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ENDO1000 - A UK-wide Endometriosis Research Project
Sponsor: University of Edinburgh
Summary
Approximately 1.5 million people in the UK, and 200 million globally live with endometriosis, and it is estimated to affect 1 in 10 women of reproductive age. Endometriosis is a chronic pain condition where the lining of the uterus (endometrium) grows in areas outside the uterus. This can cause patients a range of symptoms including severe pain, fatigue, irregular periods, infertility and gastrointestinal symptoms. There is a clear unmet need for early diagnosis and more effective pain management for people who suffer from endometriosis. Endometriosis is a heterogeneous disease in terms of symptoms, trajectory, and indicated therapeutic course, which highlights the need to develop personalised/targeted approaches for effective longitudinal management which are acceptable and accessible to patients and their health care team. The goal of this study is to accelerate discovery and advance data-driven research into endometriosis diagnosis and treatment by collecting large, multimodal, longitudinal data. To achieve this goal, the investigators plan to deliver a longitudinal cohort study. Approximately 3000 UK individuals with endometriosis will be invited over a 24-month period to self-report symptoms that include, pain, menstrual cycle, painkiller use, sleep, exercise, diet and bowel habits via a bespoke ENDO1000 mobile app. A cohort of 1000 women will be asked to complete more in-depth questionnaires asking about endometriosis history, quality of life and treatments. This cohort of women will be asked to take self-collected biological samples (blood, urine, saliva, vaginal swab and faeces). The investigators will look at, for example, inflammatory markers, examine the microbiome and may look at DNA, with permission to see if there are any markers that can help with diagnosis or treatment of endometriosis. At the same time participants will be asked to wear a smartwatch which will monitor, for example, temperature, ambient light, sleep patterns and movement. All this will help the investigators to build a picture over time of the participant's endometriosis symptoms, treatments and what may cause symptoms to flare which in turn could lead to more patient led treatments.
Key Details
Gender
FEMALE
Age Range
16 Years - Any
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
1000
Start Date
2025-12-05
Completion Date
2030-12-31
Last Updated
2026-01-09
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Sample and data collection
We will collect data via a bespoke mobile application which will include; pain, fatigue, sleep patterns, diet, bowel habits, exercise, painkiller use, hormone use from participants with endometriosis. In a subset of the participants, we will collect biological samples which will be self collected at home, that will include, blood, saliva, urine and faeces. At time of sample collected, we will also ask a selection of validated questionnaires to be completed.
Locations (1)
University of Edinburgh
Edinburgh, United Kingdom