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Blood Biomarkers for the Management of Concussion in Professional Rugby Players (RUGBYPROS100B)

U

University Hospital, Clermont-Ferrand

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Concussion
Professional TOP14 Rugby Players

Treatments

Procedure: serum S100B assay

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02930395
CHU-0282
DC-2016-2742 (Other Identifier)

Details and patient eligibility

About

In the past 20 years, the incidence of concussion in direct contact sports has significantly increased. The incidence of concussion in rugby players ranges between 8 to 17 episodes / 1000 playing hours. A recent study published by the French Rugby Federation (FFR) and the National Rugby League (LNR) showed similar results. The latter study was performed analyzing the French "TOP14", which includes 14 teams participating in professional rugby championships. At least two concussions were diagnosed each week. Despite the recent evidence, cognitive assessment remains the only means to determine whether or not players experiencing concussions can return to the game or not.

Full description

The possible evolution of neuro-vascular damage and its biological consequences are currently overlooked. The Head Injury Assessment (HIA) is the current gold standard used by the national Rugby Medical Authorities in accordance with international safety protocols. The HIA protocol relies on neurological or neuropsychological endpoints, potentially subjective or not ensuring sufficient sensitivity. As a result, defining the immediate and long-term pathophysiological consequences of concussions remains challenging. The introduction of an objective blood test to detect the presence and the evolution overtime of neuro-vascular damage could represent a pairing approach filling a sensitive gap in the management of concussed players. Recent evidence has proposed the use of serum biomarkers aiding post-concussion management . Remarkably, serum biomarkers of neuro-vascular functions are currently being used in emergency room settings. Serum levels of the brain protein S100β were demonstrated to have an excellent negative predictive value for neurovascular damage after mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI). Measurement of blood S100β was proposed as a tool to grade TBI, limiting unnecessary CT scan examinations in emergency cases . However, whether the use of serum makers of neuro-vascular damage could benefit the management of sport-related concussion remains unclear. Moreover, repeated concussions have been linked to an increased risk of Alzheimer's disease, Multiple Sclerosis and Parkinson's disease . Serum biomarkers could be of diagnostic and prognostic value, facilitating return to play decisions or predicting lingering risks of cognitive decline.

Enrollment

560 estimated patients

Sex

Male

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Players age > 18 years old.
  • Players routinely managed by the medical staff of collaborative rugby teams. Availability of clinical data, age, body mass index, brain performance, previous HIA scores, history of concussions.
  • Players must agree with all of the aspects of the research. Players must consent for a baseline blood draw before the season starts and follow up sampling after concussions

Exclusion criteria

  • Adverse players' life style (e.g., alcohol consumption, medications or chronic drug regimens) or pathological conditions associated with abnormal S100β levels (e.g., S100 genetic variants, cutaneous infections, brain tumor, auto-immune disorders, or hyper-lymphocytosis).

Trial design

560 participants in 1 patient group

professional rugby players
Treatment:
Procedure: serum S100B assay

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Patrick LACARIN

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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