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 a phase 2, open-label, single-arm, multicenter clinical trial designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of talimogene laherparepvec in combination with pembrolizumab following disease progression on prior anti-programmed cell death protein (anti-PD-1) therapy in unresectable/metastatic melanoma (stage IIIB-IVM1d) or prior anti-PD-1 therapy in the adjuvant setting. Subjects will be treated with talimogene laherparepvec and pembrolizumab until confirmed complete response, disappearance of all injectable lesions, documented confirmed disease progression per modified immune-related Response Criteria simulating Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (irRC-RECIST), intolerance of study treatment, or 102 weeks from the first dose of talimogene laherparepvec and/or pembrolizumab, whichever occurs first.
External anal sphincter is a Skeletal muscle under voluntary control. As described in previous studies, it is mainly composed of type 1 fibers. Fatigability is a concept which has been studied and described many times in skeletal limbs muscles. Two types of fatigue are described, peripheral of central fatigue. Fatigue can been physiologic but also pathologic (due to an affection of the muscle, the peripheral nervous system or the central nervous system). Many tools have been used to measure muscle fatigability (direct strength measure on isometric contraction, electromyography, echography, oxymetry...). Besides many fatiguing methods have been developed for every each muscle depending on its histological structure. Anal sphincter fatigability has already been described in few manometric studies with particularly 2 measures: Fatigue Rate and Fatigue Rate Index. Moreover, no fatiguing protocol has been standardized to study it. The primary aim of this study is to define a fatiguing protocol for external anal sphincter in order to study it in further studies. Secondary aims are to assess Electromyography as a tool for measuring this fatigability and finally to assess the link between anal sphincter fatigability and symptoms reported by patients. Patients over 18 years old, consulting for an Anorectal Manometry with a voluntary command on the external anal sphincter are included. History and treatment, height, weight, sex, age, Fatigue impact scale, digestive symptoms with Neurologic Bowel Disorders score and Wexner scale, urinary tract symptoms with Urinary Symptom Profile (USP) score and electromyography (Root Mean Square (RMS) and Mean Power Frequency (MPF)) and manometric data (contraction peak, fatigue rate, fatigue rate index) were recorded. The fatiguing protocol consists in 10 sustained external anal sphincter contractions with maximal voluntary contraction of 20 seconds followed by 10 seconds of resting. A training contraction is made before the fatiguing protocol. At the end of the protocol, patients undergo a classical anorectal manometry. Primary outcome is the difference on root mean square in electromyography between the first and the last fatiguing contraction. Secondary outcomes were mean power frequency and manometric data (i.e. Fatigue Rate index (FRI), Fatigue Rate (FR), contraction Peak) Influence of age, sex, symptoms, pathologies, weight on fatigability will be studied in a second analysis
The aim of this study is to develop a 4D-CT (4 Dimensional Computed Tomography) -scan acquisition method for estimating the cause of posttraumatic impairment of the forearm. Both forearms of patients with posttraumatic impairment of one of the forearm will be scanned using a 4D-CT-scan, during forearm rotation. Rotation of impaired and healthy forearms will be analysed and compared to each other. This method is intended to allow differentiation of motion patterns reflecting an osseous impairment from those caused by soft tissue pathology in order to improve treatment choice.
Obliterative arterial disease of the lower limbs (AOMI) is associated with a high risk of cardiovascular events, with a linear relationship between a fall in the systolic pressure index and a risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Critical ischemia is the most severe stage of AOMI, associated with decubitus pain and / or foot ulceration. The severity of this arterial involvement involves functional prognosis of the lower limb with a high risk of amputation, as well as the patient's vital prognosis. In these patients, the rate of amputation and mortality at 1 year can reach 20%. Consequently, the goal of management in a multidisciplinary setting is threefold: the treatment of pain, improvement of the functional prognosis and improvement of the patient's vital prognosis. Revascularization should be attempted as often as possible for the purpose of limb salvage and improvement of patient survival. In the vascular medicine department, the indication and modalities of the revascularization procedure are discussed at a multidisciplinary consultation meeting. The medical-radiological-surgical expertise takes into consideration the patient's terrain and comorbidities and the technical possibilities according to the arterial damage. With the modernization and development of endovascular equipment dedicated to the hamstrings, the interventional radiology techniques in the management of critical ischemia allow the treatment of one or more arterial axes as well as a very distal revascularization in the arteries. foot with a lower morbidity-mortality compared to surgery, especially in the most fragile patients. Since 2013, the endovascular revascularization procedures performed by the interventional radiology team have been an integral part of the management of patients with critical ischemia hospitalized in the vascular medicine department. In patients with critical ischemia at high risk of major amputation and without the option of traditional endovascular or surgical revascularization, an endovascular revascularization technique for leg rescue is discussed as a last resort in multidisciplinary staff. This technique, performed by the interventional radiology team (MDP and GA), consists of an extra-anatomic endovascular femoro-popliteal bypass. We wish to describe the limb salvage rate and the preservation of autonomy in the 15 patients treated with this revascularization technique since 2013 in the vascular medicine department of the GHPSJ.
