Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT05951478

DCP (RaDiCo Cohort) (RaDiCo-DCP)

Primary Ciliary Dyskinesias: Identification of Specific Severity Criteria and Phenotype-genotype Correlation Study

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
300 (estimated)
Sponsor
Institut National de la Santé Et de la Recherche Médicale, France · Other Government
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Primary Ciliary Dyskinesias (PCD) are rare, autosomal recessive respiratory diseases, due to a defect in mucociliary clearance linked to abnormalities in the structure and/or function of the cilia. The variety of ciliary abnormalities identified reflects the genetic heterogeneity of PCDs. The thirty or so genes currently implicated explain the pathology in about half of the patients. PCDs are characterized by recurrent infections of the upper (rhinosinusitis) and lower (bronchitis) airways, beginning in early childhood and progressing respectively to nasal polyposis and bronchial dilatation. In half of the cases, there is a lateralization defect of the organs (situs inversus) corresponding to Kartagener's syndrome. There is more frequent infertility in men (immobility of spermatozoa) than in women (miscarriages and tubal pregnancies). About a third of patients progress to respiratory failure. The identification of predictive factors of severity, specific to PCDs, would improve patient care. It is also important to assess the quality of life of patients with PCD, particularly at the ENT level. Data from prevalent patients are currently integrated into three separate and complementary databases: the "e-RespiRare" database, the "DCP Cils" database and the "DCP genes" database. The first step is therefore to constitute the RaDiCo-DCP database which will include data from prevalent and incident patients whose diagnosis of PCD is certain. The cohort aims to improve the routine care of PCD patients, in particular by highlighting predictive factors of severity, allowing early and personalized care, to assess the social impact (quality of life) and medical conditions of ENT impairment, as well as adult infertility, to finely characterize the ciliary phenotype. The study also aims to search for new DCP genes and to allow genotype/phenotype correlation studies.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2017-05-01
Primary completion
2027-05-01
Completion
2027-05-01
First posted
2023-07-19
Last updated
2026-02-12

Locations

32 sites across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05951478. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.