Periodontal Diseases Clinical Trial
— HSPDAOfficial title:
Relationship Between Hidradenitis Suppurativa and Periodontal Diseases
NCT number | NCT03553888 |
Other study ID # | PO18056 |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Recruiting |
Phase | |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | May 7, 2018 |
Est. completion date | May 7, 2020 |
Hidradenitis suppurativa or Verneuil's disease (HS) is a neglected and often overlooked
chronic inflammatory skin disease. Nevertheless, it is frequent (1% of the general
population) and deeply affects quality of life in patients with moderate and severe forms of
HS. This disease is characterized by the occurrence of deep, recurrent and painful nodules,
progressing to abscess formation and suppuration. It is usually localized in the axillary,
inguinal and anogenital areas. The pathogenesis of HS remains partly unknown but is probably
multifactorial (inflammatory, genetic, infectious, etc.) and related to many risk factors
(mostly smoking and obesity). An association can be found with other inflammatory diseases
such as gastrointestinal and rheumatic diseases like Crohn's disease and spondylo-arthritis
respectively.
Periodontal diseases are a heterogeneous group of infectious diseases with an inflammatory
component. Their clinical expression results in more or less rapid destruction of tooth
supporting tissues. Without treatment, these lesions may progress ultimately to tooth
exfoliation, the rate of disease progression being unevenly distributed in the population.
Various epidemiological studies in France indicate that 12 to 13% of middle-aged adults have
severe periodontal damage. In addition, a recent study shows that while 50% of adults in
France are suffering from severe attachment loss, generalized forms are rare and about 10% of
individuals seem to require special care. The bacterial factor is the main etiological factor
of these diseases but their progression depends primarily on the host immune response and on
modifying factors (genetic, systemic, environmental and behavioural). Some of these factors
are identified such as uncontrolled diabetes, smoking, stress, etc.. Finally, it is well
established that periodontal disease may also trigger the development of some systemic
diseases such as diabetes.
Thus, many common etiopathogenic factors between HS and periodontal diseases such as
inflammatory components and tobacco are found. This is corroborated by observations collected
from some patients with HS complaining of oral pain exacerbated during acute flares of HS.
Hence the aim of this project is to clarify existing potential association between
Hidradenitis suppurativa and periodontal diseases using a multicenter cross-sectional
descriptive clinical approach.
One hundred patients with HS will be included in the departments of dermatology at the
University Hospital in Reims and at the Pasteur Institute in Paris. They will be compared
with one hundred patients without HS recruited from "general practice" consultations in the
departments of Odontology at the University Hospital in Reims and at Bretonneau Hospital in
Paris.
The severity of HS will be assessed with Hurley's score by the dermatologist. The periodontal
status will be evaluated with clinical indices and radiographical parameters by a
periodontist according to the "Armitage" classification of periodontal disease and to CDC-AA
case definitions updated in 2012. Meanwhile, human saliva is a biological fluid taken to
reflect the health status of an individual and is or may be used for diagnosis and prognosis
of some oral cancers, some systemic diseases (type 2 diabetes, sarcoidosis, etc.) or
periodontal diseases. The saliva will be collected and analysed by proteomics and
metabolomics techniques in order to identify biomarkers for diagnosis and prognostic of HS
associated or not to periodontal diseases.
These unpublished works could demonstrate a predisposition to develop periodontal disease in
a subgroup of HS patients and help to unravel new etiopathogenic mechanisms common to both
diseases as well as ultimately lead to early periodontal management in order to avoid disease
progression and tooth losses.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 200 |
Est. completion date | May 7, 2020 |
Est. primary completion date | November 7, 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: Will be included in the study as HS-patients who: - Have a HS (regardless of the Hurley score) according to the criteria of EU Guidelines on the HS. - Are followed-up in departments of dermatology in Reims University Hospital or at Pasteur Institute in Paris. - Are older than 18 years. - Signed the informed consent form to take part in the study. - Are affiliated to a social insurance. Will be included in the study as no-HS patients who: - Are not suffering from HS. Are followed-up in departments of odontology in Reims or at Bretonneau hospital in Paris (regardless of the reason for consultation), even also from the dermatology departments. - Are older than 18 years. - Signed the informed consent form to take part in the study. - Are affiliated to a social insurance. Exclusion Criteria: - Are suffering from a systemic disease or condition known to have an impact on periodontal level (leukemia, Down syndrome, uncontrolled diabetes, etc.). - Are pregnant or lactating: these will be excluded because of the changes of periodontal status associated with pregnancy. - Have a history of periodontal treatment of less than 3 months. - Show an infectious risk contraindicating periodontal probing (considered as an invasive act because of the induced bacteremia). ANDEM and the Consensus Conference of 2011 identified these patients. - Are under medication known to cause changes in the gingival level as drug gingival hypertrophy including sodium diphenylhydantoïne, nifedipine, ciclosporin A. - Are protected by law. Exposed and unexposed patients having periodontal disease known before inclusion can take part in this research protocol. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
France | Damien JOLLY | Reims |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
CHU de Reims | Association Française d'épargne et de retraite (Financial sponsor), Association Française pour la Recherche sur l'Hidrosadénite (Financial sponsor) |
France,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Percentatge of peridontal disease in each groupe | Peridontal disease will be diagnosed based on clinical and radiographic examination | Day 0 | |
Primary | Questionnaire | Socio-demographic data (age, sex, etc.) and clinical data (medical history, skin symptoms, etc.) will be collected for all patients included in the study. | Day 0 | |
Secondary | Salivary collection | During the periodontal consultation | Day 0 | |
Secondary | Salivary proteomic and metabolomic biosignatures in each group | These will be investigated using spectroscopy and liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry | Month 6 |
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