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NCT ID: NCT05331339 Completed - Clinical trials for Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus

Real-life Efficacy of Insulia® Tool in Patients Living With Type 2 Diabetes Treated With Basal Insulin Therapy as Part of a National Telemedicine Program (ETAPES)

INSULIA
Start date: November 2, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the INSULIA digital tool (automation of basal insulin dose calculation in type 2 diabetes) within the framework of a French national telemedicine experimentation program (ETAPES) in a single-center study. The assumption is that a better metabolic control with this tool.

NCT ID: NCT05329337 Completed - Insulin Resistance Clinical Trials

Link Between the Peripheral Mononuclear Cells' Capacity to Induce Insulin Resistance and Hyperinsulinemia

IRACTIV
Start date: June 27, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a two-center proof-of-concept study, ancillary to the MetACTIV study, whose objective is to define immune activation profiles from the data of individuals followed by the Caisse Primaire d'Assurance Maladie du Gard (health insurance fund). The IRACTIV study will include a subset of volunteers from the MetACTIV study for whom a blood sample will be taken as part of the IRACTIV study.

NCT ID: NCT05328037 Completed - Diarrhea Clinical Trials

Study on the Association Between Vitamin C Deficiency and Diarrhea in Children

VITAL
Start date: April 25, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Diarrheal disease is the second leading cause of death in children under five, althought it is both preventable and treatable. The causative factors of diarrheal diseases vary a lot from region to region (bacteria, viruses, parasites). Diarrhea is one of the main causes of malnutrition in children under five years of age. Inversely, nutritional deficiency, particularly vitamin C deficiency, can be a risk factor for diarrhea. The main objective of this study is to assess the impact of vitamin C deficiency on diarrheal infection in children aged 2 to 5 years in countries with a high diarrheal rate. This pilot case-control study will be conducted in metropolitan France, Africa and South America. This question will be addressed by comparing vitamin C levels in children with diarrhea, regardless of the infectious agent, to levels in age- and sex-matched controls.

NCT ID: NCT05327634 Completed - Medication Abuse Clinical Trials

Obstacles to Deprescribing Among French Patients Over 75 Years of Age Treated in the Geriatric Hospital Network

OUTMEDIC-FR
Start date: April 1, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The aim of this study is to highlight action guidelines to encourage acceptance of deprescribing in people over 75 years of age: training, therapeutic education, post-prescription follow-up, specific patient pathways, specific consultations or even the integration of an advanced practice nurse in this process.

NCT ID: NCT05327218 Completed - Breast Cancer Clinical Trials

Effectiveness and Safety of Preoperative Magnetic Detection of Non-palpable Breast Lesions

MAGREES
Start date: March 20, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Breast cancer is the most common cancer in women and also has the highest death rate. In 2018, 58,500 new cases were diagnosed in metropolitan France. It affects, in 8 out of 10 cases, women aged 50 and over. Nevertheless, thanks to early detection and improved therapeutic techniques, its mortality rate has continued to decrease each year (a decrease of 1.6% per year was recorded between 2010 and 2018), which allows it to maintain its status as a cancer with a good prognosis. Furthermore, net survival is 87% at 5 years and 76% at 10 years. The median age of death is 74 years. Organized screening was initiated in France in 1990 and generalized in 2004, while maintaining a specific management according to the personal risk of each patient. It consists of a mammogram, plus or minus an ultrasound, every two years from the age of 50. The mammogram is reviewed by two different radiologists. In case of abnormality, a biopsy is performed. Breast lesions are separated into two nosological entities: palpable tumors, often diagnosed on clinical examination (or autopalpation) and confirmed on mammography, and non-palpable tumors detected during mammographic and/or ultrasound screening. Thanks to the generalization of screening, the detection of subclinical lesions requiring surgery represents more than half of the breast surgeries and the challenge of their surgical management lies in a precise preoperative location to allow a complete removal, while limiting the sacrifice of healthy glandular tissue. The metallic location technique is currently the reference technique for the preoperative location of these lesions. For all these reasons, new techniques of preoperative tracking have been developed. Magnetic tracking (MR) appears to be a simple, non-radioactive and non-aggressive technique to use and organize. MR takes the form of a 1x5mm paramagnetic clip made of iron oxide visible on ultrasound and mammography and is detected by a SentiMag probe. The MR began to be used in France in 2017. It is placed in contact with the lesion under ultrasound guidance. It has the advantage that it can be placed up to 30 days before surgery and has less risk of complication. This MR contains iron particles and is 5mm long. It is pre-loaded in a sterile 18 G needle closed with a wax tip. It is deployed under mammographic and/or ultrasound guidance. The Sentimag probe is used to detect MR in a multidirectional way at 360°, with an audio and visual estimation of the distance. It generates an alternating magnetic field that magnetizes the iron in the MR. All of these surgical procedures can be performed as outpatient surgery, which corresponds to a hospitalization of less than 12 hours without overnight accommodation, meaning that each patient is admitted and discharged on the same day as her procedure. Outpatient surgery represented 36% of all surgeries in France in 2018. The objective of the HAS is to achieve a majority ambulatory practice of 70% by 2022. This type of surgery has advantages for the patient, by making her journey safer: reduction in the risk of nosocomial infection, thromboembolic risk and anxiety linked to hospitalization for the patient and her family. It also has an important socio-economic advantage by reducing hospitalization costs and the number of hospital beds required. It improves the working conditions of the staff by reducing the workload and night shifts. It has also enabled a clear improvement in the optimization and efficiency of the organization of resources in the surgical technical platforms. The role of the MR is particularly well suited to this new organization.

