ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Physical Fitness of Children, Adolescents and Young Adults With Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP-CPET)

U

University Hospital of Bordeaux

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura

Treatments

Other: IPT-CPET

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07310342
CHUBX 2024/20
2025-A00522-47 (Other Identifier)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Patients with chronic immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) live with an anxiety-inducing risk of haemorrhage that is unpredictable over several months or years.

They also rate fatigue as one of the most frequent (48%) and most severe (73%) disabling symptoms, which contributes to a reduced quality of life [Cooper, 2021].

In this autoimmune disease targeting platelets, fatigue could be mediated by platelet and immunological abnormalities, and/or promoted by psychobehavioural determinants that are poorly understood in this chronic disease.

Since 1980, the World Health Organisation has stated that functional capacity assessments best reflect the impact of chronic diseases on quality of life, with fatigue playing an important role. The association between fatigue and aerobic physical capacity, determined by maximum oxygen consumption (VO2max), has been demonstrated in several pathologies. It is often associated with the vicious circle of deconditioning, where the impact of the disease on cardiac, muscular and respiratory functions is intertwined with inactive or sedentary behaviours.

At the end of this vicious circle, adults have been shown to have an increased cardiovascular risk and a high prevalence of anxiety and depression syndromes.

VO2max measured by cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) is increasingly used in monitoring, as recommended by the French Society of Cardiology [Marcadet, 2018;Marcadet, 2019]. Our team (Amedro et al.) has set up a research programme on aerobic physical capacity and deconditioning to exercise in chronic childhood diseases and has just published the reference values for exercise tests in healthy paediatric populations, enabling the interpretation of VO2max results in sick children [Gavotto,2023].

However, it has been demonstrated that the VO₂ plateau is not predominantly reached in healthy adults and is rarely reached (<25%) in healthy children. [Armstrong, 1996 ; Åstrand, 1952 ; Rowland, 1992].

Thus, the highest oxygen consumption measurement (VO2pic) is often used instead of VO2max to define aerobic capacity. We will therefore use the concepts of VO2max and VO2pic in this study.

The first population studied by our team was children with congenital heart disease, who showed a significant reduction in their VO2max [Amedro, 2018]. Based on these results, a functional rehabilitation programme (QUALIREHAB) was set up and evaluated in a randomised controlled clinical trial [Amedro, 2019] . The data demonstrate its positive impact not only on VO2max, but also on quality of life. Aerobic physical capacity was assessed in chronic paediatric diseases without direct cardiac involvement.

We have also shown that VO2max declines more rapidly over time in children, adolescents and young adults who have survived childhood cancer [Gavotto, 2023] or in children with asthma [Moreau, 2023].

To date, no prospective controlled studies have reported on the level of aerobic physical capacity in children, adolescents and young adults with cITP.

We therefore hypothesise that fatigue in patients monitored for cITP could be correlated with a decrease in their aerobic physical capacity, causing these patients to enter a 'vicious cycle of deconditioning'. If this hypothesis is verified, an exercise rehabilitation programme could have a positive impact on quality of life, physical health and mental health

Enrollment

53 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

8 to 25 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Children, adolescents and young adults aged 8 to 25 followed for ITPc
  • Patient referred as part of routine care by a CEREVANCE network expert physician to an exercise physiology laboratory for fitness assessment

Exclusion criteria

  • Presence of at least one contraindication to performing an exercise test

    • Acute anemia < 9g or poorly tolerated chronic anemia, fever, uncontrolled asthma, respiratory failure, acute myocarditis or pericarditis, uncontrolled arrhythmias causing symptoms or hemodynamic disturbance, uncontrolled heart failure, acute pulmonary embolism or pulmonary infarction,
    • Patients with mental impairment leading to an inability to cooperate, as assessed by the physician during the history,
    • Clinical examination abnormalities (heart murmur, rhythm disorders).
  • Opposition to participation expressed by the parent(s) or legal guardian(s) for minors (<18 years) or by the patient.

  • Absence of social security

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

53 participants in 1 patient group

ITP group
Experimental group
Description:
Children, adolescents and young adults aged 8 to 25 followed for ITPc (N=53)
Treatment:
Other: IPT-CPET

Trial contacts and locations

5

Loading...

Central trial contact

Marion AUDIE, MD; Nathalie ALADJIDI, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems