Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Gout is a chronic disease caused by the deposit of monosodium urate (MSU) crystals in body tissues secondary to hyperuricemia. Patients with gout suffer severe attacks of acute joint pain. As the disease progresses, the joint pain becomes chronic and associated with disabling and deformative manifestations called tophi. Gout is strongly associated with various comorbidities including cardiovascular disease and chronic kidney failure. Gout is a very common disease, affecting 0.9% of the adult population in France and nearly 4% of the North-American population. Data from New Zealand show a particularly high prevalence of gout among Polynesians (minority populations in New Zealand and other islands of the South Pacific) that would be explained by genetic susceptibility and frequently intertwined with metabolic diseases. Recent findings obtained from the Polynesian population in New Caledonia disclose high prevalence figures close to 7%, a level expected to be confirmed by an epidemiology study that will be conducted in parallel with the present study and designed to determine the precise prevalence of gout in French Polynesia and the most frequently associated genetic variants.


Clinical Trial Description

International genomic studies conducted in populations with hyperuricemia and gout have identified a number of associated alleles. The strength of the association between a given allele and gout (or hyperuricemia) provides an indication of the importance of the encoded protein in disease pathogenesis. It was in this way that the development of gout was found to depend on renal urate transporters that were subsequently targeted by new uricosuric therapies. Overall, the search for gout-associated genes has mostly been done in the general European population and revealed a small number of candidate loci. Most of these only contribute a small amount to the heritability for gout susceptibility, suggesting that additional genes and mechanisms of genetic influence are yet to be discovered. A common feature of Genome-Wide Association studies done so far is that usually large sample sizes are required in order to detect differences in allele frequencies and their contribution to different traits between test groups. The Polynesian population of French Polynesia possesses characteristics that make it particularly attractive to carry out population-based genetic research. Historical records indicate that the Polynesians of Tahiti and surrounding islands originate from a small founder population that has undergone a number of bottlenecks, eventually becoming a genetically homogenous population with a fairly high degree of consanguinity. The combination of a historic founder event, continued isolation and recent expansion are all ideal properties for a Genome Wide Association Study, as they ensure that 1) population stratification will be easy to correct when performing association tests and 2) there are likely high-effect variants that were kept at low frequency in mainland Europe due to negative selection but rose to high frequencies in the Polynesians via the increase in genetic drift or selection through adaptation to a specific environment and diet. Therefore, it is plausible that rare variants with large effect on health-related quantitative traits may be more easily detectable in Polynesians, even with much smaller sample sizes. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04812886
Study type Interventional
Source Lille Catholic University
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date April 29, 2021
Completion date August 16, 2021

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT04060173 - A Study to Evaluate the Safety, Tolerability, Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics of ABP-671 Phase 1
Not yet recruiting NCT06187519 - UR+AIMS Gout Wearable Skin Uric Acid Monitor Study N/A
Completed NCT03635957 - Study of Pegloticase (KRYSTEXXA®) Plus Methotrexate in Patients With Uncontrolled Gout Phase 4
Completed NCT04966325 - Thorough QT (TQT) Study to Evaluate the Effect of LC350189 on Cardiac Repolarization in Healthy Male and Female Subjects Early Phase 1
Completed NCT03015948 - A Single Dose Study of SHR4640 in Healthy Male Volunteers Phase 1
Completed NCT02855437 - Novel Methods for Ascertainment of Gout Flares -A Pilot Study N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT02702375 - Meta-analyses of Impotrant Food Sources of Sugars and Incident Cardiometabolic Diseases N/A
Completed NCT01407874 - A Randomized, Double-Blind, Dose-Response Study of the Safety and Uric Acid Effects of Oral Ulodesine Added to Allopurinol in Subjects With Gout and Concomitant Moderate Renal Insufficiency Phase 2
Completed NCT00995618 - Study of Tranilast Alone or in Combination With Febuxostat in Patients With Hyperuricemia Phase 2
Completed NCT00985127 - Study to Evaluate the Urate-Lowering Activity and Safety of Oral BCX4208 Administered in Subjects With Gout Phase 2
Terminated NCT04987294 - Phase IIa Study of ALLN-346 (Engineered Urate Oxidase) in Subjects With Hyperuricemia, Gout and Chronic Kidney Disease Phase 2
Completed NCT03291782 - D-0120 Safety and PK/PD, Food Effect Study in Healthy Volunteers Phase 1
Recruiting NCT03388515 - A Study to Assess the Safety and Tolerability of SSS11 in Healthy Subjects. Phase 1
Completed NCT06189404 - Effect of Tigulixostat on the Pharmacokinetics of Theophylline Phase 1
Enrolling by invitation NCT03336203 - The Impact of Urate-lowering Therapy on Kidney Function (IMPULsKF) Phase 4
Recruiting NCT05586958 - Tigulixostat, Phase 3 Study, Placebo Controlled in Gout Patients Phase 3
Recruiting NCT04047394 - A Study to Determine the Safety, Tolerability, PK and Preliminary PD of SSS11 in Chinese Healthy Adult Volunteers Phase 1
Not yet recruiting NCT05507723 - Tight Control of Gouty Arthritis Compared to Usual Care N/A
Recruiting NCT06056570 - Open Label PK, PD and DDI of Dotinurad and Allopurinol in Gout Patients With Hyperuricemia Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT02557126 - Study of URC102 to Assess the Safety and Efficacy in Gout Patients Phase 2