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 is an observational study in which only data are collected from participants receiving their usual treatment. The study is done in children under 2 years old with venous thromboembolism (VTE). VTE is a condition in which blood clots form in the veins, usually in the leg. This can cause pain and swelling. The clot can also break apart and travel in the blood to the lungs where it can block the blood flow. This can be life threatening. Rivaroxaban is approved for doctors to prescribe to children with VTE, but there is limited information about how it is used, how well it works, and how safe it is in children under 2 years old. Children in this study are already receiving or will receive rivaroxaban or other currently used medicines for VTE from their doctor according to the approved product information. The purpose of this study is to collect information on the pattern of use and safety of rivaroxaban and other standard medicines for VTE in children under 2 years old. The main information that researchers will collect in this study: - Age, gender, and other information about the child and their illness - Type of VTE treatment given to the child - Occurrence of medically important bleeding and its severity Further information that researchers will collect: - Changes in the characteristics of the children given VTE treatment (e.g., changes in the age range of children given VTE treatment) and changes in the treatment pattern for VTE - Return of VTE symptoms - Types of doctors who prescribe VTE treatment and their set-up (e.g., special clinics versus hospitals) Besides this data collection, no further tests or examinations are needed in this study. The data for this study will be collected from electronic health records and health insurance claims data until 2026. Researchers will observe each child during treatment until: - end of the anticoagulation treatment period e.g. discontinuation of all study drugs, - their information is no longer available, or - the study ends.
Among the 15% of couples who experience a spontaneous early miscarriage (SEM) during their pregnancy, approximately 2 to 5% will suffer from recurrent SEM. It is only after the third SM that they will be offered a workup to look for a predisposition to SEM. This workup does not currently include a search for foetal chromosomal abnormalities that could be considered causal for this event. These anomalies are responsible for approximately 50% of SEM and their detection could lead to an explanation for half of the couples currently without a diagnosis after a standard workup. The diagnosis of chromosomal abnormalities can be made by karyotype analysis or by Cytogenetic Microarray Analysis (CMA) on the product of conception. Unfortunately, karyotyping has a high failure rate due to poor cell culture of samples that are often degraded or of low quantity. The CMA is not always feasible due to the absence of analyzable feto-placental material linked to the use of a drug strategy for its elimination. The study of cell-free DNA of syncytiotrophoblastic origin (cfDNA) circulating in the maternal plasma could be a solution as it is for non-invasive prenatal screening of trisomy 21. cfDNA is detectable from 6 to 8 weeks of amenorrhea and released in the maternal blood as long as placental tissue is present in the uterus, can be easily obtained by maternal venous sampling. If maternal blood sampling is performed before complete removal of the product of conception, then detection of foetal chromosomal abnormalities would be possible. Thus, if failure rates of CMA and cfDNA techniques are comparable, cfDNA could be preferred as it applies for miscarriages for whom no fetoplacental material can be obtained. This study therefore proposes to compare the failure rates of the two technologies (CMA and cfDNA) for the detection of chromosomal abnormalities in recurrent SEM.
Glaucoma is a common, potentially blinding pathology, threatening patients' autonomy and quality of life. The main aim of treatment is to lower intraocular pressure (IOP) in order to slow nerve fiber loss as much as possible, leading to alterations in the visual field and even reduced visual acuity. To achieve this drop in pressure, there are, of course, hypotonizing eye drops, trabeculoplasty with Laser Selecta (SLT) or filtering surgery (trabeculectomy, deep non-perforating sclerectomy, insertion of drainage devices). Laser Selecta specifically targets pigmented trabecular meshwork cells without damaging adjacent structures, and is thought to act via three mechanisms: distension of Schlemm's canal, reorganization of trabecular meshwork cells and stimulation of extracellular matrix production. Its efficacy has been demonstrated in several studies, with a 20-30% reduction in intraocular pressure in patients who have never undergone surgery. Few studies have investigated the efficacy of SLT in patients who have already undergone filtering surgery. The aim of this study is therefore to determine the efficacy of SLT in previously operated patients whose intraocular pressure remains insufficiently controlled.
