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Clinical Trial Summary

The aims of this collaborative, interdisciplinary research project are to understand and describe the psychological impact of the announcement of a rare, serious disease present since birth and detected in the context of the systematic neonatal screening (DNS), in terms of the parents' experience, but also on the part of the medical team, in order to improve its process and the support it provides for the announcement of the diagnosis.


Clinical Trial Description

In France, newborn screening for phenylketonuria (PKU) has been offered systematically, but not compulsorily, since 1970. This enables the disease to be treated at an early stage, with presymptomatic treatment. While treatment can significantly improve the prognosis of affected children, ensuring normal cognitive development without neurological sequelae, the announcement of the suspicion of the disease and confirmation of the diagnosis can be painful, even traumatic, for parents, due in particular to the very specific context of the DNS. The screening results are not available until 10 days after the baby's birth, and given the urgency of the treatment, the announcement is made by a telephone call to the families when they have already returned home with their asymptomatic newborn. This call was made by an unknown doctor from a center of reference or competence for rare diseases (in this case hereditary metabolic diseases, HMD), whom the parents did not know, and who asked them to come to his department as a matter of urgency. This disease is not visible at the time of diagnosis, although intoxication is already present. This research follows on from a pilot study2 which showed the traumatic nature of this call, which; for the families, means that in an instant they are thrust into the field of a rare, genetic and chronic disease; for the teams, means that the care relationship will continue until the end of the patient's adolescence. The aims of this collaborative, interdisciplinary research project are to understand and describe the psychological impact of the announcement of a rare, serious disease present since birth and detected in the context of the DNS, in terms of the parents' experience, but also on the part of the medical team, in order to improve its process and the support it provides for the announcement of the diagnosis. The analysis will be carried out under the responsibility of the researcher, her thesis supervisor (Dr Marco Araneda, MCU / Université Paris-Cité) and her thesis co-supervisor (Pr Pascale de Lonlay, PU-PH / APHP and Université Paris-Cité). 1. Analysis of qualitative data : The interviews with the parents, doctors and midwives will be transcribed and then analysed using NVivo® software based on grounded theory methodology. 2. Analysis of quantitative data : The data from the socio-psychological questionnaire will be analysed using simple, multidimensional descriptive statistics. We will carry out an analysis of variance with repeated measures (IES-R) (time 1, time 2) to estimate the impact of time and care on the level of anxietý. A probabilitý level of 5% (p ≤ 0.05) will be considered́ significant for the results of the statistical tests. Statistical calculations will be performed using SPSS v.24 software, R y Mplus v. 8.3 statistical software. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT06289348
Study type Observational
Source Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris
Contact Pascale DELONLAY, MD, PhD
Phone +33 1 44 49 48 52
Email pascale.delonlya@aphp.fr
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase
Start date April 2024
Completion date April 2027

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
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Completed NCT01924026 - Neurocognitive Outcomes in Mild Hyperphenylalaninemia (MHP)MHP Study N/A
Completed NCT01428258 - Phase 2 Study of Glycomacropeptide Versus Amino Acid Diet for Management of Phenylketonuria N/A
Completed NCT00925054 - Dose-Finding Study to Evaluate the Safety, Efficacy, & Tolerability of Multiple Doses of rAvPAL-PEG in Subjects With PKU Phase 2
Completed NCT00778206 - PKUDOS: Phenylketonuria (PKU) Demographic, Outcomes, and Safety Registry
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Recruiting NCT05781399 - First-in-Human, Multiple Part Clinical Study of JNT-517 in Healthy Participants and in Participants With Phenylketonuria Phase 1
Completed NCT02555579 - Simplified Diet Approach in Phenylketonuria N/A
Completed NCT03097250 - MRI Spectroscopy and Neuropsychological Functioning in Phenylketonuria
Completed NCT01965912 - Kuvan®'s Effect on the Cognition of Children With Phenylketonuria Phase 4
Completed NCT01965691 - Protein Requirements in Children With Phenylketonuria (PKU) N/A
Completed NCT00789568 - A Phase 1 Study to Evaluate Effects of Sapropterin Dihydrochloride on QTc Intervals in Healthy Adult Subjects Phase 1
Completed NCT00688844 - Nutritional and Neurotransmitter Changes in PKU Subjects on BH4 N/A
Terminated NCT01465100 - Liver Cell Transplant for Phenylketonuria Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT01732471 - Phase 3 Open-label Study to Evaluate the Response and Safety of Kuvan® in Subjects With Phenylketonuria Phase 3
Completed NCT04879277 - Study of Low-grade Systemic Inflammation in Adult Patients With Phenylketonuria N/A
Completed NCT02176603 - Observational Study of Endothelial Dysfunction in Phenylketonuria N/A
Terminated NCT01904708 - Moderate Intensity Exercise and Phenylketonuria N/A
Completed NCT01819727 - An Open-Label Phase 3 Study of BMN 165 for Adults With PKU Not Previously Treated w/ BMN 165 Phase 3
Completed NCT01869972 - Biological Variation of Phenylalanine in Patients With Hyperphenylalaninemia N/A