Osteoporosis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Thalassemia Clinical Research Network (TCRN)
The purpose of the TCRN is to accelerate research in the management of thalassemia, standardize existing treatments, and evaluate new ones in a network of clinical centers in North America. The emphasis will be on clinical trials that help identify optimal therapy. Therapeutic trials may involve investigational drugs, drugs already approved but not currently used, and drugs currently used.
BACKGROUND:
Cooley's anemia (beta-thalassemia major, hereafter referred to as thalassemia) is a severe,
inherited blood disorder characterized by a quantitative defect in the synthesis of the beta
chain of hemoglobin caused by any 1 of more than 100 known mutations in and around the beta
globin gene cluster. The disease is characterized by severe anemia beginning in the first 6
to 12 months of life. If untreated, the life expectancy is less than 5 years of age. Chronic
red blood cell transfusions to maintain hemoglobin levels between 9 and 11 gm/dl
("hypertransfusion") alleviate the anemia and partially suppress erythropoiesis. The regular
administration of red blood cells also improves growth, delays or prevents enlargement of
the liver and spleen, and prevents the development of bone abnormalities that cause
fractures as well as disfiguring changes known as Cooley's facies. Transfusions carry risks
of alloimmunization, iron overload, and blood-transmitted infections. In the absence of
effective iron chelation therapy, iron overload leads to numerous complications, including
delayed or absent sexual development, diabetes mellitus, cirrhosis, cardiac arrhythmias, and
congestive heart failure. Nonchelated or poorly chelated patients usually die of heart
disease by 20 to 30 years of age.
The addition of chelation therapy with deferoxamine (DFO) to the treatment of Cooley's
anemia has dramatically improved the outcome for affected patients. With regular chelation
therapy, the accumulation of excessive iron can be prevented. Studies have demonstrated that
well-chelated patients have normal or only modest increases in liver iron, improved growth,
sexual development, and most importantly, a markedly reduced chance of developing
iron-induced heart disease.
In the past few years, several new approaches to the treatment of thalassemia have included
marrow or stem cell transplantation; the use of young red blood cells ("neocytes") for
transfusion; maintenance of a higher pretransfusion hemoglobin level; new iron chelators;
and the use of drugs such as hydroxyurea, erythropoietin, and butyrate compounds.
It is recognized that even with a clinical network, the number of patients with Cooley's
anemia who can be enrolled in a research protocol is likely to be small. Therefore, although
a randomized clinical trial may be the preferred way of assessing the clinical benefits of a
new therapy, it may not be feasible in some instances, even using biomarkers or other
surrogate outcome measures. Depending upon the specific questions being addressed, other
study designs might be appropriate. These might include pre- and post-treatment assessment
or historical control studies. In all cases, the proposed design, including sample size,
would be evaluated by the Protocol Review Committee.
There is an urgent need to evaluate new and existing therapeutic approaches for persons with
thalassemia and to disseminate the findings to health care professionals, patients, and the
public. There are several reasons why a thalassemia clinical research network will
accelerate clinical research and meet this need. The highly variable and sometimes
complicated clinical manifestations of thalassemia often make it difficult to accumulate a
large number of comparable patients in one center. Furthermore, uniformity in treatment
protocols may reduce the number of patients needed at each clinical center. Also, the TCRN
mechanism will help pool the necessary clinical expertise and administrative resources to
facilitate the conduct of multiple and novel therapeutic trials in a timely, efficient
manner. This, in turn, would promote rapid dissemination of research findings to health care
professionals.
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
The network was originally funded in 2000 and has been extended through June 2010 to perform
interventional clinical trials in key areas of thalassemia care. Two major trials are
proposed: First, a randomized, controlled trial to examine the effect of DFO alone versus
DFO plus deferiprone on cardiac disease due to transfusional iron overload; second, a
randomized trial of arginine versus sildenafil for pulmonary hypertension, an important
problem in thalassemia intermedia and other hemolytic states. Goals are to provide an
infrastructure for development, launch, and prompt completion of small, innovative trials in
thalassemia and to improve assessment of phenotype and clinical outcomes in thalassemia to
facilitate current and future clinical trials. This will be accomplished by two studies: The
Thalassemia Longitudinal Cohort (TLC) study and the Iron Burden Study, which is a detailed
study of iron-related organ damage comparing measures of iron burden in the heart, liver,
and pancreas to outcomes of iron-related organ dysfunction. Combined with the clinical
trials and the ability to perform detailed genotype/phenotype correlations, these improved
phenotype and outcome measures are powerful tools to enhance knowledge about thalassemia
clinical care. Please refer to individual Clinicaltrials.gov study listings for TCRN study
specifics and current information about trials, eligibility, and site participation. Thank
you.
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Time Perspective: Prospective
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