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The aim of this study is to define structural damage to the manubriosternal joint (MST) in axial spondyloarthritis (axSpA) by comparing its CT scan aspects between a population of patients with radiographic (axSpA) and a control population free of chronic inflammatory rheumatism.
Full description
Axial spondyloarthritis (axSpA) is, together with rheumatoid arthritis, one of the 2 major chronic inflammatory rheumatic diseases. While the lumbar spine and sacroiliac joints are at the forefront of the clinic and diagnosis of axSpA, clinical involvement of the rib cage is common and long-standing. It can lead to limitation of thoracic extension and respiratory consequences. Clinical involvement of the anterior chest wall was evaluated in the early 2010s in axSpA, especially in the newer forms.
Several anatomical structures of the thoracic cage can be the cause of pain and among these is the manubriosternal joint (MST). It is known to be a possible site of inflammatory involvement in axSpA and this is well demonstrated by MRI imaging. Bone CT scans allow precise analysis of changes in the MST joint, but unlike MRI, they do not analyse inflammation, which is itself the cause of structural changes. While inflammation is the main cause of pain, structural changes, particularly ankylosis, are the cause of potentially disabling sequelae. To date, there have been no studies of structural damage to the MST joint in patients with axSpA, including the radiographic form. Moreover, little is known about the CT scan data of the MST joint in healthy subjects. Apart from the interest in defining axSpA-related abnormalities for CT scan analysis of the MST joint in general, it is important to know the frequency and types of structural abnormalities of the MST joint in axSpA, not for early diagnosis, but in terms of assessing the severity of the disease.
The investigator's hypothesis is that there are structural abnormalities of the STD joint in the radiographic axSpA, the characteristics, prevalence and relationship to patient and disease characteristics of which must be determined. This should be analysed in the non-radiographic axSpA. This requires comparison with a control population, but as there are no validated criteria for assessing the pathological nature of the STD joint on CT, it is necessary to proceed in 2 steps:
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion Criteria :
axSpA population:
Control population:
Exclusion Criteria :
axSpA population:
Control population:
377 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Maryline Delattre; Lynda Benammar
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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