Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT) results from genetic deregulation of angiogenesis. It is characterized by mucocutaneous telangiectasia responsible for recurrent epistaxis affecting quality of life (anaemia, iron deficiency, social distress). More rarely, HHT is complicated by the appearance of pulmonary, hepatic or cerebral arteriovenous malformations that can lead to serious complications: cerebrovascular accidents, cerebral abscesses, high output heart failure, and massive hemoptysis (1). The intensity of symptoms increases with age but with significant individual variability, even for the same mutation in the same family. Thus, while the mutations responsible for the disease have been identified, the pathophysiology is not fully understood because these mutations do not explain the great diversity of clinical presentations. Other factors not yet identified probably play an important role. Angiogenic T cells (TANG) are a newly individualized T cell population, defined by a CD4+CXCR4+CD31+ phenotype, which plays a key role in differentiating endothelial progenitors (2).
In an earlier study, the investigators showed that patients with HHT had a decrease in CD4+ and CD8+ LT compared to a cohort of healthy subjects (3).
They hypothesize that the lymphopenia mainly involves TANG, whose quantification could make it possible to assess the individual level of angiogenesis during HHT. The evaluation of the TANG levels could thus make it possible to personalize HHT management.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
"Patient" group:
"Control" group :
Exclusion criteria
Person not affiliated to a national health insurance scheme
Pregnant or breastfeeding woman
Protected adult
Hemoglobin levels less than 9 g/dl in the last 15 days
Progressive or recent infectious disease, autoimmune disease or cancer (less than 6 months)
Immunosuppressive treatment in progress or recent (less than 6 months), including systemic steroid therapy. The use of inhaled or topical steroids is not an exclusion criterion.
Treatment in progress or stopped less than 6 months ago or to be introduced within the next 3 months of the following medications:
60 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal