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 study will look at how well CagriSema helps people with type 2 diabetes lower their blood sugar and body weight. CagriSema is a new investigational medicine. Doctors may not yet prescribe CagriSema. CagriSema will be compared to a medicine called tirzepatide that doctors may prescribe in some countries. Participants will get either CagriSema or tirzepatide. Which treatment participant get is decided by chance like flipping a coin. Participant will have an equal chance of receiving either drug. For each participant, the study will last for up to one and a half years.
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder is a psychiatric disorder that occurs after a traumatic event and is estimated to affect 5 to 12% of the general population. Around 70% of patients suffering from this disorder report sleep disorders (sleep apnea, insomnia, recurring nightmares, etc.). There are specific sleep disorders called Rapid Eye Movement (REM) sleep behavior disorders which correspond to nocturnal restlessness with sometimes violent behavior, often associated with intense dreams during a phase of sleep called REM sleep. These disorders are more frequently found in patients suffering from post-traumatic stress, such as veterans. However, the physiopathological link between these two disorders is poorly understood and studies on this subject are few in number. Through this study, the investigators wish to demonstrate whether there is a correlation between the severity of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and that of Rapid Eye Movement sleep behavior disorder. The main objective is to study the relationship between the severity of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and the Rapid Eye Movement (REM) Sleep Behavior Disorder. This is an observational prospective study based on 4 questionnaires relating to the sleep (PSQI), the severity of the Rapid Eye Movement (REM) Sleep Behavior Disorder (REM RBDSQ, IRBD-SSS) and the severity of the Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PCL-5).
The main purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of LY3541860 in adult participants with multiple sclerosis that gets worse and gets better. The study will last about 9 months with additional 6 months follow-up.
The purpose of this study is to demonstrate that by allowing patients with an anticoagulant level less than 100 ng/ml to have their fracture managed surgically, will reduce the delay in surgery and therefore the complications associated. It will also demonstrate that there are no more complications with this new management than from remaining with a bleeding fracture.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability, efficacy, and drug levels of CC-97540 in participants with Relapsing Forms of Multiple Sclerosis (RMS) or Progressive Forms of Multiple Sclerosis (PMS).
The number of incident and prevalent patients with end stage renal disease on dialysis treatment is increasing in France and worldwide. A quarter of dialysis patients are initiating dialysis urgently through central venous catheters and the number of patients registered in the waiting list for renal transplantation before dialysis initiation is very low. This is also reflected in the very low number of pre-emptive renal transplantations. In order to reduce the number of dialysis patients, the French state has induced a national program proposing a multidisciplinary care pathway including the nephrology visits and at least one consultation with a dietitian and a specialist renal nurse in all patients with Chronic Kidney Disease stage 4 and 5. The aim of this single-center retrospective study is to evaluate the influence of the complete, partial or no participation in this program on the evolution of renal function and clinicobiological parameters in this group of patients.
This is a non-interventional, prospective, single-center study designed to collect and describe environmental and psychosocial data from patients with a history of male breast cancer (MBC) referenced in the IUCT-O regional database. The study will be conducted on a population of 110 to 150 patients.
Sepsis is a disruption of homeostasis in the human body in response to bloodstream infection and is associated with a high risk of mortality. Worldwide, sepsis is affecting approximately 30 million people and resulting in six million deaths. Blood culture is a specific blood sample used to identifying microbial agent (bacterium or yeast) and determine the sensitivity of these microorganisms to antibiotics and antifungals. Any delay in identifying the microorganism and/or determining the AST (antibiotic susceptibility testing) has a direct impact on the administration of appropriate antibiotic treatment and, consequently, on mortality of the patient. The faster the diagnosis, the faster the antibiotic treatment will be adapted, the higher the survival rate/probability of patients, and the lower the ecological impact. In routine, clinical microbiology laboratories currently use 2 automatized techniques: MALDI-TOF MS® for microorganisms identification and VITEK2® method for AST determination. Based on a proteomic approach, the IDBIORIV method is a rapid method (90 minutes) in comparison of current methods (24/48 hours) able to identifying a large panel of 113 pathogens and determine the antibiotic resistance profile of 49 species for 4 classes of antibiotics (Beta-lactams, Aminosides, Glycopeptides, Colistin). The main objective of this study is to evaluate the performance of the IDBIORIV method in pathogen identification and antibiotic susceptibility testing in comparison with current methods of analysis of positive blood cultures used at the microbiology laboratory of the Hospices Civils de Lyon, in a real clinical situation, over a 2-year period.
Cerebral cortical microinfarctions (CMI) are frequently observed on MRI and histology studies, especially in elderly patients and in patients with cognitive dysfunction. The majority of these studies analysed chronic cerebral CMI lesions. The few studies reporting on temporal dynamics of MRI signal of acute cerebral CMI showed very low sensibility for persisting signal changes on follow-up MRI on standard MRI sequences. A retrospective study, analysing follow-up 3T MRI in 25 patients with acute cerebral CMI (defined as ≤10 mm on DWI), showed a chronic cerebral CMI detection rate of only 16% on T2-weighted and 5% on FLAIR imaging after a mean follow-up period of 33 months (with a very wide range of 0.5-142 months). Another 3T MRI study including seven patients showed disappearance of all acute cerebral very small-sized CMI (defined as <5 mm size on initial DWI) on all follow-up MRI sequences (T1- and T2-weighted and FLAIR imaging, performed after one month). Recently, it has been shown that chronic relatively small (<20 mm) cerebellar cortical infarctions (based on diffusion-weighted imaging) were frequently observed in acute stroke patients, especially in case of cardioembolic stroke (with chronic small cerebellar cortical infarctions observed in 32% of cases). The high prevalence of these chronic small cerebellar cortical infarctions suggest a possible higher detection rate of chronic small-sized infarction in the cerebellum compared to the supratentorial brain.
The purpose of this study is to investigate the cerebral activation of healthy and stroke participants in 4 or 2 different conditions (repeated 2 times) of vibration-induced illusion of movement respectively, resulting in 8 or 4 vibration blocks with 3 vibrations per block. The frequency of the vibration being 80 Hz. Healthy participants: - Right arm, eyes opened - Right arm, eyes closed - Left arm, eyes opened - Left arm, eyes closed Stroke participants: - Deficient side, eyes opened - Deficient side, eyes closed The aim is to compare the subjective sensation of movement score and cerebral activations of healthy/stroke participants depending on the condition.