Trial of Colchicine Versus Prednisone for the Treatment of Acute CPPD Arthritis (COLCHICORT)
Colchicine or Prednisone for the Treatment of Acute Calcium Pyrophosphate Deposition (CPPD) Arthritis: Open-label, Randomized, Multicenter, Equivalence Trial of Efficacy and Safety
Sponsor: Armentières Hospital Centre
A observational or N/A phase clinical study on Chondrocalcinosis, this trial is completed. The trial is conducted by Armentières Hospital Centre and has accumulated 15 data snapshots since 2018. Longitudinal tracking of this trial contributes to a broader understanding of treatment development timelines.
Study Description(click to expand)Chondrocalcinosis, recently renamed the calcium pyrophosphate deposition (CPPD) disease, is a very frequent affection of the elderly and causes very painful arthritis. International recommendations for the treatment of patients suffering from CPPD are based upon rare studies, not randomized, with small samples, and thus very weak scientific evidence. Some factors are known to trigger CPPD arthritis (trauma, surgery, infection, hospitalization). Prevalence increases with age, and case series estimate the presence of chondrocalcinosis in over 20% of 80 plus years population. International recommendations for the treatment of patients suffering from CPPD are based upon rare studies, not randomized, with small samples, and thus very weak scientific evidence. The treatment of CPPD arthritis is extrapolated from the experience of gout treatment, another crystal deposition disease (this one related to monosodium urate crystals that deposit after long-standing hyperuricemia. Among recommended treatments, colchicine and oral steroids are recommended as first-line treatments, while NSAIDs are used with caution in elderly populations of patients. Colchicine utilization is not risk-free, in particular with old patients and patients with renal impairment. Drug interactions of colchicine can have serious consequences, especially in a polymedicated old patient's population. Oral steroids offer an interesting alternative with the potential of being better...
Chondrocalcinosis, recently renamed the calcium pyrophosphate deposition (CPPD) disease, is a very frequent affection of the elderly and causes very painful arthritis.
International recommendations for the treatment of patients suffering from CPPD are based upon rare studies, not randomized, with small samples, and thus very weak scientific evidence.
Some factors are known to trigger CPPD arthritis (trauma, surgery, infection, hospitalization). Prevalence increases with age, and case series estimate the presence of chondrocalcinosis in over 20% of 80 plus years population.
International recommendations for the treatment of patients suffering from CPPD are based upon rare studies, not randomized, with small samples, and thus very weak scientific evidence.
The treatment of CPPD arthritis is extrapolated from the experience of gout treatment, another crystal deposition disease (this one related to monosodium urate crystals that deposit after long-standing hyperuricemia.
Among recommended treatments, colchicine and oral steroids are recommended as first-line treatments, while NSAIDs are used with caution in elderly populations of patients.
Colchicine utilization is not risk-free, in particular with old patients and patients with renal impairment. Drug interactions of colchicine can have serious consequences, especially in a polymedicated old patient's population. Oral steroids offer an interesting alternative with the potential of being better tolerated.
However, even oral steroids are recommended, their efficacy in CPPD arthritis isn't demonstrated. Interesting comparative results with NSAIDs were shown for the treatment of gout flares. These results may not be fully extrapolated to CPPD which holds differences with gout. In addition, oral steroids were not compared to colchicine which is the benchmark treatment in many countries for CPPD.
The aim of this study is to compare the efficacy of colchicine and oral steroids for the treatment of CPPD acute arthritis and compare their tolerance profile. It is the first large randomized controlled trial comparing two treatments of CPPD acute arthritis.
Status Flow
Change History
15 versions recorded-
Apr 18, 2026 — Present [daily]
Completed
Phase: PHASE3 → None
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Jan 2026 — Apr 2026 [monthly]
Completed PHASE3
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Sep 2025 — Jan 2026 [monthly]
Completed PHASE3
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Sep 2024 — Sep 2025 [monthly]
Completed PHASE3
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Jul 2024 — Sep 2024 [monthly]
Completed PHASE3
▶ Show 10 earlier versions
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Dec 2022 — Jul 2024 [monthly]
Completed PHASE3
Status: Recruiting → Completed
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Nov 2021 — Dec 2022 [monthly]
Recruiting PHASE3
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Oct 2021 — Nov 2021 [monthly]
Recruiting PHASE3
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Mar 2021 — Oct 2021 [monthly]
Recruiting PHASE3
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Jan 2021 — Mar 2021 [monthly]
Recruiting PHASE3
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Apr 2019 — Jan 2021 [monthly]
Recruiting PHASE3
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Sep 2018 — Apr 2019 [monthly]
Recruiting PHASE3
Status: Not Yet Recruiting → Recruiting
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Jun 2018 — Sep 2018 [monthly]
Not Yet Recruiting PHASE3
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Oct 2017 — Jun 2018 [monthly]
Not Yet Recruiting PHASE3
Phase: PHASE4 → PHASE3
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Jun 2017 — Oct 2017 [monthly]
Not Yet Recruiting PHASE4
First recorded
Eligibility Summary
Chondrocalcinosis, recently renamed the calcium pyrophosphate deposition (CPPD) disease, is a very frequent affection of the elderly and causes very painful arthritis. International recommendations for the treatment of patients suffering from CPPD are based upon rare studies, not randomized, with small samples, and thus very weak scientific evidence. The treatment of CPPD arthritis is extrapolated from the experience of gout treatment, another crystal deposition disease. Among recommended treatments, colchicine and oral steroids are recommended as first-line treatments, while NSAIDs are used with caution in elderly populations of patients. Colchicine utilization is not risk-free, in particular with old patients and patients with renal impairment. Drug interactions of colchicine can have serious consequences, especially in a polymedicated old patient's population. Oral steroids are an interesting alternative in this indication with a potential of being better tolerated, but comparative efficacy with colchicine needs to be studied. From a broader point of view, colchicine and oral steroids have never been compared in any crystal related arthritis. This is the first large randomized controlled trial for CPPD acute arthritis.
Contact Information
- Armentières Hospital Centre
- Bichat Hospital
- Dunkerque Hospital Centre
- Hopital Lariboisière
- Lille Catholic University
- University Hospital, Lille
- Valenciennes Hospital Centre
For direct contact, visit the study record on ClinicalTrials.gov .