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.
Erectile dysfunction is a highly prevalent pathology. When oral or injectable pharmacological treatments prove ineffective, the treatment of choice is penile prosthesis which provides the possibility of sexual activity with penetration. Unfortunately, current prostheses are difficult (or even impossible) to manipulate for some patients. Many patients underutilize their device due to difficulties in using the pump related to mechanical issues (difficult grip, lack of strength, etc.) or sensory issues (altered proprioception, etc.), resulting in an inability to achieve rigidity that allows optimal satisfaction for the patient and/or partners. These difficulties correspond to a significant portion of dissatisfaction among patients with penile prostheses. Actually, no study has evaluated patients' ability to manipulate the pump of their penile prosthesis, as well as the association between these manipulation abilities, the rigidity of erections with a penile prosthesis, and patient and partner sexual satisfaction. In this descriptive study, the primary outcome is to describe the manipulation abilities of patients with penile prostheses during follow-up consultations after prosthesis implantation. The secondary outcomes are to estimate the association of various markers related to penile prosthesis manipulation (overall hand grip strength, pinch grip strength, proprioception, and discrimination) with - Rigidity of erections with penile prosthesis - Patient's sexual satisfaction - Partner's sexual satisfaction - Satisfaction related to pump manipulation
The aim of this prospective registry is to evaluate the clinical impact of the new Navitor prosthesis (Abbott, Minneapolis, MN, USA) in BAV and evaluate both the main sizing methods (the classical annular or the supra-annular with ICD measurement at 4 mm above the virtual basal ring).
Paraneoplastic Neurological Syndromes are rare autoimmune complications linked to the presence of systemic cancer. Despite their autoimmune origin, they have historically shown little response to immunotherapy. The reason for this failure is probably related to too late administration of immunotherapy, at a stage where the inflammation has already disappeared and irreversible neuronal loss has occurred. The protocol focuses on patients with anti-Hu antibody sensory neuronopathy. This single arm trial consists of an early immunotherapy combining Intravenous Immunoglobulin (IVIG) for 3 months, cyclophosphamide and methylprednisolone for 6 months, at the rate of 1 cycle per month. The percentage of patients with clinical improvement will be evaluated (ONLS) at 3 months. The tolerance of the treatment will also be evaluated as well as other functional scales at 3 and 6 months.
Major risk after pulmonary embolism (PE) is recurrence, fatal in 10% of patients. Patients with PE can be stratified in 3 groups according to the risk of recurrence : very low risk, high risk or Intermediate risk. Little is known about this last group. Anticoagulation is efficient to prevent recurrence but is currently not recommended for patient with an intermediate risk of recurrence. Identifying risk factors of recurrent PE remains a major issue to identify sub-groups of patients who would require lifelong anticoagulation. In 30-40% of cases, PE patients develop residual pulmonary vascular obstruction (RPVO), which has been found to be associated with an increased recurrence risk. This last observation was mostly reported in patients with unprovoked PE (patients with high risk of recurrence) and RPVO was measured using conventional planar lung scan. In patients with an intermediate risk of recurrence, the impact of RPVO has been much less studied. In addition, the definition of RPVO was variable according to studies and correlation between RPVO burden and recurrence risk has not been clearly demonstrated. This might be explained by the inherent limitation of RPVO quantification using conventional planar imaging, which is only based on a visual estimation on 2-dimensional images. Ventilation/Perfusion Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography (V/Q SPECT/CT) is a new method of scintigraphic image acquisition that offers the advantage of 3-dimensional imaging, enabling more accurate and reproducible quantification of RPVO. The main hypothesis of this study is that in patients with PE at intermediate risk of recurrence, RPVO computed with V/Q SPECT/CT imaging may be an important predictor of recurrence.
