There are about 36633 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in France. The country of the clinical trial is determined by the location of where the clinical research is being studied. Most studies are often held in multiple locations & countries.
This double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomised pilot trial aims to assess the effect of oral soy isoflavone consumption on skin ageing parameters in post-menopausal women.
The selection of kidneys from living donors is based on strict glomerular filtration rate (GFR) values, in the setting of the increasing proportion of older donors. The 2017 KDIGO recommendations consider that approving kidney donation for a donor with a GFR between 60 and 89 mL/min/1.73 m² should be individually discussed, possibly using a calculator. A GFR < 60 mL/min/1.73 m² should contraindicate donation without considering the donor's age. GFR physiologically decreases with age, so older donors frequently have a GFR below 90 ml/min/1.73 m². However, the proportion of older donors continues to rise. Kidney grafts from older living donors maintain better renal function than those from deceased donors, aiming to counteract the organ shortage. Kidneys possess functional reserves, allowing an increase in GFR during stimulations and adaptation to reduced functional nephron count (as after nephrectomy). Assessing this adaptive capacity clinically is challenging. It might be dependent on vascularization and/or absence of fibrosis, but these parameters are poorly understood due to a lack of current in vivo exploration methods. The development of functional renal MRI enables the evaluation of these parameters, allowing measurements on separate, regional, non-invasive, quantitative kidney segments coupled with morphological studies. BOLD-MRI can measure regional oxygen content, thus accessing more precise medullary data. The DWI sequence can estimate renal microstructure and study interstitial fibrosis. Therefore, evaluating renal performance (by measuring GFR, renal perfusion, fibrosis, inflammation, and oxygen content) in donors, and studying the evolution of these parameters in recipients and donors, could optimize donor selection. Hence, the aim of our study is to 1) investigate the evolution of renal functional parameters in the transplanted kidney up to 1 year post-transplant, and 2) study the evolution of these same parameters in the contralateral kidney of the donor.
Two hundred and ninety-six million people worldwide are chronically infected with the hepatitis B virus (HBV), with around 750,000 deaths each year linked to the development of cirrhosis or hepatocellular carcinoma. Current treatments based on nucleoside analogues (NA) achieve virological cure in only 5% of cases at 10 years. The virological persistence of HBV is explained by the persistence of cccDNA (covalently-closed circular DNA) in the nucleus of hepatocytes. Complex and poorly understood interactions between immunological and virological responses explain the persistence of ccccDNA. A better understanding of the immunological and virological interactions of the intrahepatic compartment during chronic HBV infection is needed to better understand the mechanisms of viral persistence and for research and development of new drugs to achieve the goal of a functional cure for HBV (defined as the prolonged loss of Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) after cessation of treatment, associated with a decrease in intrahepatic cccDNA or its transcriptional inactivation). The intra-hepatic compartment can be explored by liver biopsy. A fine needle aspiration (FNA) technique is used to characterize primary hepatic tumors, with fewer complications than liver biopsy. One study has validated its use for immunological exploration of the intra-hepatic compartment. Finally, a recently published study confirms a correlation between FNA and liver biopsy virological markers in patients with chronic HBV infection. However, no combined immuno-virological study has been carried out to explore this intra-hepatic compartment by FNA in patients with chronic HBV infection. The investigators will assess the intrahepatic compartment of patients chronically infected with HBV (+/- hepatitis Delta (HDV)) to understand the mechanisms of viral persistence and characterize host immune responses to HBV. These investigations will make it possible to determine the immuno-virological profiles of patients who would benefit from intensification of antiviral treatment or, potentially, discontinuation of antiviral therapy.
The purpose of this study is to compare the efficacy and safety of glofitamab in combination with polatuzumab vedotin plus rituximab, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, and prednisone (Pola-R-CHP) vs Pola-R-CHP in participants with previously untreated CD20-positive large B-cell lymphoma (LBCL).
Surface mechanomyography (sMMG) has been proposed as a tool to study muscle mechanical activity. sMMG is a noninvasive technique using specific transducers to record muscle surface oscillations due to mechanical activity of the motor units . It could be of major interest for the detection of respiratory efforts in patients with respiratory failure. This study aims at assessing the performances of sMMG to measure and detect respiratory drive and effort in healthy volunteers.
The CELEST Long term is a prospective study, assessing the very long term risk of post thrombotic syndrome (PTS) in patients enrolled in the CELEST double-blind RCT. All patients enrolled in CELEST RCT will benefit from a 7-year follow-up visit conducted over the phone. The primary objective is to assess the proportion of patients with moderate-severe PTS assessed with the patient reported Villalta score and the 2 main secondary objectives are to assess predictors of moderate to severe PTS and the impact of initial compression stockings strength (25mmHg vs. 35mmHg) on the development of moderate-severe PTS. Up to 288 patients may participate. The investigators believe that this study has the potential to significantly improve the knowledge on the epidemiology of burdensome PTS and on the impact of different initial compression stockings strengths on the risk of PTS.
As part of the Reference Center for Rare Diseases of the Robert Debré Hospital, many children have eating and verbal oral disorders. In this doctoral research, we question the psychological impact of oral disorders on the dynamics of family functioning.Our research entitled: Evaluation and Remediation of Orality Disorders (ERTO) aims to evaluate the impact of psychological care of the child and a support program for parents. We hypothesized that this comprehensive management could contribute to improving disorders and consequently modify parental representations of the child and his disorders. In addition, care focused on intra-family relations and communication would allow a decentralization and a repositioning of the problem of disorders within the family dynamic. The results of this research will have concrete applications for the management of children suffering from oral disorders.
The ERYTHRO study is a retrospective medical chart review study of patients in the AMANA and ATUc Early Access Programs (EAPs) across a number of countries, to assess anifrolumab usage and patient experience in treating SLE in a real-world setting. Since patient safety data are already collected and reported according to regulatory requirements through EAPs, this study will not collect safety data.
Extra-hospital cardiac arrest is a major public health problem, with approximately 46,000 cases per year. Nearly 71% of the patients for whom resuscitation was initiated did not present a return of spontaneous circulation on scene and only 29% were transported alive to the hospital. In this context, extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation (ECPR) by veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation has been developed as a second line of treatment according to the latest international guidelines. The selection of eligible patients as well as the timing of initiation of ECPR has long been controversial, but expert recommendations have recently been published. After an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest of cardiological cause, an early ventricular dysfunction has been previously described, more particularly in hemodynamically unstable patients. This dysfunction was associated with greater early in-hospital mortality. There are few data on the medium-term course of left ventricular dysfunction and the largest study addressing this question showed that the severity of left ventricular involvement was associated with greater long-term morbidity and mortality. However, it also found that left ventricular ejection fraction was partially reversible in 29% of the study population. It seems so far, the medium-term evolution of left heart dysfunction had not been described in the context of refractory extra-hospital cardiac arrest treated by ECPR. However, these patients are particularly severe, hemodynamically unstable and potentially at risk of developing long-term sequelae.
Reflectance confocal microscopy (RCM) is the reference in vivo imaging technique for identifying malignant melanocytic tumors prior to surgical excision. However, it is not widely used due to its high cost and highly technical and time-consuming nature. In addition to RCM, we currently use 2 less expensive dermatoscopes that also allow in vivo diagnosis: super-high magnification dermoscopy (D400) and Fluorescence-Advanced videodermatoscopy (FAV).