, allopurinol and febuxostat, to lower serum uric acid and therefore prevent further gout attacks. These therapies have never been compared at appropriate doses. Further, they will be studied in patients with kidney disease for the first time.
This is a questionnaire study aimed at learning about physicians' views on the treatment of Gout.
The purpose of this study is to show that patients with gout suffer from chronic inflammation of their joints, observable by MRI, even in the absence of symptomatic gouty attacks. Secondary end-points of this study will include analyzing the effects of uric acid-lowering therapy (specifically with the FDA approved medication Febuxostat) in a subgroup of patients, checking for the presence of inflammatory markers to see if there is any correlation with the proposed chronic inflammation, and evaluating for other characteristic findings of gout on MRI.
This study examines the implications of providing hospital-level care in rural homes.
This is a retrospective observational study drawing on data from the Brigham and Women's Home Hospital database. Sociodemographic and clinic data from a training cohort were used to train a machine learning algorithm to predict patient deterioration throughout a patient's admission. This algorithm was then validated in a validation cohort.
The purpose of this Phase IIa study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of ALLN-346 in subjects with hyperuricemia in an inpatient, controlled setting.
This is a retrospective observational study drawing on data from the Brigham and Women's Home Hospital database. Sociodemographic and clinic data from a training cohort were used to train a machine learning algorithm to predict the likelihood of 30-day readmission throughout a patient's admission. This algorithm was then validated in a validation cohort.
This is a retrospective observational study drawing on data from the Brigham and Women's Home Hospital database. Sociodemographic and clinic data from a training cohort were used to train a machine learning algorithm to predict length of stay throughout a patient's admission. This algorithm was then validated in a validation cohort.