Respiratory Microbioma and Respiratory Complications After Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantion
NCT ID: NCT06639750
Last Updated: 2024-10-15
Study Results
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Basic Information
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NOT_YET_RECRUITING
120 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2025-02-01
2029-02-01
Brief Summary
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Among these, late non-infectious pulmonary complications (LNIPC), all taken together, occur in 25% of post-HSCA cases(1). These NIPCs, the most common of which is bronchiolitis obliterans, significantly alter the prognosis(4,5). The pathophysiology of CPTNI is poorly understood, but it seems that the occurrence of a viral respiratory infection (pre- or post-ACSH) may be a potential trigger for the onset of CPTNI(1). These viral infections can become "chronic", given that viral clearance is impaired by the underlying immunodepression, and can thus cause chronic inflammation leading to the fibrosing and irreversible process of obliterative bronchiolitis(6). Given the prognostic importance of this type of CPTNI, it seems essential to gain a better understanding of its pathophysiology, which may involve a number of mechanisms: cellular expression of the graft and its evolution, disruption of the host response (innate immunity) following viral infection, influence of the microbiome and alteration of epithelial repair(1,3,5). Interest in the digestive and respiratory microbiome has been growing in recent years(7-9). The literature is gradually being enriched with data on the links between infection, the microbiome and chronic respiratory pathology and, in the post-HSCA context, a potential link between the enteric microbiome and Chronic Graft Versus Host Disease (cGVHD).
A pilot study comparing respiratory microbiomes using sequencing and metatranscriptomic analysis on 20 respiratory samples (nasopharyngeal swab and bronchoalveolar lavage pairs) taken under the conditions of the proposed study showed that the technique was highly feasible and highly sensitive.
The aim of this study is therefore to use meta-genomics to investigate the respiratory virome/microbiome in a population of patients who have undergone HSCA: eukaryotic and prokaryotic viruses, bacterial expression and the expression (meta-transcriptomics) of graft-derived cell lines and their possible association with the occurrence of post-HSCA respiratory complications (infectious and non-infectious).
No study has assessed the link between the composition of the respiratory virome/microbiome and the occurrence of respiratory events (infectious and CPTNI post ACSH), but also more broadly the link with the composition of the microbiome in the broad sense (respiratory virome, respiratory and digestive microbiota).
The aim of this study is to establish a respiratory viral and bacterial map as a possible biomarker of the occurrence of respiratory events (infectious and CPTNI), thus enabling more personalised monitoring of patients at risk of CPTNI and management of immunosuppressive treatment of patients at risk of an infectious episode, with risk assessment based on the composition of the respiratory virome.
The interest of this study is that it is multidisciplinary and transdisciplinary, studying the respiratory pathologies and infections of haematology patients and combining clinical and fundamental research, with expected spin-offs for direct patient care (personalised monitoring and management of immunosuppressive treatments).
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Detailed Description
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Conditions
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Study Design
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COHORT
PROSPECTIVE
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* French-speaking
* Followed in the centre's haematology department with a project for a haematopoietic stem cell allograft
* Whatever the haemopathy, previous treatments, type of transplant (pheno, geno, haplo-identical), type of graft (bone marrow, peripheral stem cells, cord blood), any conditioning (myeloablative or non-myeloablative), any immunosuppressive protocol.
* Be affiliated to the social security system
* Person able to understand the information and sign the consent form.
* Informed consent must be collected and signed
Exclusion Criteria
* Failure to sign the consent form
* Contraindication to nasopharyngeal swabbing
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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University Hospital, Caen
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Central Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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VIREMID 24-0157
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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