Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05075798

Study of Cerebral MRI Anomalies in Mutated Transthyretin Amyloidosis Patients

A Comprehensive Retrospective Study of Cerebral MRI Anomalies in Mutated Transthyretin Amyloidosis Patients

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
36 (actual)
Sponsor
Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Nīmes · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Transthyretin amyloidosis (aTTR) initially described as a rare disease, became the most serious hereditary polyneuropathy of adult onset and family screening has made it possible to identify and follow up many asymptomatic patients and carriers of the mutation in the TTR gene. Considered as a systemic disease with involvement of target organs (the heart, the eye, the kidney and peripheral nervous system), it seems to be more complex for neurologists according to recent publications raising the issue of central nervous system involvement. Indeed, TTR amyloid deposits seem to be correlated with the duration of the disease. These deposits can cause cortical damage by different mechanisms: direct TTR toxicity or as a result of pathology related to cerebral amyloid angiopathy (intraparenchymal or subarachnoid hematomas, small infarcts, hemosiderin). A small number of mutations in the TTR gene cause a rare phenotype of systemic amyloidosis, the oculoleptomeningeal form, characterized by clinical neurological symptoms: progressive dementia, epilepsy, ataxia, spastic paraparesis, stroke-like episodes. Hypothesis of the work: the central nervous system involvement is probably underestimated on the radiological description in patients with TTR mutation.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERNo intervention,pure observational study

Timeline

Start date
2021-10-25
Primary completion
2022-05-31
Completion
2022-05-31
First posted
2021-10-13
Last updated
2022-09-02

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05075798. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.