View clinical trials related to Anemia, Sickle Cell.
Filter by:Psychological distress (anxiety and depression) is common in and experienced differently by people living with long-term health conditions (LTCs). Being able to measure whether psychological distress is related to living with a LTC would allow researchers and clinicians to provide interventions specifically tailored to the challenges of living with a LTC and therefore provide the most appropriate support for these patients. Such a measure would also be useful in research to identify the presence of illness-related distress in different patient groups. This project will therefore create a new measure of illness-related distress that has applications for both research and clinical practice. This will involve the psychometric validation of the new illness-related distress measure to test how valid and reliable the measure is. The aim of the project is to provide initial validation of the Illness Related Distress Scale in a community sample, recruited through online platforms. The objective of the study is to gather initial validity and reliability data for the scale.
The purpose of this study is to find out whether a web-based intervention using a mobile app is helpful for teens and young adults with sickle cell disease (SCD) in learning how to care for and manage their symptoms.
Voxelotor is a novel hemoglobin polymerization inhibitor which has been demonstrated to reduce hemolysis and improve hemoglobin levels. There have been numerous studies examining the clinical impact of voxelotor in sickle cell disease (SCD) patients, but there are few published reports on the effects of treatment on physical function in patients with SCD. The hypothesis to be tested is that anemic SCD patients will have improvements in performance after 6 months of voxelotor treatment.
The goal of this clinical trial is to test an COVID-19 vaccination information video in adults with sickle cell disease. The main questions it aims to answer are why are some adults with sickle cell disease hesitant to receive COVID-19 vaccination and whether a COVID-19 vaccination information video tailored for people with sickle cell disease will reduce vaccine hesitancy. Participants will complete a brief survey before and after watching a short video with information on vaccine safety, efficacy, and the greater impact of COVID-19 infection on people with sickle cell disease.
The study will test a new medicine, etavopivat, for sickle cell disease and see if it is safe and helpful for participants with sickle cell disease who are at an increased risk of stroke. Participants will be divided into two cohorts depending on their transcranial doppler (TCD) ultrasound results and whether or not they receive hydroxyurea (medication that they may already be taking). In one cohort, participants with conditional transcranial doppler (TCD) or participants with abnormal TCD who are not able to receive hydroxyurea will be included. The study doctor will determine if the TCD result is conditional or abnormal. In another cohort, participants with conditional TCD or participants with abnormal TCD who are receiving a stable dose of hydroxyurea will be included. The study doctor will determine if the TCD result is conditional or abnormal. The participant will start a 52-week (1 year) treatment period. The participant will take 400 milligrams (mg) of etavopivat once a day for the 52 weeks. The dose of 400 mg will be taken as 2 tablets by mouth, each containing 200 mg of etavopivat. Etavopivat may be taken with or without food. Each dose should be taken with a glass of water. As part of the study, the participants will be asked to visit the clinic frequently. At the end of the study, if deemed appropriate by you, your child, and the study doctor, your child may be offered the opportunity to participate in a separate study to continue receiving etavopivat.
Sickle cell disease (SCD) is associated with a lifetime of medical and socio-behavioural complications that require coordination of care from multidisciplinary teams. Access to adequate care for SCD is important as inadequate access can contribute to increased acute care utilization, disjointed care delivery, and earlier mortality for many SCD patients. Hydroxyurea (HU) is the first drug approved for the treatment of SCD and improves many adverse outcomes of SCD and yet its use remains sub-optimal. This mixed-methods study aims to identify the barriers and enablers that SCD patients, caregivers of children (under age 18 years), and health care providers (including physicians, nurses and pharmacists) identify for health care access and HU utilization. The findings may guide development and implementation of strategies to improve access to SCD healthcare and HU uptake which may result in significant benefits to patients, families and the healthcare system including possible reduction in healthcare utilization. Participants will be recruited from the Sickle Cell Unit, Kingston and from all four Jamaican regional health authorities. Questionnaires and interview guides for provider and patient/caregiver assessments are adapted, with permission, from the Sickle Cell Disease Implementation Consortium tools. The study will also examine data on HU usage from the National Health Fund of Jamaica since its addition of SCD to its list of chronic illnesses in 2015. All data collected will be de-identified and maintained in a secure database, with access limited to key personnel. There is minimal risk to participants. Participants will be selected only because of the specific problem under investigation, and not because of easy availability, diminished autonomy, or social bias.
