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International Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia Cohort

Recruiting
Conditions
Kartagener Syndrome
Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia
Registration Number
NCT03517865
Lead Sponsor
University of Bern
Brief Summary

The iPCD Cohort is an international cohort that assembles available retrospective datasets and prospectively newly collected clinical and diagnostic data from patients suffering from primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) worldwide, to answer pertinent questions on clinical phenotype, disease severity, prognosis and effect of treatments in patients with this rare multiorgan disease.

Detailed Description

The iPCD Cohort was set up under the framework of the European Union (EU) funded 7th Framework Programme (FP7) project Better Experimental Screening and Treatment for Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia (BESTCILIA). The iPCD Cohort is hosted at the Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine at the University of Bern, Switzerland. Research is performed in close collaboration with all data contributors.

Aims:

This combined international dataset allows investigation of PCD epidemiology in a large international study population in order to: 1) describe the spectrum of clinical phenotypes and disease severity in PCD patients by age, sex and time period of diagnosis; 2) describe short-term and long-term prognosis of PCD, looking at important outcomes such as growth, lung function and respiratory failure, bacterial colonisation, hearing loss, fertility, and mortality; and 3) identify predictors of long-term outcomes such as age at diagnosis, clinical phenotype, ultrastructural defects, genotype and clinical care.

Study design:

The iPCD Cohort is an international cohort, combining available data on PCD from national or local registries and clinical or diagnostic databases. All participating centres delivered retrospectively collected data; new centres joining the iPCD Cohort in the future can also participate with retrospectively and prospectively collected data.

What information is collected:

The iPCD Cohort includes retrospectively collected patient data on the following 11 thematic categories: 1) general information, 2) results of diagnostic tests, 3) baseline characteristics, 4) growth and lung function, 5) clinical manifestations, 6) therapy, 7) microbiology, 8) imaging, 9) surgical interventions, 10) neonatal period, and 11) family history.

Study database:

The iPCD Cohort database is web-based, using the Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap) platform developed at Vanderbilt University. REDCap is widely used in academic research and allows data entry and extraction in various formats.

How to participate:

Centres that wish to participate to the project and contribute data can contact the iPCD Cohort to sign a data delivery agreement. They then will receive a password to access the online software REDCap and they will be able to enter their data directly. They can also upload follow-up data or add additional patients at a later time point.

For further details, contact: pcd@ispm.unibe.ch

Funding:

The setting up of the iPCD Cohort (salaries, consumables and equipment) was funded by the EU FP7 project BESTCILIA (http://bestcilia.eu) and several Swiss funding bodies, including the Lung Leagues of Bern, St Gallen, Vaud, Ticino and Valais and the Milena Carvajal Pro-Kartagener Foundation. Data collection and management at each site was funded according to local arrangements. Most participating researchers and data contributors participate in the European Cooperation in Science and Technology (COST) Action "Better Evidence to Advance Therapeutic options for PCD" (BEAT-PCD) (BM 1407; www.beatpcd.org). Infrastructure is provided for free by the University of Bern, where the data are pooled and stored. The study is currently funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation (320030_173044 and 320030B_192804).

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
5000
Inclusion Criteria

Patients diagnosed with primary ciliary dyskinesia

Exclusion Criteria

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
BMIevery 3 months up to 10 years

Body Mass Index (BMI) z-scores calculated based on available national and international references

Microbiology resultsevery 3 months up to 10 years

Results of microbiology cultures of respiratory samples (sputum, cough swabs, throat swabs, ear swabs, bronchoalveolar lavage) and information on antibiotic resistance (in positive cultures)

Heightevery 3 months up to 10 years

Height z-scores calculated based on available national and international references

Lung function measurementsevery 3 months up to 10 years

Spirometric indices, particularly Forced expiratory volume in 1 sec (FEV1) and Forced vital capacity (FVC) z-scores calculated based on Global Lung Function Initiative (GLI) reference values

Diagnostic test resultsat diagnosis/ study entry

Results of performed PCD diagnostic tests including measurement of nasal nitric oxide, electron microscopy findings, beat frequency and pattern.

Imaging resultsevery 3 months up to 10 years

Radiological findings from sinus and lung imaging tests including x-rays, computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging

Clinical symptoms and signsevery 3 months up to 10 years

Prevalence of reported clinical symptoms at different age groups, including rhinitis, cough, otitis, sinusitis, pneumonia, laterality defects, congenital heart disease and fertility problems.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Bern

🇨🇭

Bern, Switzerland

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