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.
Surgery for brain gliomas is usually guided by different imaging techniques including neuronavigation MRI and intraoperative ultrasound that do not allow visualization of the low-density peri-lesional tumor infiltration present in gliomas and from which the tumor recurs. Another important aspect in the management of glial tumors is the histological grade. The appearance of new vessels (called neo-angiogenesis) is one of the crucial steps in the life of these tumors, which signifies the transition to anaplasia. This neoangiogenesis is diagnosed during the anatomopathological analysis of the operative specimen, and may be suspected on preoperative MRI on the so-called infusion sequences. The objective of this project is to evaluate the potential of two ultrasound modalities - elastography and ultrasensitive Doppler - in helping the surgical management of brain tumors. Ultrasound elastography measures cerebral elasticity and thus indirectly the degree of tumor infiltration; while ultrasensitive Doppler measures intratumoral vascularization, and could therefore help in the diagnosis of tumor anaplasia.
Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is first genetic kidney disease and fourth etiology of end stage renal disease in the world. Peritoneal dialysis is underuse in this population. Indeed in this pathology, behind big kidneys and big liver, a hyper pressure is feared with technical failure. The lack of abdominal space could generate increase of peritoneal pressure. Hyper pressure is already known to be a risk factor of technical failure and over mortality in peritoneal dialysis patients (all nephropathies included). It depends on body mass index and body surface modulating injected volume for each patient. Anticipate peritoneal pressure in this population ADPKD could be an important information for distinguish those who can use peritoneal dialysis without fear and those at risk of technical failure. The primary objective is to create and validate prediction score for intra-peritoneal pressure, in peritoneal dialysis for ADPKD patients thanks to clinical and radiological values. The secondary objectives are to study the association between intra-peritoneal pressure and patient's outcome (global survival and technical survival). Retrospective, multicentric, national, cohort study will be performed. For the first step (score creation): ADPKD patients starting peritoneal dialysis for end stage renal failure between 01/01/2010 and 31/12/2015 with tomodensitometry between one year before beginning and one year after were included. For the second step (score validation): ADPKD patients starting peritoneal dialysis for end stage renal failure between 01/01/2016 and 31/12/2017 with tomodensitometry between one year before beginning and one year after were included.
The primary purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of imipenem/cilastatin/relebactam (IMI/REL) in participants from birth to less than 18 years of age with confirmed or suspected gram-negative bacterial infection. Participants are expected to require hospitalization through completion of intravenous (IV) study intervention, and have at least one of the following primary infection types: hospital-acquired bacterial pneumonia (HABP) or ventilator-associated bacterial pneumonia (VABP); complicated intra-abdominal infection (cIAI); or complicated urinary tract infection (cUTI). Participants will be randomized in a 3:1 ratio to receive IMI/REL or active control. This study will also evaluate the efficacy of IMI/REL by assessing all-cause mortality at Day 28 post-randomization, as well as clinical and microbiological response to treatment. It will also evaluate the pharmacokinetics of IMI/REL.
This study will evaluate the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of ABBV-3067 given alone and in combination with various doses of ABBV-2222 in adults with Cystic Fibrosis who are homozygous for the F508del mutation.
A number of case reports describe the association of antiphospholipid antibodies (aPL Abs) with hematological and solid organ malignancies. Especially in elderly patients, thrombotic events associated with aPL Abs can be the first manifestation of malignancy. Cancer-associated monoclonal gammopathy of the IgM type can be accompanied by positive lupus anticoagulant (LA) or an anticardiolipin (aCL) IgM. Cancer and antiphospholipid antibody syndrome (APS) can coexist in sporadic cases, while some cancer patients with or without thrombosis may show some transitory aPL Ab positivity, the most striking symptomatic clinical feature, catastrophic APS, being even described in cancer patients. Some reports suggest a significant incidence of malignancies in APS patients. Cancer was the 2nd cause of death (13.9%), after bacterial infection, during the 10-year follow-up of the 1,000 APS patients studied by the Euro-Phospholipid Project Group, but no control group was simultaneously evaluated. The risk of cancer in patients with APS is thus still uncertain. The Nîmes Obstetricians and Haematologists APS (NOH-APS) study was based on the recruitment of a cohort of women with no history of thrombosis, who had experienced pregnancy loss fulfilling the clinical criteria of obstetrical APS (oAPS), who were either positive for aPL Abs (APS group), or positive for the F5 rs6025 or F2 rs1799963 polymorphism (Thrombophilia group), or negative for thrombophilia screening (Control group). We now want to assess the comparative incidence of cancer in women for whom an oAPS diagnosis had been made. This evaluation will be carried out during the 2017 medical follow-up step, corresponding to a median follow-up of 17 years. An external, local population-derived control group, the registry of tumors in Montpellier area (Registre des Tumeurs de l'Hérault) will be used to compute standardized incidence ratios (SIRs).