A Phase 2, multi-center, randomized, controlled, open-label study to evaluate the effects of the intraperitoneal, liposomal formulation VS-01 in patients with an acute episode of hepatic and/or extrahepatic organ dysfunctions and failures in the presence of liver cirrhosis (Acute-on-Chronic Liver Failure, ACLF) and accumulation of fluid in the abdominal cavity (ascites)
Eosinophilic esophagitis is a chronic condition of the esophagus. The symptoms of eosinophilic esophagitis can affect the quality of life of affected children. There is no French scale to specifically evaluate the quality of life of these patients. It will be a monocentric, prospective, descriptive study carried out at the Nice University Pédiatric Hospital. The main objective of this study will be the validation of a French version of the quality of life pediatric scale (PedsQL) module for eosinophilic esophagitis. It will take place in 2 distinct parts: - The translation of the questionnaire in French. - Collection of the quality of life questionnaires
Per Oral Endoscopic Myotomy (POEM) is a treatment of choice for achalasia with an excellent safety and efficacy profile. There is a high rate of esophagitis related to gastroesophageal reflux following this procedure. There is no recommendation on the prescription of protein pump inhibitors (PPI) after the procedure and no study has studied the benefit of systematic prescription of PPI after POEM for achalasia. The study authors hypothesize that routine PPI prescribing post-POEM for 12 months would reduce the rate of esophageal acid exposure compared to a symptom-based prescribing strategy.
This retrospective observational study will evaluate high-dose methotrexate patterns of use, supportive care measures used during high-dose methotrexate chemotherapy, along with the incidence of delayed elimination of methotrexate, acute kidney injury and any associated impact of delayed elimination of methotrexate on future courses of chemotherapy and disease outcomes in adults and children with cancer. The study will compare current practice with existing guidelines and best practices to identify potential gaps in the management of high-dose methotrexate administration and delayed elimination of methotrexate. The study will identify variations in practice and outcomes in different study centers, countries, cancer types, patient age groups, by different methotrexate doses and infusion times and different supportive care measures used. The study will also document the proportion of high-dose methotrexate courses in which glucarpidase has been used and any toxicities attributable to the use of glucarpidase.
Chronic fatigue (CF) is a pathological fatigue over at least 6 months, without improvement after rest or sleep. In primary care, it is the major complaint in 5 to 10% of the consultations. Physical activity is an efficient therapy to help reducing this fatigue in addition to the improvement of muscular and cardiorespiratory functions. However, it remains little exploited. Yet the studies focus mainly on precise chronic pathologies with general trainings, without considering the fatigue status and reveal a large heterogeneity. Personalizing the physical training appears to be the next step in order to improve chronic fatigue patients care. The objective of this study will be to investigate the relevance and the effects of a personalized physical training to reduce fatigue in chronic fatigue patients.
Main objective: For a bimodal fitting (hearing aid (HA) + cochlear implant (CI)): Comparison of a tonotopy based fitting strategy with synchronization between HA and CI (ABFS) to a tonotopy based fitting strategy without synchronization (ABFnoS) for the accuracy of sound localization. Secondary objectives: Comparison of ABFS to ABFnoS for the bias of sound localization. Comparison of ABFS to ABFnoS for speech perception in noise. Comparison of ABFS to ABFnoS for the auditory skills experienced by the subject.
Predicting fluid responsiveness is primordial when caring for patients with circulatory shock as it allows correction of preload-dependent low cardiac output states, while preserving patients of the deleterious effects of excessive fluid resuscitation. Patients with severe acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) treated with prone positioning (PP) are a specific subset of patients, as 1) they frequently present with shock; 2) excessive fluid administration may lead to respiratory worsening due to increased hydrostatic oedema with potential subsequent worse clinical outcome; and 3) all available dynamic tests evaluating fluid responsiveness can only be performed in patients in the supine condition (which in the case of severe ARDS patients in PP occurs only for 8h over 24h). These elements warrant the development of specific tests allowing the clinician to predict fluid responsiveness with enough exactitude when caring for these patients. We hypothesize that there exists diagnostic heterogeneity in the predictive performance of 4 clinical tests to identify fluid responsiveness in ARDS patients in PP. For the matter of this study, these 4 tests are the Trendelenburg maneuver, the end-expiratory occlusion test, the end-expiratory occlusion test associated with the end-inspiratory occlusion test, and the tidal volume challenge. The diagnostic reference of the study will be the relative change in cardiac index measured by transpulmonary thermodilution before and after a 500 ml fluid bolus, and will allow the adjudication of patients as being fluid responsive or not. The primary objective of the study is to determine the area under the ROC curve of each of the 4 tests, with their respective 95% confidence interval. All enrolled patients will perform the 4 tests following a cross-over design and in a randomized sequence, separated by 1-min wash-out periods with return to hemodynamic baseline values, and concluded with the 500-ml fluid bolus. Patients will only participate once. The expected duration of study participation is 30 minutes maximum.