View clinical trials related to Anemia.
Filter by:This retrospective observational study will assess the incidence of hemoglobin cycling in chronic kidney disease (stage 3, 4, and 5) patients with renal anemia treated with Mircera (methoxy polyethylene glycol-epoetin beta). Data will be collected from each patient from a 9-month treatment period.
Sickle Cell Anemia is caused by an inherited hemoglobin disorder. Healthy red blood cells are discoid and can deform and move through small blood vessels to carry oxygen to all parts of the body. In sickle cell disease, as red blood cells circulate and oxygen is released in the circulatory system, the deoxygenated abnormal hemoglobin S can begin to polymerize. When this occurs, the red blood cells can become sticky and elongated. These sickled red blood cells are less flexible and will obstruct small blood vessels and block normal red blood cells from traveling through the circulatory system, which limits oxygen delivery to tissues and organs. This is known as a "sickle crisis". Patients suffering from a sickle crisis experience severe pain and are at risk of stroke, heart attack or even death. By lowering the level of oxygen pressure at which sickling occurs and opening the vasculature and rapidly delivering oxygen directly to ischemic tissues, the addition of MP4CO to existing treatment protocols may alleviate pain associated with a sickle cell crisis, abort a crisis and/or potentially reduce the duration of a crisis. This could mean less time in the hospital and an improved quality of life for patients with sickle cell anemia.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether ST10-021, an oral ferric iron preparation, is safe and effective in the treatment of iron deficiency anaemia (IDA) in subjects with non-active Crohn's Disease (CD).
This is a clinical research trial in which a novel preparatory regimen was developed for bone marrow transplant (BMT) which eliminates the primary obstacle to transplant, the lack of a matched sibling donor. It is believed this regimen is sufficiently efficacious and sufficiently gentle to apply to patients with sickle cell anemia and related disorders. It is proposed to characterize the efficacy and toxicity of this regimen in high risk patients with sickle cell anemia using criteria for patient selection that have been accepted in prior BMT trials in patients with sickle cell disease, specifically only the subset of patients whose prior clinical behavior indicates that they are at high risk for serious morbidity and early mortality. In addition, it is proposed to characterize the pathophysiology of a consistent febrile response seen in the haploidentical BMT regimen the investigators have developed at Thomas Jefferson University (TJU). The primary goal of this study is to determine the response rate to a reduced intensity conditioning regimen which consists of fludarabine, cytarabine, low dose total body irradiation and cyclophosphamide in patients with severe sickle cell anemia.
Iron affects immunity. However, the exact effect of iron on the innate immune response is not known. Animal data suggest that iron administration induced oxidative stress which enhances the innate immune response, whereas iron chelation has the opposite effect. The investigators tested the hypothesis that administration of iron sucrose 1.25 mg/kg augments the innate immune response, and iron chelation by deferasirox 30 mg/kg attenuates the innate immune response during human experimental endotoxemia.
The primary purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of preoperative intravenous ferric carboxymaltose in patients with anemia undergoing hip or knee replacement
This is a Prospective Phase II Study to evaluate Cord Blood Transplantation in Inherited or Acquired Severe Aplastic Anemia Refractory or in Relapse after Immunosuppressive Therapy in the absence of an HLA identical donor;
This single arm, open label, multicenter study will evaluate the safety and change in hemoglobin levels of Mircera (C.E.R.A.; methoxy polyethylene glycol-epoetin beta) in patients with chronic renal anemia who are not on dialysis. Patients will receive as a recommended starting dose 1.2 micrograms of Mircera subcutaneously every 4 weeks. The starting dose is dependent on the patient's weight. Dose adjustment may be required due to inadequate or excessive treatment response. The anticipated time on study treatment is 28 weeks.
This study will evaluate the safety LY2787106 in participants with cancer and anemia. It will also evaluate when LY2787106 can improve anemia. This study has two parts: Part A is a dose escalation evaluation. Part B is an evaluation of LY2787106 at a defined dose given with and without iron supplementation.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether ST10-021, an oral ferric iron preparation, is safe and effective in the treatment of iron deficiency anaemia (IDA) in subjects with non-active ulcerative colitis (UC).