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Clinical Trial Summary

The thrombin generation test is a global test for the study of coagulation that allows the fine study of the balance between procoagulant and anticoagulant factors. For many years, it has been performed in laboratories by semi-automated techniques, sometimes using in-house reagents, which led to a high variability and did not allow multicenter studies. Recently, an automated device for the evaluation of thrombin generation has been placed on the market (ST-Genesia), allowing a better standardization of the technique. In order to allow multicenter studies, which are essential for the routine positioning of the thrombin generation test, the inter-center variability must be evaluated, as a priority, in the pathologies for which the test is routinely positioned. Thrombin generation (TG) assays are long-established research tools in hemostasis. They are used for both fundamental and clinical research, but a multiplicity of test methodologies limits the large adoption of TG due to the variability of results despite the attempts to standardize practices. Several publications already exist to evaluate its analytical performances, and thereby demonstrate that the test automation also allows its democratization to reach acceptable performances It also enables the evaluation of the device in various indications such as, for example, the evaluation of the effect of direct oral anticoagulants or the evaluation of the risk of breast cancer recurrence. The confirmation of these anterior results allows further clinical investigations in larger cohorts. However, the absence of interchangeability between the two systems indicates that the results will need to be more rugged through multicenter studies on ST Genesia.


Clinical Trial Description

A preliminary step in the development of multi-center protocols is to confirm that inter-center variability is acceptable on ST Genesia, and even more acceptable than it was on Calibrated Automated Thrombogram (CAT). Since the variability of the results can be attributed to analytical, pre-analytical and inter-individual biological variabilities, it has been agreed that the evaluation that we will conduct will focus only on the analytical variability and will therefore be carried out on the same samples, collected and prepared in the sponsoring center of the study, and distributed in the form of frozen aliquots to the different co-investigating centers. The evaluation of this inter-center variability of this new device will allow, if satisfactory, to propose multicenter studies. These are essential in order to position the thrombin generation test in routine in these various promising clinical contexts. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05422157
Study type Observational
Source University Hospital, Clermont-Ferrand
Contact Lise Laclautre
Phone 334.73.754.963
Email promo_interne_drci@chu-clermontferrand.fr
Status Recruiting
Phase
Start date September 7, 2022
Completion date September 30, 2024