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Clinical Trial Summary

The objective of this trial is to constitute a cohort of sarcopenic versus non-sarcopenic patients to validate the most relevant biological, imaging, mobility and clinical markers considered individually or in association for the diagnosis of sarcopenic patients.


Clinical Trial Description

This trial is part of a Research Program partly funded by a grant from the Walloon region entitled "Development of Markers of Sarcopenia Using an Integrated Approach : From Cell to Human". Consistent with the above-mentioned observation, there is not only one biological marker that perfectly matches the sarcopenia criteria but there is a range of complementary biomarkers - including but not limited to inflammation markers, products of oxidative damage, serum creatinine and urinary creatinine excretion, endocrine function, urine proteomics panel, N-terminal procollagen peptides, myostatin and agrin fragment - that will together constitute the ideal panel of markers (Fougère et al, 2015). These current biomarkers and the thresholds for correlation with clinical outcomes have to be deeply evaluated in clinical trials before being considered as good biomarkers. In addition, one research priority is to investigate and define novel biomarkers allowing an improved assessment, characterization and follow-up of elderly people with sarcopenia. Biomarkers derived from blood can indeed easily be measured in a standardized and low-cost way and are therefore very attractive. This clinical trial aims at confirming the relevance of new soluble markers and validating the most relevant biological (previously and newly identified), imaging, mobility and clinical markers for clinical research in sarcopenia. Newly identified soluble markers of sarcopenia coming from DEMAIN Research program and using secretomic approach (to be identified in secretome of human myotubes during the program research) using immunoassays on biological fluids. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04569487
Study type Interventional
Source Artialis
Contact Yves Henrotin, Prof
Phone 0032 4 242 77 06
Email yves.henrotin@artialis.com
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date February 11, 2021
Completion date December 31, 2023

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