Lower Limb Chronic Oedema Clinical Trial
Official title:
Assessment of Tissue and Biomolecular Complements of Lower Limb Chronic Oedema
The chroedem study is aiming to assess tissue and biomolecular components of chronic lower limb oedema (CO). The investigators working hypothesis is that according to the aetiology of CO, the proportion of oedema & composition of peri-oedema tissues (fat, muscle, fibrosis/inflammation) might differ and could at least in part explain differences in failure/success of compressive therapies from one patient to another. For that purpose, 24 patients with a post-thrombotic syndrome (PTS)-related oedema and 24 patients with a primary lymphedema will undergo a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)) of the legs and biological (genetic) testing.
Chronic lower limb oedema is the consequence of an abnormal accumulation of fluid in the interstitium located beneath the skin of legs. It is a frequent disease with a significant morbidity (skin infections, leg ulcers…), which can deeply alter patient's quality of life. On a pathological point of view, current main hypothesis is hemodynamic (i.e. failure of venous and lymphatic return). Recent data suggest that other factors, particularly genetic ones (genes coding for proteins of inflammation or of fibrosis, for adipogenesis and for lymphangiogenesis…) could influence the development of CO. Stimulation of these mediators varies from one person to another and from one clinical setting to another (i.e. venous insufficiency vs. lymphedema etc…). One can therefore assume that CO is not a homogeneous entity and that the distribution of tissue components varies. On a therapeutic point of view, this difference in the distribution of tissue components could at least in part explain the differences in effectiveness of compression therapy and in tissue dysmorphia from one person to another and from one type of CO to another. The study primary objective is to assess and compare by MRI the different tissue components (oedema, fat, muscle, inflammation/fibrosis) of lower limb CO of venous vs. lymphatic origins. The investigators shall conduct a prospective observational pilot study. 24 patients with a CO of PTS origin and 24 patients with a CO of lymphatic origin (primary lymphoedema) will undergo a clinical examination, 3-D laser scanner volumetry of their lower limbs, blood tests and a MRI of lower limb. Main exclusion criteria will be obesity and bilateral CO. The main primary outcome measure will be the proportion of fat, muscle and oedema assessed by MRI in a pre-determined lower limb area. The main secondary outcome measure will be the prevalence in each group of i) variations in exonic sequence of genes coding for proteins of inflammation/fibrosis, angiogenesis, adipogenesis; ii) variations in exonic sequence of genes reported in the literature as associated with primary lymphoedema. This study should allow to better characterize tissue structure and inflammatory, adipous and angio-genetic profiles of lower limb CO. The potential therapeutic perspective is to adapt compressive therapies to the type of oedema and to test the impact of new therapies (e.g. anti-inflammatory drugs for oedema with important fibrotic component?). ;