NCT ID: NCT05326607 Completed - Presbyopia Clinical Trials

Pilot Clinical Investigation of Adaptative Eyeglasses for the Correction of Presbyopia

eve-1
Start date: September 9, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study is a pilot clinical investigation of adaptive eyeglasses for the correction of presbyopia. The goal of this clinical investigation is to assess IMD safety and to obtain patient feedback on the usefulness of the Laclarée eyeglasses, through subjective clinical measures and qualitative evaluations. This is an exploratory investigation.

NCT ID: NCT05326048 Completed - Multiple Sclerosis Clinical Trials

Defining an Immunological Signature Related to Lesion Location in Multiple Sclerosis

APOLLO
Start date: March 9, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The objective of APOLLO is therefore to identify biomarkers associated with the CNS involvement phenotype in early MS patients.

NCT ID: NCT05325619 Completed - Gynecologic Disease Clinical Trials

Evaluation of the Rate of Consultations in Gynecological Emergencies Under "Non-urgent" Management

URGO_CARE
Start date: March 23, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The difference between the demand and the current medical supply poses a real public health problem in terms of the organization of health care systems. For several years in France, there has been an increase in the number of consultations in emergency services, particularly gynaecological ones. The two causes put forward are a change in user behavior with an increase in requests for rapid but "non-urgent" care and the inadequacy of the supply of care in the private sector. Few studies have been carried out concerning gynaecological emergencies, unlike general emergencies. The aim of this study is to measure the frequency of consultations in gynaecological emergencies for non-emergency reasons. The interest of this study is therefore mainly on the optimization of the care system with the emphasis on the city-hospital network in the management of these patients.

NCT ID: NCT05325086 Completed - Clinical trials for Chronic Respiratory Disease

Effect on Quality of Life of Adapted Information in Pulmonary Rehabilitation in Chronic Respiratory Disease Patients

Start date: April 5, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of the clinical study is to study the effect of health-related quality of Life of information aimed at reducing the impact of a personality trait (openness to experiences) identified as a risk of non-response to pulmonary rehabilitation in patients with chronic respiratory diseases. This study will determine if a specific information focusing on characteristics of openness to experiences personality trait will lead to better benefits than a general information.

NCT ID: NCT05325047 Completed - Epilepsy Clinical Trials

Preoperative Speech Rehabilitation in Drug-Resistant Temporal Epilepsy: A Case Study

REPREO SCED
Start date: September 20, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Out of 30,000 new cases per year in France, 30% of epileptic patients are drug-resistant. Neurosurgery, which consists in resecting the epileptogenic zone, is the only chance of cure. In the case of temporal epilepsy of the language-dominant hemisphere (TLE), this procedure presents a high risk of increasing cognitive difficulties and may even be contraindicated for this reason alone. The difficulties found are impairments in lexical access (anomia) and verbal memory and affect more than 60% of patients. Preoperative cognitive rehabilitation could influence brain plasticity mechanisms but there are currently no recommendations on this topic. In this context, a speech rehabilitation procedure specific to the needs of ELTPR patients was developed. Investigators rely on cognitive hypotheses explaining the disorders but also on models of rehabilitation-induced neural plasticity likely to improve cognitive reserve before surgery. Investigators hypothesize that preoperative cognitive language rehabilitation in ELTPR patients may decrease surgical risk and improve postoperative language prognosis. The main objective is to demonstrate the efficacy of preoperative speech therapy on language performance and to evaluate possible protective effects on postoperative language prognosis. Single case study following the Single Case Experimental Design (SCED) methodology involving the prior definition of the following elements: a repeated measure of the target behavior (naming abilities), the sequential introduction of an intervention (speech therapy), whose effect will be evaluated according to SCED specific analysis and statistics (visual analysis, Tau -U, randomized tests). Investigators expect patients' naming performance to be stable before the introduction of speech therapy. It is expected that patients will progress in the trained words from the beginning of speech therapy. Finally, in the postoperative period, investigators predict that for the trained words, patients will show performances superior or equal to the pre-rehabilitation period. This result would support a protective effect of preoperative speech therapy.