Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT05388838

Screening for Oculocerebral Lymphoma with the Phenotype of NK Cells in Patients with Uveitis

Screening for Oculocerebral Lymphoma by Identifying the Phenotype Carried by Circulating NK Cells in Patients with Uveitis

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
60 (estimated)
Sponsor
Hospices Civils de Lyon · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Uveitis is an inflammation of the uvea, an ocular tunic comprising the iris, ciliary body and choroid. This inflammation can also involve other tissues such as the retina, the optic nerve and the aqueous humor. These diseases can result in significant vision loss and account for 10% of all blindness in developed countries, and up to 25% in developing countries. The main difficulty in this pathology is to make the etiological diagnosis, which then allows a specific treatment of the disease. The main etiologie are inflammatory or infectious (sarcoidosis, tuberculosis) but other cancerous etiologies are possible and are of more complicated diagnosis. Vitreoretinal lymphoma is a subtype of central nervous system lymphoma, which is generally associated with a poor prognosis. It is a diffuse non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, with large B cells. It can be primary ocular (Primary Intra-Ocular Lymphoma - LIOP), without brain involvement, but can also be secondary to central nervous system involvement, which explains the poor prognosis of the disease. Approximately 50-90% of LIOP develop brain involvement within 1-2 years of diagnosis, which encourages early diagnosis to avoid brain involvement as much as possible. The main obstacle to rapid diagnosis is the difficulty of identifying LIOP. Indeed, the clinical symptoms of this rare disease are often identical to classical uveitis, and the diagnostic means to detect it are invasive and require a trained ophthalmologist and hematologist team. LIOP diagnostic tests are often delay in the management of uveitis and lead to diagnostic erraticity that can last between 4 to 40 months. The INSERM U1183 unit is developing a diagnostic technology for lymphomas based on the analysis of blood NK cells and their phenotypes including those acquired by trogocytosis (WO/2016/005548). A rapid, simple, minimally invasive LIOP test using this technology could therefore be propose to all patients presenting with uveitis and whose clinical criteria could match those of LIOP. The research hypothesis is : Could the diagnostic wandering of patients with primary intraocular lymphoma be reduced by a rapid blood test for NK cell phenotype of patients with uveitis? Following a simple blood test, a rapid LIOP test, using this diagnostic technology, could therefore be proposed to all patients with uveitis and clinical criteria (age, intermediate and posterior location of the uveitis) corresponding to those of LIOP. The primary objective of this study is to compare the phenotype of circulating NK cells of patient with untreated intraocular lymphoma versus the phenotype of patient with non-cancerous uveitis.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BIOLOGICALBlood sampleBlood sample will be taken at D0: 63 ml (7 tubes of 9 ml),

Timeline

Start date
2022-06-01
Primary completion
2025-12-01
Completion
2025-12-01
First posted
2022-05-24
Last updated
2025-03-03

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05388838. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.