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.
The management of locally advanced cervical cancer (Figo >IB) is based on radiochemotherapy (RCT) followed by brachytherapy. At present there is no personalized treatment, all patients undergoing radiochemotherapy will follow a conventional treatment by external radiotherapy (46 Gy in 23 sessions associated with cisplatin (CDDP) weekly) and brachytherapy to achieve a total equivalent biological dose around 80-90 Gy).The efficacy of this treatment has been proven for most patients, almost 80% being in complete response after RCT. Nevertheless, on an individual scale, there remains a significant variation in the tumor response, with patients who respond from the first week of treatment, "early responders" or, on the contrary, others who present significant tumor residues after external beam radiotherapy.Various macroscopic tumor volume (GTV) response patterns have been identified based on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) at diagnosis and MRI before brachytherapy, implying very different clinical target volumes for brachytherapy technique. The difference in tumor volume response has been identified as having a major impact on treatment response. This is the first study attempting to evaluate tumor response in real time during radiochemotherapy treatment. Knowing the tumor response during treatment will make it possible to modify the management of locally advanced cervical cancer, several therapeutic options might then be discussed depending on the early response to treatment: dose de-escalation for early responders, reduction of time total treatment, personalization of brachytherapy management (technique and dose). This observational study will allow rapid identification of responder and non-responder patients and might be used as a basis for personalized treatment strategies
Research hypothesis - Recent studies have shown that high-dimensional descriptors of the cardiac function can be efficiently exploited to characterize targeted pathologies. In this project, the investigators hypothesize that echocardiograms possess a wealth of information that is currently under-exploited and that, combined with relevant patient data, will allow the development of robust and accurate digital tools for etiological diagnosis. Objectives - Based on key advances recently obtained in image analysis, notably by members of the consortium, the objective of this project is to develop rigorous and explainable cardiac disease prediction models from echocardiography based on the transformer paradigm (AI). The strength of this study lies in the development of a strong AI framework to model the complex interactions between high-quality image-based measurements extracted from echocardiograms and relevant patient data to automatically predict etiological diagnosis of cardiac diseases
Tourette disorder (TD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by motor and vocal tics. It is often associated with multiple psychiatric comorbidities involving a high degree of impulsivity such as obsessive-compulsive disorders (OCD), attention-deficit hyperactivity disorders (ADHD), and intermittent explosive disorders (IED). Although a substantial body of clinical studies have emphasized the role of the dopamine system in motor symptoms, little is known about how the serotonergic (5-HT) system modulate both cognitive and affective abilities in TD. Several lines of evidence suggest that different 5-HT receptor subtypes may constitute a crucial factor in the development and maintenance of different symptoms. Because abnormal 5-HT2A receptor bindings have been reported in patients with TD and aripiprazole (drug of first choice) is a 5-HT2A antagonist, we hypothesize that 5-HT2A receptors may play an important role in regulating psychiatric symptoms in TD such as those characterized by impulsive behaviors. To investigate the involvement of 5-HT2A receptors in TD, we propose to perform a multimodal imaging study with 20 adult patients (ON and OFF treatment). Neuroimaging data will be collected with a hybrid system that simultaneously combines the positron emission tomography (PET) and the functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). A highly selective PET radiotracer ([18F]-altanserin) will map 5-HT2A receptor bindings in the whole brain, while fMRI will provide detail information regarding the altered brain activities.
Obesity is recognized as a major public health problem. Recent research suggests the involvement of the gut microbiota in the development of obesity. Indeed, obese people are characterized by a dysbiotic intestinal microbiota. Periodontitis are chronic inflammatory oral pathologies linked to an imbalance between the bacterial etiological factor, oral dysbiosis, and the host's immune defenses.They lead to the destruction of the supporting tissues of the tooth and an apical migration of the periodontal attachment system, thus leading to the formation of the pathognomonic entity of the disease, the periodontal pocket.the presence of bacteria of oral origin such as Porphyromonas gingivalis (Pg) has been demonstrated in the adipose tissue of obese patients inducing a chronic low-grade inflammatory response by macrophages which leads to the proliferation of adipocyte precursors predisposing to obesity. The main objective is to assess the average amount of Porphyromonas gingivalis (Pg) in the saliva of obese people (BMI ≥ 30) with periodontitis.
The aim is to study the effectiveness of a common osteopathic intervention in professional handball players on diaphragmatic contractility and its correlations with posture. This study has never been done in healthy subjects. It is a scientific process of objectification of an osteopathic technique commonly performed in this population. The main objective is to assess diaphragmatic contractibility using ultrasound after abdominal osteopathic intervention (OMT).
The development of artificial intelligence (AI) systems in the field of colorectal endoscopy is currently booming, colorectal cancer being, by its frequency and severity, a real public health problem. In terms of image analysis, AI is indeed able to perform many tasks simultaneously (lesion detection, classification, and segmentation) and to combine them. Lesion detection is thus the starting point of the whole chain to choose at the end the most appropriate treatment for the patient. Large-scale studies have demonstrated the superiority of artificial intelligence-assisted detection over the usual detection by gastroenterologists, mainly for the detection of sub-centimeter polyps. However, the investigators have shown that a recent computer-aided detection system (CADe) such as the ENDO-AID software in combination with the EVIS X1 video column (Olympus, Tokyo, Japan) may present difficulties in the detection of flat lesions such as sessile serrated lesions (SSLs) and non-granular laterally spreading tumors (LST-NGs). This represents a major challenge because in addition to their shape being difficult to identify for the human eye in practice and where AI assistance would be of great value, these rare lesions are associated with advanced histology. In addition, the investigators recently described the case of a worrisome false negative of AI-assisted colonoscopy, which failed to detect a flat adenocarcinoma in the transverse colon. Therefore, it is important to measure the false negative rate of AI detection based on the macroscopic shape of the lesion. Comparing this rate to the human endoscopist's false negatives would improve the performance of AI for this specific lesion subtype in the future.
This is a prospective, randomized, double-blind, parallel-group controlled trial. The aim of this research project is to compare the clinical benefits achieved in patients with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) following two types of intervention: ccPAS active or ccPAS sham.
Physical exercise has a fundamental position in the chronic low back pain treatment. However, the physical activity level is often low in these patients and the adherence to the care program is not enough in the long term. The French Evaluation of the Perception of Physical Activity (EPPA) is a valid and reliable questionnaire, developed by N. Coste et al in 2020, that assesses the perceived barriers to and facilitators of physical activity in patients with knee osteoarthritis. To our knowledge, there is no valid and reliable instrument allowing such an assessment in chronic low back pain. The main objective of this study is to adapt the EPPA to chronic low back pain and to evaluate its psychometric properties. This validation would allow its use in current practice to adapt the care strategy, to personalize rehabilitation of each patient with chronic low back pain in order to have a better adherence to rehabilitation programs.
The main objective is to measure the effects of intense brief exercise program in the workplace of administrative staff on the cardio-metabolic health
Membranous Nephropathy (MN) is a renal autoimmune disease mediated by autoantibodies. Current management is based on the use of immunosuppressive therapies. MN patients with a pro-inflammatory Th17 cytokine profile have a 10.5-fold increased risk of disease relapse. Interferon-based immunomodulatory therapies are effective in blocking the production of cytokines in the Th17 pathway avoiding an increased risk of infection, unlike immunosuppressive treatments. To date, these treatments have not been evaluated in the management of MN. The aims of the ALPHAGEM project are to monitor the immunological activity of the disease before and after 6 months of personalized interferon-alfa treatment in MN patients.