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NCT ID: NCT05661799 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2

Persistence of Physical Activity in People With Type 2 Diabetes Over Time.

PerPA2Temps
Start date: September 9, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Many programmes exist to enable patients to engage in physical activity, but it is clear that the objectives are often not achieved in terms of quality, quantity or intensity of practice. In this study, the aim is to find alternatives, assuming that strengthening patients' self-efficacy, meeting their basic needs and increasing their level of hope will have an impact on their motivation to practice, which in turn will have an impact on their actual practice. The aim is to develop and implement an innovative intervention programme and to identify the interactions between the variables that are assumed to predict engagement in practice.

NCT ID: NCT05661513 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Infection, Lung Parenchyma

Inventory of the Management of Acute Community-acquired Pneumonia in Strasbourg University Hospitals

PPAC
Start date: September 9, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Acute community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) refers to an acute infection of the lung parenchyma, occurring within the first 48 hours of hospitalization. It is a frequent, serious pathology with a strong economic impact. Viruses (rhinovirus, respiratory syncitial virus, influenza virus for the most common) and Streptococcus pneumoniae are the most frequently encountered pathogens. However, more than half of the PACs have no microbiological documentation. The management of CAPs is based on national and international recommendations. Several studies have shown imperfect compliance by clinicians with recommendations with a prognostic impact. The various published studies insist on the variability of the incidence, the type of pathogen, the severity and the economic impact, depending on the series. They also insist on the need to know the local epidemiology, in particular microbiological, in order to adapt the recommendations.

NCT ID: NCT05661487 Completed - Clinical trials for Vertigo Labyrinthine

Correlation MRI - Paraclinical Examination in Sudden Deafness Associated With Vertigo

SBAV
Start date: May 19, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Acute cochleo-vestibular syndrome or labyrinthitis is characterized clinically by the sudden appearance of a great rotatory vertigo and a unilateral sensorineural hearing loss. In this clinical context, MRI is the examination to eliminate differential diagnoses and to make a positive diagnosis of labyrinthitis (supposedly infectious, immunologic or ischemic). The etiologies described are ischemic, infectious or autoimmune, so the risk factors are very variable (cardiovascular, autoimmune or infectious). Labyrinthitis has been little studied as a clinical entity in its own right. Indeed, studies mainly focus on sudden deafness with subgroups of patients with vertigo. The incidence of sudden deafness is of the order of 5 to 20 per 100,000 people per year but is probably under-diagnosed. The individual and medico-economic consequences are similar to those of hearing loss, with an increased risk of dementia, depression, premature death and an increase in health care consumption.

NCT ID: NCT05661331 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Chronic Liver Disease

VIATORR Device Registry

Start date: February 21, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The primary objective is to confirm the clinical performance and safety of the GORE® VIATORR® TIPS (Transjugular Intrahepatic Portosystemic Shunt) Endoprosthesis with Controlled Expansion throughout the device functional lifetime of 3 years in real world setting. The secondary objective is to collect information on quality of life after treatment with the GORE® VIATORR® TIPS Endoprosthesis with Controlled Expansion. Additionally, data will be collected on the safety and performance of the GORE TIPS Set when utilized.

NCT ID: NCT05661149 Completed - Type 1 Diabetes Clinical Trials

Closed-Loop Insulin Delivery During Pregnancy (IADIABENCEINTE)

IADIABENCEIN
Start date: May 11, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The imbalance of diabetes is associated with an increased risk of maternal and fetal complications. In women, it can cause abortion, hypertension, preeclampsia, and obstructed labor; in the fetus, it increases the risk of many malformations, including neurological and cardiac, fetal death in utero, intrauterine growth retardation, macrosomia, prematurity and metabolic complications. Despite the various therapeutic tools available and used during pregnancy, maintaining blood sugar levels within this narrow range remains a challenge. Automated Insulin Therapy (IA) Could Further Improve Outcomes With Continuous Glucose Monitoring and Increase Percentage of Time Spent on Target Between 63 and 140 mg/dL The objective of this observational study is to describe the clinical characteristics, metabolic data on MCG and maternal and/or fetal complications in women with T1D treated during pregnancy with an AI system available in France.