Non-surgical traumas to the lower limbs that require orthopedic immobilisation (plaster or splint) are a frequent reason for going to accident and emergency. Due to venous stasis caused by immobilisation, hypercoagulable states and vascular injuries brought on by the trauma, these patients are at risk of developing VTE. For this reason, it is current practice in France and Belgium for the majority of patients to receive a preventative anticoagulant treatment. However, the benefit of this treatment, which has a considerable cost, is controversial. Contrary to French recommendations, American recommendations from 2012 actually advise against systematic preventative medicine, with prevention appearing to be effective primarily in studies with restrictive inclusion criteria. The most significant randomised controlled study on the subject did not show the benefit of low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH) on the rate of symptomatic VTE among 1,435 non-selected patients. Therefore, in 2017, the Cochrane meta-analysis concluded that stratification of the risk of thromboembolism is required. For this purpose, in collaboration with the Dutch team of Nemeth et al. we have recently developed a risk stratification model that takes into consideration the patient's characteristics, the type of immobilisation and the severity of the trauma: the TRiP(cast) score. This score is applied retrospectively to a large cohort and demonstrates excellent prognostic performances (AUC (area under the curve) of 0.74). In addition, when using a <7 limits, it makes it possible to identify a large group of patients at very low risk of developing VTE (negative predictive value: 99.2%). The aim of the CASTING study is to prospectively demonstrate the reliability and utility of the TRiP(cast) score by showing that patients with orthopaedic immobilisation of a lower limb who are not receiving preventative treatment on the basis of a TRiP(cast) score of <7 have a very low rate of symptomatic VTE, which allows for a significant reduction in prescriptions of anticoagulants in comparison with prior practices.
With 50% of post-operative biochemical failure, efficient predictive models are needed to guide post-operative management. Radiomic features are quantitative features extracted from medical imaging, supposed to be correlated with tumor heterogeneity. We aim to build and test three predictive models (clinical, radiomic and combined models).
The objective of the study is to analyse : - Psychic experience of ear aplasia in children ; - the modalities of their psychic functioning ; - and the psychological repercussions of the plastic reconstruction surgery
Coronary artery diseases (CAD) are multifactorial diseases which prognosis and risk factors are improved with increased physical activity (PA). Thus, CAD rehabilitation (CR) program is mainly based on recovering sufficient exercise capacity and promoting regular personalized PA associated to modifications in lifestyle habits to improve control of cardiovascular risk factors and health-related quality of life. However, most of patients do not achieve the recommended levels of PA which may be partly due to numerous barriers that hamper the return to a physically active lifestyle. One promising interventions strategy is so-called 'brief interventions' (BI) to increase PA in health care settings used to initiate change for an unhealthy behavior in individuals and consisting in "verbal advice, discussion, negotiation or encouragement, with or without written or other support or follow-up". An 'extended brief intervention' (EBI) is similar but usually lasts more than 30 minutes and is delivered on a one-to-one or group basis and can be composed of multiple brief sessions. However, in CAD patients, the effect of such interventions on PA level and behavior remains unclear, as well as predictor patterns associated with better outcomes. The investigators aimed to assess the effect of a 4-day PA education program with multiple EBI and exercise on the level and barriers to PA in CAD patients and characterize the profile of participants (barriers to PA) with better outcomes.
In situ fenestration (ISF) could represent an alternative in the treatment of aorto-iliac disease when usual techniques are not available. The aim of this study was to present the results of ISF in aorto-iliac disease. Data will retrospectively be analyzed. Inclusion criteria will be: a surgical abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) with an unsuitable anatomy for a standard endograft, aorto-iliac occlusion with narrow distal aorta (<14mm). Technically, after placement of the endograft, a transjugular intrahepatic access set was used to perform ISF. The hole was secondary enlarged using a cutting or non-compliant balloon. Finally, a kissing stent was performed to the aorto- uni-iliac into a bifurcated endograft.
Height measurement is unreliable when neuromuscular weakness or spinal deformity is present. The aim of this study was to accurately predict pulmonary function from a limb segment (ulna) measurement that is precise and reproducible. Equations are available in caucasian children but are not available in children of sub-saharian or caribbean ethnicity, which was the aim of the study. To this end, 350 black children referred for pulmonary function testing for asthma follow-up will be included.