Status
Conditions
Treatments
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
In 2012, a previous work showed that T. whipplei is a common bacterium detected in various situations. A large part of the population is therefore exposed to a T. whipplei but there is that some people probably with immunological and genetic factors predisposing which develop a disease. The association teams with experience in HLA-typing will allow us to better identify patients with a risk of chronic complication.
The main aim of this study is to evaluate if the HLA-DRB13 and/or HLA-DQB106 typing in patients are risk factors of chronic infection with T. whipplei (defined by classic Whipple disease and/ or, endocarditis and/or encephalitis).
Full description
Since the first isolation of a strain of Tropheryma whipplei (T. whipplei) and the development of molecular tools, the natural history of this bacterium continued to clarify. The currently proposed scheme is as follows: after contamination human oral-oral or fecal, patients will develop acute infections such as bacteremia, gastroenteritis and pneumonia. They can then produce specific antibodies. Likely depending on the host-related factors, three types of evolution appear to be possible: (i) some patients eliminate the bacteria and develop specific antibodies. (ii) some patients are chronic carriers of the bacterium with a strong immune response. (iii) Finally, patients develop subacute or chronic infections, with an insufficient immune response or non-existent answer to T. whipplei.
Subacute or chronic infections include Whipple's disease characterized by histological involvement of the small intestine, as well as localized without digestive impairment, such as endocarditis or encephalitis. Despite appropriate antibiotic therapy, patients with Whipple's disease will present relapse (30-40% of patients), but also of re-infection with different genotypes of T. whipplei.
Here the hypothesis is that HLA-DRB 13 and/or HLA-DQB1 06 alleles are associated with the presence of chronic infections with T. whipplei (defined by classic Whipple disease and / or endocarditis and/or encephalitis)
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
246 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal