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NCT ID: NCT06274593 Not yet recruiting - Glaucoma Clinical Trials

Study of OCT Peripapillary Angiography in Patients With Advanced Glaucoma

OGA
Start date: April 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Glaucoma is a chronic disease of the optic nerve, characterized by progressive loss of nerve cells in the retina, leading to progressive loss of peripheral and central vision. There are in fact several types of glaucoma, which is the world's second leading cause of blindness after cataracts, and the leading cause of irreversible blindness. To date, to our knowledge, there is no work analyzing the progression of angiographic OCT in patients with glaucoma. The main aim of this study is to compare the 3-year progression rate of 3 examinations in advanced glaucoma patients: one functional (visual field) and two anatomical (OCTa and OCTrnfl).

NCT ID: NCT06273943 Not yet recruiting - Prevention Clinical Trials

Impact of Long-acting Injectable Cabotegravir for HIV PrEP in MSM in France.

CABOPrEP
Start date: April 1, 2024
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate if offering long-acting injectable cabotegravir (CAB-LA) as an additional HIV prevention choice among oral PrEP-experienced men who have sex with men (MSM) in France can significantly increase the sustained PrEP use over time and the PrEP coverage of at-risk sexual risk behaviors.

NCT ID: NCT06273566 Recruiting - Cystic Fibrosis Clinical Trials

French Validation of the AdT-Physio Scale

Trans-AdT
Start date: April 1, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The goal of this observational study is to translate and validate the Adt-Physio scale in French, and to validate on a large number of patients the French translation of the Adt-Physio scale as a tool for evaluating adherence and perception of the intervention of a physiotherapist in patients with cystic fibrosis. participants will have to answer the French trans-AdT scale, the Brief Cope and GSES questionnaire.

NCT ID: NCT06273267 Not yet recruiting - Cerebral Palsy Clinical Trials

Initiating Pediatric Palliative Care in ACT Group 4

StartSPP
Start date: February 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Due to the wide range of diagnoses encountered in pediatric palliative care, the Association for Children's Palliative Care (ACT) and the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health (RCPCH) have developed a classification of life-limiting illnesses, based on support models. This classification includes four groups. ACT 4 category is made up of children with a serious incurable non-progressive neurological disease (for example: anoxic ischemia, cerebral palsy, traumatic or infectious brain injuries). Although data relating to specific ACT groups are scarce, experience from clinical practice suggests that the needs and use of Pediatric palliative care resources are different across the four categories. The specific history of ACT-4 patients suggests that pediatric palliative care may be required early on in the history of the disease but effective intervention varies greatly from one patient to another. Tthis study aims to better understand the optimal timing for introducing a PPC team into the care pathway for these children. The study also aims to describe the care trajectory over the first year of PPC intervention.

NCT ID: NCT06272591 Recruiting - Pregnancy Clinical Trials

Comparison of Patient Satisfaction With Home Induction and In-patient Induction.

Start date: November 20, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Induced labour is a medical intervention designed to initiate or accelerate the childbirth process when clinically indicated. Induced labour concerns 25.8% of pregnant women in France, according to the latest National Perinatal Survey 2021. This rate is rising steadily, since in 2016 induction concerned 22% of pregnancies. There are many medical indications for induction, both maternal and foetal. Induced labour in hospitals is beginning to reach its limits, given the reduction in the number of nursing staff and the reduction in the number of beds available. In some cases, patients are hospitalised for 24 to 72 hours before going into labour. In this context, the place where the birth takes place, whether at home or in hospital, is essential, with a potential impact on patient satisfaction and the experience of induction. Cervical ripening can be a difficult experience for women, with a feeling of loss of control at this crucial stage. The duration of induction is one of the factors that women would like to see changed when asked about the aftermath of induction. The option of inducing at home might seem to improve women's experience and reduce the length of their stay in hospital.

NCT ID: NCT06272396 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Arrhythmias, Cardiac

Relevance of Recording an ECG Trace With a Connected Watch

ECG-MC
Start date: March 26, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Over the past few years, various systems have been developed to record ECG traces on an ambulatory basis. The latest connected watch models feature 2-electrode ECG recording. This single (1D) or six derivations (6D) can be used to derive a wealth of information about the heart's rhythm. The information that can be derived from an ECG recording with a derivation goes far beyond̀ simple differentiation between atrial fibrillation and sinus rhythm. In contrast, in various clinical situations, a tracing restricted to an intracardiac defibrillator (ICD) may prove falsely normal, wrongly reassuring a patient and delaying management. The primary objective of the study is to evaluate the sensitivity of ECG-1D or 6D recordings from a connected watch in measuring electrical parameters, compared with a standard ECG-12D, also to obtain a bank of tracings, to create and validate an artificial intelligence algorithm for the automatic analysis of ECG tracings recorded with a connected watch and also to validate the feasibility and sensitivity of recording an ECG tracing with a connected watch in children.

