Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

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.


Clinical Trial Description

To date, no specific agent has been approved to treat sickle cell crisis, to reduce the severity of a sickling crisis, or to shorten the duration of admission. Current therapy for a sickling crisis is limited to hydration and symptomatic pain relief with opiates when pain is severe enough to cause admission to hospital. Administration of oxygen by inhalation alone has not proven effective. Carbon monoxide (CO) binds to Hb S and, while attached, prevents and reverses polymerization of Hb S chains and consequent distortion of the red blood cell. Carbon monoxide at very low doses also acts as a messenger to cells, reducing inflammation, reducing oxygen requirements, and preventing programmed cell death (apoptosis).

The MP4 molecule can be modified to carry CO and other gases to enhance therapeutic benefit for certain patients. MP4CO is therefore designed to deliver therapeutic, non-toxic levels of CO, to provide an immediate metabolic signal to cells and to reduce inflammation. Once the CO is released from the compound, the MP4 molecule gets oxygenated in the lung and then delivers oxygen to ischemic tissues.

Previously published studies provide a good foundation to postulate that a chemically modified hemoglobin such as MP4CO might have the ideal properties as an oxygen therapeutic agent for treatment or reversal of a sickling crisis. The initial release of CO from MP4CO is predicted to have a therapeutic effect including immediate stabilization of Hb S to prevent further polymerization and reverse existing sickling, vasodilation of capillaries, and anti-inflammatory properties. The subsequent circulation of the MP4 molecule as an oxygen therapeutic agent (after converting to MP4OX following oxygenation in the lungs) will help to 1) preferentially oxygenate ischemic cells, 2) reverse partially sickled red cells, and 3) improve oxygenation of local tissues, thereby potentially ameliorating the painful VOC caused by red blood cell sickling. In addition, MP4CO has enhanced chemical stability, which enables storage at room temperature while minimizing methemoglobin formation. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01356485
Study type Interventional
Source Sangart
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 1
Start date January 2012
Completion date December 2012

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT02227472 - Working Memory and School Readiness in Preschool-Aged Children With Sickle Cell Disease
Recruiting NCT06301893 - Uganda Sickle Surveillance Study (US-3)
Recruiting NCT04398628 - ATHN Transcends: A Natural History Study of Non-Neoplastic Hematologic Disorders
Completed NCT02522104 - Evaluation of the Impact of Renal Function on the Pharmacokinetics of SIKLOS ® (DARH) Phase 4
Recruiting NCT04688411 - An mHealth Strategy to Improve Medication Adherence in Adolescents With Sickle Cell Disease N/A
Terminated NCT03615924 - Effect of Ticagrelor vs. Placebo in the Reduction of Vaso-occlusive Crises in Pediatric Patients With Sickle Cell Disease Phase 3
Not yet recruiting NCT06300723 - Clinical Study of BRL-101 in Severe SCD N/A
Recruiting NCT03937817 - Collection of Human Biospecimens for Basic and Clinical Research Into Globin Variants
Completed NCT04917783 - Health Literacy - Neurocognitive Screening in Pediatric SCD N/A
Completed NCT04134299 - To Assess Safety, Tolerability and Physiological Effects on Structure and Function of AXA4010 in Subjects With Sickle Cell Disease N/A
Completed NCT02580565 - Prevalence of Problematic Use of Equimolar Mixture of Oxygen and Nitrous Oxide and Analgesics in the Sickle-cell Disease
Recruiting NCT04754711 - Interest of Nutritional Care of Children With Sickle Cell Disease on Bone Mineral Density and Body Composition N/A
Completed NCT04388241 - Preliminary Feasibility and Efficacy of Behavioral Intervention to Reduce Pain-Related Disability in Pediatric SCD N/A
Recruiting NCT05431088 - A Phase 2/3 Study in Adult and Pediatric Participants With SCD Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT01158794 - Genes Influencing Iron Overload State
Recruiting NCT03027258 - Point-of-Delivery Prenatal Test Results Through mHealth to Improve Birth Outcome N/A
Withdrawn NCT02960503 - Macrolide Therapy to Improve Forced Expiratory Volume in 1 Second in Adults With Sickle Cell Disease Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT02567695 - A Single-Dose Relative Bioavailability Study Of GBT440 300 mg Capsules in Healthy Subjects Phase 1
Completed NCT02567682 - Drug Interaction Study of GBT440 With Caffeine, S-warfarin, Omeprazole, and Midazolam in Healthy Subjects Phase 1
Completed NCT02565082 - Evaluation of the Hemostatic Potential in Sickle Cell Disease Patients N/A