NCT ID: NCT05660967 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma

Subcutaneous Epcoritamab With or Without Lenalidomide as First Line Therapy for Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma

EPCORE DLBCL-3
Start date: March 6, 2023
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of the study is to examine efficacy and safety of epcoritamab with and without lenalidomide in newly diagnosed elderly patients with Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma (DLBCL) who cannot tolerate anthracycline therapy. Epcoritamab (also known as EPKINLYâ„¢, GEN3013 and DuoBody®-CD3xCD20) is an antibody that has already been tested in several clinical studies. All patients will receive active treatment. There is an equal chance of receiving epcoritamab or epcoritamab plus lenalidomide.

NCT ID: NCT05660733 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Prosthetic Infection

Study of the Aortic and Large Arterial Vessel Infections

Repia
Start date: June 30, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Aortic or large arterial vessel infections are rare but serious infections. Their management is based on French and American expert opinions. The quality of evidence supporting these guidelines is low because most publications on the subject correspond to case series and few interventional studies have been performed to validate their management. However, referral centres for vascular surgery are frequently solicited to give their opinion on patients suffering from mycotic aneurysms. In addition, the last few decades have seen the improvement of vascular surgery techniques allowing the management of more and more patients, often elderly and comorbid. There has therefore been an increase in the incidence of infectious complications associated with this care. It is therefore essential to participate in research on aortic and large arterial vessel infections. For this, a monocentric cohort study seems to be an essential first step to better understand the polymorphism and complexity of these patients.

NCT ID: NCT05660499 Recruiting - Primary Brain Tumor Clinical Trials

Impact of the Development of Pediatric Palliative Care

PTB
Start date: February 15, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Despite medical advances, cancer remains the leading cause of death by disease in children. Brain tumors are the second most common cause of cancer in children after leukemia, representing 25% of pediatric cancers. The overall survival rate is about 50% with extremes ranging from less than 5% to more than 90% depending on the histological type of brain tumor. The end of life of children with a brain tumor is marked by the possibility of discomfort symptoms, painful or not, and by a progressive neurological deterioration, which makes the management of these children complex for both families and health professionals. Over the last decade, the concept of palliative care has been increasingly integrated into pediatric onco-hematology services with the primary objective of better symptom control in a global approach to the child and his or her family in order to aim at a better quality of life.

NCT ID: NCT05660252 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Intensive Care Units

Effect of Collaborative Requesting on DCD Refusal Rates: Randomized Controlled Trial

PRODON
Start date: June 16, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The most common reason for not obtaining donation after brain death (DBD) or donation after controlled circulatory death (DCD) in France is refusal of consent by the relatives. Many observational studies suggest that consent rates may increase when the request is made by specially trained and highly experienced professionals. One technique that may maximize the consent rate is collaborative requesting made jointly by the physician in charge of the patient and an organ procurement coordinator (OPC). Although the general principles are the same for DCD as for DBD, several differences and specificities exist. First, withdrawal of life-sustaining treatments (WLST) decisions should be entirely independent from organ-donation considerations, in order to eliminate potential conflicts of interest. However, separating conversations about WLST and donation may not always be possible. Potential DCD situations often occur after an extended ICU stay with the development of close ties between families and staff. The ICU physician may therefore feel that suggesting donation during the WLST conversation serves the family-ICU staff relationship. An unblinded multicenter randomized controlled trial tested the null hypothesis of no difference in organ-donation consent rates between collaborative requesting (clinical team and OPC together) vs. the clinical team only (routine requesting). The potential donors met criteria for brain-stem death or had impending brain-stem death; none were candidates for DCD. Collaborative requesting did not increase the consent rate. The PRODON study will test whether collaborative requesting by the ICU team and OPC decreases the rate of DCD refusal by families compared to routine requesting by the ICU team only.

NCT ID: NCT05660174 Recruiting - Acute Kidney Injury Clinical Trials

Identification of Preoperative Parameters to Predict Acute Kidney Injury Risk Following Vascular or Digestive Surgery

SCOPING
Start date: January 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The study aims to identify the preoperative parameters associated with the risk of postoperative acute kidney injury (in particular the parameters of the SPARK score) in patients of the Besançon University Hospital who have undergone digestive or vascular surgery.