Vasoplegic syndrome after cardiac surgery is common and is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. It is characterized by early and prolonged arterial hypotension, with preserved cardiac output and low systemic vascular resistance. Vasoplegic syndrome therefore shares pathophysiological features with septic shock. There are no data in the literature on the function of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis during vasoplegic syndrome after cardiac surgery. In situations of acute stress and systemic inflammation, relative adrenal insufficiency has been reported in the most severe patients, particularly those in septic shock. The term ""CIRCI"" (Critical Illness-Related Corticosteroid Insufficiency) is currently defined as an increase in total plasma cortisol of less than 9 µg/dl after stimulation with 250 µg tetracosactide (synthetic ACTH), or a basal total plasma cortisol level of less than 10 µg/dl. However, recent studies have called into question the usefulness of the cosyntropin stimulation test for exploring the HPA axis in intensive care patients. Tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) assays can be used to measure steroid metabolites (steroidome), enabling more precise exploration of the corticotropic axis. The aim of this study is to evaluate, on an exploratory basis, the impact of the presence of a post-cardiac surgery vasoplegic syndrome on adrenal function by steroidome mapping (LC-MS/MS).
The purpose of this study is to identify, at 5 years, the clinical and therapeutic factors associated with improvement in shoulder functionality and quality of life in patients with transfixing (total) rotator cuff injuries undergoing treatment.
Given the challenges of treating complex cases of VAP caused by P. aeruginosa and K. pneumoniae, TechnoPhage developed a bacteriophage cocktail (TP-122) against those pathogens, aiming to provide a hospital-based add-on therapy to the SoC including antibiotic therapy, administered by nebulization. TP-122 is a bacteriophage cocktail divided in two different components: TP-122A is comprised of three bacteriophages against infections caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa and TP-122B includes three bacteriophages against K. pneumoniae . For this study, an effective sample of 15 subjects will be randomly allocated into two arms, in a 3:2 ratio, with 9 subjects receiving TP-122A, in addition to SoC, and 6 subjects receiving the SoC alone.
This study intends to assess safety, tolerability, and efficacy of SENS-501 in children between the ages of 6-31 months with pre-lingual hearing loss due to a mutation in the Otoferlin gene.
Adoptive immunotherapy using CAR-T cells is now one of the Advanced Therapy Medicines routinely used for relapsed or refractory lymphoid hemopathies. In 2023, in France, 5 types of CAR-T cells have marketing authorization for 6 different indications. However, these marketing authorizations are based on clinical trials involving a limited number of selected patients. Real-life data are essential for assessing the post-authorization use of these innovative treatments. The French national DESCAR-T registry, promoted by LYSARC and in which Toulouse University Hospital plays an active role, is an international reference for this real-life evaluation. It does not, however, allow precise evaluation of patient-centered indicators and care pathways. With the increasing number of indications and candidate patients, Toulouse University Hospital, the only healthcare facility authorized in the Western Occitanie region to administer CAR-T cells, is faced with growing hospital needs and longer treatment times. In 2023, this has necessitated the implementation of new ambulatory and inter-facility care pathways in collaboration with the referral centers of the Onco-Occitanie Ouest regional cancer network. The selection of patients for CAR-T cell treatment is based on objective clinical criteria linked to the pathology (histology, morphological localization, size and kinetics of the tumor mass) and the patient (physiological age, performance index, comorbidities, patient choice). Because of their innovative nature, in a difficult psychological and physical context for the patient (refractory disease), CAR-T cell care pathways also need to be evaluated in terms of their "quality of life" dimension. The impact of non-biological determinants (also described as social and territorial inequalities in health) such as place of residence and distance from healthcare provision, marital, economic and social status, has never been explored on the accessibility and progress of the CAR-T cell treatment pathway. The creation of a registry of patients eligible for CAR-T cells at Toulouse University Hospital will enable these lines of research to be explored on the scale of a region with a population of 3 million.
In patients requiring renal replacement therapy (RRT) in the intensive care unit (ICU), continuous techniques are predominantly using due to better hemodynamic tolerance. The most employed techniques in ICU are continuous venovenous hemodiafiltration (CVVHDF) and continuous venovenous hemodialysis (CVVHD). To our knowledge, there are no prospective studies comparing the efficiency of these two techniques with the same dose of dialysis (and the same filter). In the CompEER study, we aim to compare the efficiency of CVVHD and CVVHDF on urea reduction rate in intensive care patients with acute kidney injury. The research hypothesis is that CVVHD citrate technique is as effective as CVVHDF heparin technique for urea reduction and provides prolonged and stable clearance, facilitating antibiotic management during RRT.