NCT ID: NCT06272344 Completed - Pacemaker Clinical Trials

Remote Programming of Cardiac Implantable Electronic Devices 2

REACT 2
Start date: April 24, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Cardiac Implantable Electronic Devices (CIEDs) such as pacemakers and implantable cardioverter defibrillators need to be regularly and systematically interrogated and reprogrammed to ensure proper functioning. While remote monitoring allows for partial interrogation at a remote location, full CIED check-up and reprogramming is only possible when the patient visits a cardiologist capable of performing device programming. This can be challenging for patients and may cause unnecessary delays, particularly in settings of limited resources, enforced physical distancing, and quarantines. The aim of this study is to evaluate our previously validated remote programming solution (REACT study, NCT05366660) in outpatient device clinics which are close to the patient's home but remote from the CIED expert.

NCT ID: NCT06271785 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Epilepsy in Children

Prognostic Value of High-resolution Electrical Source Imaging on the Success of Pediatric Focal Epilepsy Surgery

ISEPEE
Start date: April 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study investigates the usefulness of high resolution electrical source imaging (HR-ESI) in the setting of presurgical evaluation of drug-resistant focal epilepsy in children. This method is based on an estimation of the intra-cerebral source that produces a signal recorded by scalp electrodes by solving the inverse problem, taking into account attenuation factors resulting from particular conductivity properties of the cerebral, peri-cerebral and cranial tissues. Electrical sources are then fused on structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Scalp EEG recorded using 64 to 256 electrodes refers to as high resolution EEG (HR-EEG), leading to HR-ESI. Studies based on small population of children or on mixt population of children and adults showed that HR-ESI has accuracy values, i.e. percentage of true positives (electrical source localized in the brain area resected and success of surgery) and true negatives (electrical source localized outside the brain area resected and failure of surgery) among the total population, ranging from 50 to 80%. Discrepancies between studies could be explained by the limited number of patients included or by the mixture of pediatric and adult data. Another limitation of previously published studies is that the spatial pattern of dipole source distribution was not taken into account to determine prediction accuracy of ESI. Studies using magnetoencephalography (MEG) to perform magnetic source imaging (MSI) suggest that the spatial pattern of dipole source distribution needs to be considered, a spatially-restricted dipole distribution being associated with better post-surgical outcome when resected. To tackle these issues, the investigators aim to conduct the first large prospective multicentric study in children with focal epilepsy candidates to surgery to assess prediction accuracy of ESI based on the finding of tight clusters of dipoles. This is original as this pattern (tight versus loose cluster of dipoles) has been studied by several researchers using MEG but not using HR-EEG. The investigators make the hypothesis that HR-EEG will allow to identity good candidates for epilepsy surgery and thus to offer this underutilized treatment in more children with better post-surgical outcome. Among the secondary objectives, the investigators will address methodological issues related to the resolution of the inverse problem (methods using distributed sources models versus methods based on equivalent dipole estimation), the potential added value to model high-frequency oscillations (HFO), and the investigators will assess the cost-utility of the HR-ESI procedure.

NCT ID: NCT06271603 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Basal Cell Carcinoma of the Skin

Evaluation of the Efficiency and Economic Impact of LC-OCT (Line-field Confocal Optical Coherence Tomography) for the Diagnosis and Management of Basal Cell Carcinomas

ECOBASO
Start date: February 26, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a comparative, randomized, prospective, multicenter clinical investigation aimed at evaluating the efficiency and economic impact of LC-OCT (Line-field Confocal Optical Coherence Tomography) for the diagnosis and management of basal cell carcinomas.

NCT ID: NCT06271343 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Kidney Transplant Tolerance

Kidney Graft Tolerance KTOL

KTOL
Start date: March 20, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Prospective experimental study using PBMC from a limited number of adult patients (15) treated at Nantes University Hospital for a kidney transplant from a related living donor. The study will be carried out on PBMC from both donors and recipients, collected during visits scheduled as part of the clinical management of the donor/recipient pair. The study will test the hypothesis that DP8α Tregs expressing CD73, whose frequency in blood increases stably after non-rejected kidney transplants, but not when patients have undergone or will subsequently undergo rejection, are enriched in donor-specific cells, which would be a strong argument in favor of a direct role for these Tregs in preventing transplant rejection, through their ability to inhibit immune responses directed against donor alloantigens.