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UnknownNCT04170205

Causes Associated With Small Fiber Neuropathy (SFN).

Retrospective Study of Causes Associated With Small Fiber Neuropathies.

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
450 (estimated)
Sponsor
University Hospital, Brest · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Small fiber neuropathy (SFN) is an injury of cutaneous nerve fibers, mainly by a decrease in their density within the cutaneous tissue. The symptomatology associated with this SFN is broad with symptoms that are essentially sensory, but also autonomic. The etiologies of SFN are numerous (diabetes, drug, infectious, immunological...) and clinically non-specific, justifying a broad etiological assessment. The appearance of staged skin biopsies in the SFN balance sheet has greatly helped to improve diagnosis. Despite this, a significant part of SFN remains without associated etiology and is considered idiopathic. As the distribution of the different causes of SFN remains a missing data to date, the completion of this cohort study by one of the SFN reference centres should make it possible to establish the prevalence of SFN causes over a large population. Only patients with clinical symptoms that may be related to SFN and who have been sampled for SFN, positive or not, will be eligible for recruitment. The result of the anatomopathological sampling will allow patients to be separated into two groups, with or without SFN. The main judgement criteria will be the prevalence of etiologies associated with SFN: diabetes, medication, systemic lupus erythematosus, Gougerot-Sjögren syndrome, amylosis, dysthyroidism, alcoholism, vitamin B12 deficiency, HIV infection, hepatitis C, paraneoplastic syndrome, hereditary disease (Fabry disease, Friedreich ataxia,...), idiopathic, others.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2019-11-15
Primary completion
2020-04-30
Completion
2020-04-30
First posted
2019-11-20
Last updated
2019-11-20

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04170205. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.