Epidemiological studies link early exposure to persistent organic pollutants (POPs) with health consequences in the newborn. Experimental studies have shown the impact of POPs on the gut microbiota. This project aims to characterize the POPs content in breast milk in an exposed population and to evaluate the impact on breast milk composition and intestinal microbiota establishment in the newborn. The health consequences will be evaluated by the clinical follow-up of the newborn.
Determination of the best positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) based on oxygenation or driving pressure in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) after cardiothoracic surgery The use of a positive end-expiratory pressure in acute respiratory distress syndrome is obvious in ARDS management. On the one hand it serves to fight against the reduction of functional residual capacity (FRC) and enable the limitation of hypoxia; and on the other hand it allows the limitation of "opening/closing" lesions in pulmonary alveoli which lead to increase "bio trauma". However elevated PEEP has harmful effect such as hemodynamic effect on the right ventricle and distension on healthy part of the lung.Other adverse effects are: decreasing cardiac output, increased risk of barotrauma, and the interference with assessment of hemodynamic pressures. Ideally the adjustment of PEEP level must be done by taking into account each patient characteristic. PEEP titration based on blood gas analysis is one of the most used techniques by physicians. Current guidelines for lung-protective ventilation in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) suggest the use of low tidal volumes (Vt), set according to ideal body weight (IBW) of the patient, and higher levels of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) to limit ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI). However, recent studies have shown that ARDS patients who are ventilated according to these guidelines may still be exposed to forces that can induce or aggravate lung injury. Driving pressure (DP) is the difference between the airway pressure at the end of inspiration (plateau pressure, Ppl) and PEEP. Driving pressure may be a valuable tool to set PEEP. Independent of the strategy used to titrate PEEP, changes in PEEP levels should consider the impact on driving pressure, besides other variables such as gas exchange and hemodynamics. A decrease in driving pressure after increasing PEEP will necessarily reflect recruitment and a decrease in cyclic strain. On the contrary, an increase in driving pressure will suggest a non-recruitable lung, in which overdistension prevails over recruitment. The main purposes of this study are to assess the optimal PEEP based on the best driving pressure or the best oxygenation.
A functioning vascular access provides a lifeline for patients requiring haemodialysis but vascular access dysfunction remains one of the leading causes of excessive morbidity, mortality and healthcare costs in this group. Despite increasing numbers of vascular access trials, successful interventions to improve vascular access function have been sparse and compromised by highly variable, often selectively reported outcome measures of limited relevance to patients and health professionals. Through engagement of all relevant stakeholders including patients and caregivers, vascular access function, defined by the need for interventions to enable and maintain the use of a vascular access for haemodialysis, has been identified as one of the most critically important outcome measures for trials in haemodialysis. This prospective, multi-centre, multinational validation study aims to assess the accuracy and feasibility of measuring vascular access function part of routine clinical practice and across different clinical settings to ensure successful global implementation of this core outcome measure in future trials in haemodialysis.
It is accepted that emotional events engage more attention and are detected and identified faster than neutral events. The same is true of negative events with regard to positive events. At the cerebral level, this facilitation results in greater activation of brain regions involved in visual and emotional processing. In normal aging, the preference for the negative stimuli (named negativity bias) tends to disappear and, sometimes, to shifts towards a preference for positive stimuli compared to both the negative and neutral stimuli (positivity bias). Most studies have assessed the age effect on emotional processing using tasks which require the identification of a personal emotional experience or the emotions of others. Although many studies suggest a strong link between emotion and action, relatively little is known about the age effect on emotional processing when the task requires the identification of a tendency to action (i.e. preparation of the individual to react and direction of action - example: fear prepares to avoid danger). ACTEMOVI project aims to identify the brain bases and neural networks involved in the processing of emotional visual information in normal aging when performing emotional appraisal and action-oriented tasks, through a functional MRI study.
Primary mitral regurgitation (MR) is the second most frequent valve disease requiring surgery and it is important to identify patients whose outcome could be improved with surgery by considering the risks and benefits. The current guidelines recommend surgery in patients with symptomatic severe mitral regurgitation or in asymptomatic patients who develop early signs of left ventricular (LV) dysfunction as a result of the MR. However, it remains difficult to determine optimal timing for surgery with the current guidelines. Early-stage LV dysfunction with normal LVEF predicts post-operative LV decompensation and poor prognosis and longitudinal myocardial function is suitable for detection of minor myocardial damage in patients with MR. Thus, inestigators want to study the value of LV global longitudinal strain (GLS) to predict postoperative LV dysfunction in patients with chronic severe MR and preserved pre-operative LVEF. The principal aim is to prove that the optimal timing for surgery, in asymptomatic chronic severe primary MR with preserved LVEF, is before GLS alteration, and that investigators should not wait for LV dilatation of dysfunction.