Rationale: Non-myeloablative allogeneic stem cell transplantation (SCT) has become a feasible curative treatment option for sickle cell disease (SCD) patients with an available matched sibling donor. Chemotherapy free conditioning with alemtuzumab and 3 Gy total body irradiation (TBI) is increasingly being used as preferred conditioning scheme for these patients. This regimen typically results in mixed donor chimerism and has only few toxic effects. However, the risk of graft failure (rejection) is still significant, with an occurrence of 13% in the latest series. Levels of T cell chimerism are crucial for the success of this kind of transplantation. A donor T cell level of at least 50% at 1-year post-transplantation seems to be sufficient to allow the discontinuation of immunosuppressive medication without risk of graft rejection. Low levels of alemtuzumab prior to or shortly after SCT are thought to facilitate rejection of the donor graft. Recently, a positive correlation between alemtuzumab levels on day+14 was found with levels of T cell chimerism +2 and +4 months post-transplantation in adult SCD patients receiving matched sibling donor SCT. However, in this study alemtuzumab levels prior to the infusion of hematopoietic stem cells and beyond day +28 post-transplantation were not measured. Furthermore, the alemtuzumab levels were measured in 2 patient groups undergoing two different conditioning regimens. Here, the investigators aim to thoroughly investigate the correlation of alemtuzumab levels and T cell chimerism. This will be the first study involving SCD patients receiving matched sibling donor SCT with alemtuzumab/TBI conditioning that includes alemtuzumab level measurements before the infusion of hematopoietic stem cells and beyond 1-month post-transplantation. Findings from this study will improve the insights into the etiology of graft failure in these patients and might ultimately lead to a more personalized approach in dosing alemtuzumab in order to achieve a more robust and stable engraftment of donor hematopoietic stem cells. Objectives: To investigate whether serum alemtuzumab concentrations are predictive of the robustness of engraftment in SCD patients undergoing a matched sibling donor transplantation with alemtuzumab/TBI conditioning resulting in mixed chimerism. Study design: Prospective observational laboratory study. Serum alemtuzumab concentration will be measured at various time points before and after stem cell infusion (days -3, 0, +7, +14, +28, +60). Study population: Adult SCD patients that are planned for a matched sibling donor transplantation with alemtuzumab/TBI conditioning at the Amsterdam UMC. Main study parameters/endpoints: The correlation between serum alemtuzumab concentration and levels of donor chimerism. Secondary endpoints: correlation between serum alemtuzumab levels and patients with and without successful engraftment. Correlation of serum alemtuzumab levels and the dosing of alemtuzumab in mg/kg, number of patient lymphocyte count and total number of infused enucleated donor-derived cells.
To assess the pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics and safety of Epeleuton capsules in adult SCD patients who are aged ≥18 years.
Vaso-occlusive crisis are highly painful in Sickle-cell patients. Morphine is the treatment of choice for this pain. Various adjuncts have been studied for the treatment of vaso-occlusive crisis. The investigators aimed to study the effect of clonidine associated with morphine in PCIA (patient controlled intravenous analgesia pumps) regimen. The investigators will compare it to the morphine alone in PCIA for the treatment of vaso-occlusive pain. The investigators will measure the morphine consumption of all patient, the impact on the apparition of the morphine secondary effect and on inflammation biomarkers and the biopsychosocial respond. Each patient will be hospitalized and follow by haematologist from the hospital, pain doctors and nurses. It will be a double blind randomised, prospective study. The randomisation will be done by the pharmacy.
This prospective mixed-method interview study aims to qualitatively describe the beliefs, attitudes, and informational needs around gene therapy for rare pediatric diseases among patients and parents of children with a rare disease targeted for treatment using gene therapy techniques. Using learned insights, the team will develop an online platform providing educational content and patient decision aids for patients and their families.