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.
Neurotrophic keratitis (NK) is a degenerative disease of the cornea due to the impairment of the nasociliary branch of the ophthalmic nerve. Reduced corneal sensation lead to several corneal lesions including spontaneous ulcerations, delayed wound healing, corneal scarring, neovascularization, thinning, perforation or infection. An important and permanent visual loss of is frequently associated with the condition. NK can be congenital or acquired. Its acquired forms can be due to traumatic, infectious (herpes, zoster), neoplastic or iatrogenic causes. There is currently no specific medical treatment. Surgical reconstruction techniques of sensory neurotizations have recently been described in young patients suffering traumatic, congenital or neoplastic NK using supratrochlear nerves as the sensory donor nerves and sural nerve as healthy graft. A neurotization involves the transfer of a healthy donor nerve segment into a tissue to reestablish either motor or sensory innervation. The aim of the present study is to assess the outcomes of a novel sensory neurotization technique for the treatment of severe NK in adult patients (Stages 2 and 3 of Mackie classification). Corneal neurotizations will be performed using either ipsilateral supraorbital nerve as donor nerve (direct neurotization) or contralateral supraorbital nerve as donor nerve and a segment of the lateral antebrachial cutaneous nerve as graft. Small-size skin incisions (less than 3 centimeters) will be made in one or both eyebrow and an endoscopic device will help the surgeons to localize and dissect the supraorbital nerve. Donor nerves or graft will be sutured to the neurotrophic corneas. Adult patients with unilateral NK due to infectious, traumatic or iatrogenic causes will be included.
This is a Phase 3, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multinational, and multicenter study to evaluate the efficacy of rovalpituzumab tesirine as maintenance therapy following first-line platinum-based chemotherapy.
This study aims to describe incidence of right ventricular dysfunction after major lung resection with echocardiography criteria.
Lung cancer is still the leading cause of cancer related-deaths worldwide, with an overall all-stage 5-year survival of approximately 17%. The primary treatment of early stage (I-IIIA) NSCLC is curative surgery. Although patients treated with curative surgery have a better prognosis, the 5-year survival for patients treated with surgery alone remains low, ranging from 67% (stage IA) to 23% (stage IIIA). Several randomized trials comparing postoperative chemotherapy versus no chemotherapy have shown a significant overall survival benefit from postoperative chemotherapy in completely resected patients with NSCLC stage II and IIIA. Likewise other randomized trials have demonstrated preoperative chemotherapy improves survival and recently the analyses also based on individual patients data of 15 randomized trials showed a significant benefit of preoperative chemotherapy on survival with the same survival improvement of 5% at 5 years. Then, neoadjuvant chemotherapy has also become accepted in many countries. Targeting of PD-1 receptors and its ligand PD-L1, and inhibiting their engagement is an attractive therapeutic option in the early stage NSCLC, which may reactivate host immune responses and enable longterm tumor control.
The AURORA study will be conducted to confirm the efficacy and safety of cenicriviroc (CVC) for the treatment of liver fibrosis in adult participants with NASH.
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and efficacy of rovalpituzumab tesirine administered in combination with nivolumab or nivolumab and ipilimumab in participants with extensive-stage small cell lung cancer (SCLC).
A cochlear implant is a device for the rehabilitation of severe to profound hearing loss. Despite the standardization of surgical procedures and rehabilitation, speech discrimination performance varied significantly in cochlear implant users and could be improved by early individualized cares. However, there is no objective method yet to evaluate phonemes discrimination, especially in infants, which account for more than half of the indications for implantation. In electroencephalography (EEG), it is possible to highlight the discrimination of auditory stimuli studying the wave of MisMatch Negativity (MMN). In this work, this study propose to use the MMN as an objective vocal audiometry method to evaluate the ability to discriminate phonemes, the smallest units of oral language, in adult cochlear implant users.
This is a Phase III, multicenter, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of atezolizumab versus placebo in participants with RCC who are at high risk of disease recurrence following nephrectomy.
Severe brain injuries lead to disorders of consciousness after coma. During this awakening period, detection of arousal is critical to the adaptation of medical strategy, but global paralysis, including facial expression, make the clinical assessment very difficult. Emotional facial expressions are a significant part of this clinical assessment. They are both a landmark of the internal state of the patient (comfort versus discomfort) and a landmark of the relational level with his environment. Visible emotional facial expression is a large temporal phenomenon lasting a couple of seconds, while a microexpression is barely noticeable and very brief. These micro expressions are usually produced when one tried to voluntary hide emotional expressions. In this study, we hypothesize that some patients awakening from coma could still produce microexpression before being able to produce visible emotional facial expressions. This ability to produce micro-expression could be an early landmark of relational awakening in severe brain lesions.
Diabetes is a chronic and progressive disease that affects nearly 3.5 million people in France. Currently the investigators are seeing an aging of the population explained by the increase in life expectancy and thus an increasing incidence of diabetes in the elderly. However, the frequency of hypoglycemia in older vulnerable patients remains poorly characterized