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Diagnostic Value of Ultra-low Dose Thoracic Scanner for the Pulmonary Arteriovenous Malformation Detection in HHT Patient (ULD OSLER)

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Civil Hospices of Lyon

Status

Completed

Conditions

Telangiectasia, Hereditary Hemorrhagic
Rendu Osler Disease

Treatments

Radiation: Low CT scanner without injection dose
Radiation: Ultra-low dose CT scanner without injection

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04108052
69HCL19_0336
ID-RCB (Other Identifier)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT) is linked to a dysregulation of angiogenesis leading to the formation of arteriovenous malformations (AVM): cutaneo-mucous telangiectasia and visceral shunts. The diagnosis is clinical and based on Curaçao criteria: recurrent epistaxis, cutaneo-mucous telangiectasia, hereditary signs and presence of visceral AVM.

Pulmonary AVMs (PAVM) expose patients to many potentially life-threatening complications, such as strokes or brain abscesses due to the right-left shunt created and the lack of filtration barrier of the pulmonary capillary within the AVM. These patients should therefore have regular monitoring throughout their life by a chest CT scanner every 5 to 10 years in the absence of PAVM at the initial scan or more often if PAVMs are present. The management of PAVMs is based on their early detection and embolization in interventional radiology during which is set up within the afferent artery of the PAVM an embolizing agent, the coil.

However, the risk of cumulative irradiation exposure from thoracic scanners and repeated thoracic embolizations over time could be reduces by a decrease of X-rays dose.

A new thoracic CT imaging protocol validated in the United States in the primary screening of lung cancer, the ultra-low dose protocol, is a CT scanner acquired at an irradiation dose equivalent to that of a frontal chest x-ray and in profile. The dose reduction is of 40 times the usual dose of a chest CT scanner.

The lung parenchyma has a high natural contrast on thoracic CT images and there are few adjacent attenuating structures allowing a drastic reduction of dose. However, from this dose, the image quality is degraded with an increase of the image noise. The diagnostic performances have to be confirmed with qualitative and quantitative measurements.

Thus, the objective of this study is to compare the sensitivity and the specificity of the current scanner and the ultra-low dose scanner to reduce the exposure to X-rays.

Enrollment

45 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patient monitored for a clinically confirmed Rendu-Osler disease and / or confirmed by molecular biology, seen for an initial assessment or for a reassessment of PAVM (after treatment or without treatment)
  • Patient who agreed to participate in the study and signed the written informed consent
  • Patient affiliated to a social security scheme or similar

Exclusion criteria

  • Women who are pregnant, nursing (lactating) or at risk of pregnancy (verified by a urine test before performing the scanner)
  • Patient who is protected adults under the terms of the law (French Public Health Code).
  • Patient who has not or poorly understand French

Trial design

Primary purpose

Diagnostic

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

45 participants in 1 patient group

Low dose CT scanner and Ultra low dose CT Scan
Other group
Description:
Thoracic low dose CT acquisition and Thoracic ultra-low dose CT acquisition
Treatment:
Radiation: Ultra-low dose CT scanner without injection
Radiation: Low CT scanner without injection dose

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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