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The Stanislas Cohort is a monocentric familial longitudinal cohort comprised of 1006 families (4295 subjects) from the Nancy region recruited in 1993-1995 at the Centre for Preventive Medicine (Centre de Médecine Préventive, CMP), Vandoeuvre lès Nancy for a 5-year periodic health examination, under the auspices of the Caisse Nationale d'Assurance Maladie (CNAM).
This cohort was established with the primary objective of investigating gene-gene and gene-environment interactions in the field of cardiovascular diseases, based on the study of inter-individual variability and familial segregation analysis of biological and morphological intermediate phenotypes of cardiovascular risk. The longitudinal nature of this study should enable to take into account the evolution of intermediate phenotypes related to genetic factors throughout the follow-up period. The families, consisting of two parents and at least two biological children, were deemed healthy, free of declared acute and/or chronic illness, in order to assess the effect of genetics on the variability of intermediate phenotypes studied under physiological conditions (without the influence, in the absence) of pathology.
The Stanislas Cohort is, both nationally and internationally, the only longitudinal familial cohort of supposedly healthy subjects on such a large scale.
Brief summary of ancillary study "Cardiac Functional Indices Comparison Between MRI and Echocardiography" : the ESCIF study is an ancillary study of the Stanislas cohort aiming at comparing in a cohort of supposedly healthy subjects different cardiac functional indices between two different modalities : Echocardiography and MRI. Indeed, new cardiac functional indices have been recently developed in the scope of echocardiography and would be very useful in MRI. In echography they are computed either from tissue Doppler imaging or from a specific image analysis called speckle tracking. These two techniques are accessible in MRI with the Generalized Reconstruction by Inversion of Coupled Systems (GRICS) technology which provides a motion model from which strains and strain rates may be derived and which allow longer acquisition without the constraint of breath holding (mandatory to reach high temporal resolution).
Full description
MAIN STUDY Follow-up visit No. 4 is currently being scheduled, and is planned between 2011 and 2016.
Objectives:
Conduct a fourth visit, in 2011-2016, enabling a follow-up at 17 years of the cohort population.
Enrich the sample collection with new biobanks and clinical phenotyping of the cohort by conducting selected specific investigations and supported by specific scientific hypotheses and protocols
Evaluate the long-term (follow-up, monitoring) of clinical, biological, morphological data by analyzing:
Methodology, Organization:
All Cohort members will be contacted to participate in this fourth visit. The data collected will be identical to those collected during the previous visits. However, they will be enriched with new clinical phenotyping conducted at the CIC (principal investigator Prof. Zannad): collection of blood and urine samples (DNA, RNA, lymphocytic extracts, plasma biobank, urology biobank), and morphological investigations (electrocardiogram, echocardiography, carotid echotracking, arterial stiffness, systolic pressure index, abdominal aortic ultrasound). Based on previous participation rates, the recruitment of 2,000 participants (500 families) is possible.
Expected Results:
This reconvening, for the follow-up at 17 years of the Stanislas Cohort, unique in its familial nature and having already contributed in a very significant manner in terms of knowledge generated, will enable in addition to the long-term continuation of its initial objectives (gene-environment interactions and cardiovascular diseases : Sophie Visvikis-Siest) to identify more specifically the natural history of the evolution of cardiovascular risk factors, including metabolic syndrome and its components as well as the incidence and transition mechanisms toward common cardiovascular diseases, notably vascular and coronary diseases and heart failure.
ANCILLARY STUDY
Detailed description of the ESCIF ancillary study - Dr. BONNEMAINS :
Objectives :
Organization :
76 subjects from the Stanislas cohort will be included prospectively in two groups according to the echocardiographic strains and tissue Doppler velocities acquired during echocardiography : 38 subjects with normal indices, and 38 with altered indices. Each subject will be proposed an MRI examination with the GRICS technique the same day to assess the same indices.
Study design = interventional: MRI. Prospective Number of groups: 2 Enrollment: 76 Last inclusion in the ESCIF study : 23/09/2014
SUBSTUDY : PHRC I 2013 - BioSe-PreIC - Dr HUTTIN : diagnostic performance of circulating biomarkers in early screening of heart failure Design : non interventionnal study
Main objective : Determine the contribution, in addition (ontop of ) of the subject's clinical characteristics, of circulating biomarkers assays (Gal-3, PIIINP, ST2) in a general population to screen early stages of heart failure (Stage B: asymptomatic patients with structural abnormalities) validated by trans-thoracic echocardiography (diastolic function and left ventricular mass)
Inclusion crieria :
Subjects participating to the 4th visit of the STANISLAS cohort
Subjets over 40 years old
Non-inclusion criteria :
Blood sample or echocardiography unavailable
Known cardiopathy
Modarate to severe sympptoms linked to heart failure
Présence of an abnormal diastolic function (E/Ea ratio above 8) and/or left ventricular hypertrophy (left ventricular mass above 125 g/m² for men and 110 g/m² for women).
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
STANISLAS ancillary study:
Study population = subgroup of 76 subjects from the Stanislas cohort
Eligibility:
being member of the Stanislas cohort and participating to 4th visit Specific written and signed enlightened consent for the ESCIF study
Exclusion:
contraindications for MRI examination, possibility of pregnancy
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
1,705 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Sophie LAURENT; Patrick ROSSIGNOL
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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