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Screening for Prognostic Biomarkers of Severe Bell's Palsy in Adults
Sponsor: University Hospital, Montpellier
Summary
Bell's palsy (idiopathic peripheral facial palsy) is the most common cause of facial palsy, which is related to the inflammation of the facial nerve, possibly induced by herpesvirus reactivation. Its first-line treatment comprises corticosteroids, antiviral therapy and physiotherapy. In most severe cases (grade IV to VI on House-Brackmann scale), facial motricity may remain altered or develop synkinesis or post-paralytic spasm, thus tremendously affecting quality of life. To avoid potential complications, surgical facial nerve decompression could be proposed. To date, however, there are no means to predict if Bell's palsy will evolve with any complications or if the patient will recover entirely. Thus, the invasive facial nerve decompression is equally proposed to subjects who will develop the consequences as well as to subjects able to restore without surgical treatment. This study proposes to search for prognostic blood biomarkers related to the Bell's palsy recovery pattern. Adult patients with severe Bell's palsy will be proposed to have a blood sampling for proteomic analysis in the early stage of the disease. Then 125 biomarkers on a Peptiquant™ kit will be analysed by mass spectrometry, and prognostic biomarkers will be selected regarding to the clinical recovery of Bell's palsy
Official title: Screening for Prognostic Biomarkers of Severe Bell's Palsy in Adults Using Proteomic Analysis by Quantitative Mass Spectroscopy
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
130
Start Date
2023-01-03
Completion Date
2026-07
Last Updated
2024-08-20
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Blood sampling
4 ml of blood will be collected into EDTA tube for proteomic analysis at visit 0 and visit 1
Locations (1)
CHU Montpellier
Montpellier, France