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Recruiting NCT05294107

Intestinal Organoids

Conditions: Digestive System Diseases, Inflammatory Bowel Disease, Ulcerative Colitis Type, Crohn Disease

Sex: All
Ages: 18 Years – 75 Years
Healthy volunteers: No
Phase: NA
Enrollment: 90
Sponsor: Rennes University Hospital

Location: CHU de RENNES-Service des Maladies de l'Appareil Digestif Rennes

Summary

Over the last decade, the use of mini-organ or organoids has been increasingly developed in fundamental research. Indeed, digestive organoids represent an essential advance compared to classical culture systems (epithelial cell lines, immortalized cells) since they preserve in culture the functional complexity present in vivo (architecture, different cell types). They also have the advantage of being able to be propagated indefinitely (unlike explants), minimizing the use of animal models and reducing the amount of tissue required. Finally, their growth and development depends on the origin of the sample (the organoid will develop differently if the cell source comes from a patient suffering from an inflammatory bowel disease, for example), thus generating models of human pathologies to better determine their physiopathology. The use of organoids in biomedical research has proven to be an indispensable tool for the understanding of cellular and molecular mechanisms involved in epithelial renewal and the screening of molecules and ingredients for applications in the health and agri-food sectors.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria: * Subjects aged 18 to 75 years * Subject undergoing endoscopy as part of the standard of care with the need to take digestive biopsy samples * Subject having signed a free and informed consent in writing Exclusion Criteria: * Subjects under legal protection (safeguard of justice, curatorship or guardianship) or deprived of liberty. * Anticoagulant treatment and anti-platelet treatment (except for aspirin 75 mg)

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View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05294107). StuddyBuddy aggregates publicly available trial information.