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Clinical Trial Summary

Main objective: To compare the efficacy of a new strategy of Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) versus a classical Sanger strategy, for the diagnosis of patients referred to the laboratory for suspected systemic autoinflammatory diseases (SAID). Secondary objectives: - Compare after 6 months the impact of these strategies on the establishment of an effective treatment SAID following genetic result. - Compare the distribution of different forms of SAID found with each genetic diagnostic strategies (NGS vs classic method).


Clinical Trial Description

Systemic autoinflammatory diseases (SAID) include a broad spectrum of pathologies of innate immunity. In recent years, numerous publications have shown the involvement of new genes in these diseases, highlighting new pathophysiological pathways (inflammasome, NFkB: nuclear factor-kappa B, interferon) and new targeted therapies (biotherapy advantageously replacing non-specific anti-inflammatory drugs). Current laboratory diagnostic strategy is based on the Sanger method, the gold standard to date, allowing the sequential analysis of some genes (usually between 1 and 4). The nonspecific nature of the clinical presentation of these diseases, the increasing number of genes involved and the low diagnostic yield obtained, make it essential to develop a new strategy, more efficient, so that the patient can benefit as soon as possible treatment suited to his pathology as soon as the gene involved is identified. The investigator had developed and validated in our genetic laboratories a new method based on the Next Generation Sequencing (NGS). A panel of 32 known or candidate SAID genes, which can be simultaneously analyzed within a time compatible with the diagnosis. The investigator wishes to highlight the benefits of this new strategy. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms

  • Systemic Autoinflammatory Diseases (SAID)

NCT number NCT02976948
Study type Observational
Source University Hospital, Montpellier
Contact
Status Terminated
Phase
Start date July 31, 2015
Completion date March 31, 2020