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 multicenter genetic study aimed at identifying new genes/variants associated with sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) based on whole-genome sequencing of family trios
The objective is to study the phenotypic, functional and metabolomic characteristics of neutrophils circulating subpopulations in lung cancer patients, and to compare them to a control group of healthy volunteers. A blood sample will be taken before the first treatment session for the lung cancer patient and a second blood sample will be taken during the first evaluation visit. The investigators hypothesize that there may be different circulating neutrophil subpopulations in patients with metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) involved in tumor progression and resistance to immunotherapy.
The Kangaroo Unit (UK) takes care of newborns requiring special care or monitoring for a pathology whose clinical situation is stable and whose prognosis is favorable. In order to avoid separating mother and child, these units were created with a care pathway somewhere between that requiring hospitalization in a neonatal unit and that of pathology-free newborns in post-natal care. Theoretically, the mother-child bond created in the UK is as good as that created in conventional post-natal care. However, studies show that there are limits to the quality of the bond in the UK. This study aims to assess whether the mother-child bond is degraded in the UK, in comparison with that of mothers in post-natal care.
This study will evaluate orally administered RVU120, a novel small molecule Cyclin-dependent Kinase (CDK) 8/19 inhibitor, in terms of erythroid hematologic improvement (HI-E) and safety in participants with lower-risk myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS). Responding patients are eligible to continue treatment until loss of response/disease progression.
The French Society of Intensive Care conducts a comprehensive assessment of current antibiotic therapy practices in critically ill patients suspected of Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia (VAP).
Cystic fibrosis is the most common severe genetic disease with autosomal recessive transmission in the Caucasian population. Its prognosis has improved considerably since the creation of Cystic Fibrosis centers (CF centers) and the improvement of symptomatic management (nutrition, antibiotic therapy, transplantation, etc.). Thus, the median survival rate is now 46 years, whereas it was 5 years in 1963. The current challenges for cystic fibrosis patients are therefore twofold: to continue to improve their survival, and to improve their quality of life (QoL) to promote "healthy ageing" with this pathology that begins in childhood. In 1980, the World Health Organization (WHO) stated that functional capacity explorations best reflected the impact of chronic disease on health-related quality of life. Impairment of physical activity is common to chronic diseases, as in cystic fibrosis, where respiratory impairment and denutrition have been shown to contribute to reduced exercise tolerance and increased dyspnoea. Measurement of the maximum oxygen consumption (VO2max) by a cardiopulmonary exercise test (CPET) is regarded as the gold standard exercise test in the measurement of aerobic exercise capacity. In 2005 Pianosi et al. found that for children with cystic fibrosis, the rate of decline of VO2max measured by CPET was predictive of poorer quality of life. Continuing to study the determinants associated with impaired aerobic fitness in cystic fibrosis offers the hope of considering appropriate therapies to further improve the quality of life of these patients. In recent years, the arrival and widespread use of CFTR protein modulators in children has been a real turning point and makes it possible to envisage a drastic change in the history of this disease and its prognosis in the long term. Thus, in this study, the investigators aimed to assess the aerobic fitness, assessed by a CPET, of children with cystic fibrosis, and to compare the results with healthy controls. Secondly, investigators wanted to identify the predictive factors of VO2max in children with cystic fibrosis.
The aim of this study is to describe, using a non-interventional survey, the relevant aspects of health in adults with ADRD for the patients themselves, their carers and healthcare professionals. Commonalities and differences between these three stakeholders and according to the severity of the dementia will also be studied.
This is a single-center retrospective study conducted at Mercy hospital, aiming to investigate the correlation between changes in hemoglobin (Hb) levels and the volume of vascular refill administered during the first 48 hours.
To date, no study has shown the effects of diets (normoglucidic or ketogenic) on type I diabetes during physical activity (hiking, ski touring) at altitude. The ketogenic diet in the general population is increasingly studied scientifically, but no clinical trial has studied it in type I diabetic patients during physical activity at altitude. Similarly, no study has investigated the effects of this diet on ketone and blood glucose levels in athletes during physical activity at altitude. Therefore, its impact on blood glucose and ketone levels during exercise at altitude is unknown in healthy and type I diabetic subjects. Since the investigators are studying ketonemia at altitude, and since ketonemia depends on insulin and carbohydrate intake, it is necessary to also study a control group with the same diet, in order to analyse whether the results obtained at altitude are related to the diet alone or to the diet in the context of diabetes. In order to avoid certain biases and confounding factors, the type I diabetic group will be compared to a control group of healthy subjects, in which the subjects have the same diet as the diabetic group. This is a pioneering study, of significant interest because the ketogenic diet is recent and rapidly increasing in interest in diabetic patients, with no scientific data for mountain physical activity. Doctors, diabetologists and sports doctors, are still without data to advise their diabetic patients who wish to follow a ketogenic diet on the benefits/risks of this diet, or to explain to them how to react to physical activity in the mountains.
Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs), such as anti-PD-1/PD-L1 agents, initially evaluated in advanced non-curative pathologies, are now being evaluated in adjuvant or even neoadjuvant curative treatment conditions. This paradigm shift is leading to the treatment of young women, particularly in the context of gestational trophoblastic tumours. Given the potential autoimmune side-effects affecting endocrine functions, as well as their impact on maternal-foetal tolerance mechanisms, accurate assessment of post-ICT fertility is necessary. In the coming years, treatment with anti-PD-L1 (avelumab) could become a cornerstone of the therapeutic strategy for patients with gestational trophoblastic tumours. However, these patients are often young and of childbearing age, so safety of use in terms of fertility and successful pregnancies is an essential factor in the widespread use of immunotherapy as a treatment option. Some studies have reported the possibility of conceiving after avelumab treatment, but no cohort has been reported. This study aims to explore fertility and the course of potential pregnancy in 50 patients treated with anti-PD-L1 (avelumab) over the last 5 years in several French centres.