View clinical trials related to Anemia, Sickle Cell.
Filter by:Background: - Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a blood disease. The drug hydroxyurea (HU) is approved to prevent pain crises in people with SCD. Researchers want to see how higher doses of HU affect the blood. This will help them learn about the right dosage of HU to give to people with SCD. Objective: - To improve hydroxyurea dosing in people with SCD. Eligibility: - People age 15 or older with homozygous SCD (HbSS). Design: - Participants will be screened with medical history, physical exam, medication review, and blood and urine tests. - Participants will be in the study for about 15 months. - First 3 months: monthly study visits with blood and urine tests. - After 3 months: participants will take HU as a capsule by mouth. If you are already taking HU, your dose will be increased. - Within a month of starting or increasing HU: participants will keep a daily pain diary for 2 weeks. They will have an echocardiogram (ultrasound) of the heart, a 6-minute walk test. They will complete a quality-of-life questionnaire. - Participants will visit every month until they reach their highest tolerated dose of HU. They may need to come as often as every week sometimes to closely monitor their blood counts. Then they will alternate a phone call one month and a visit the next. At the visits, participants will bring their pill bottle, answer questions about side effects, and have blood tests. - Every 2 months, participants will have a medical history, physical exam, and blood tests. - Every 4 months, participants will have blood and urine tests. They will also complete another 2-week pain diary and quality-of-life questionnaire. - About 12 months after starting or increasing HU, participants will have blood tests, an echocardiogram, and a 6-minute walk test.
The goal of this pilot study is to improve emergency department (ED) pain management for adults with sickle cell disease. Sickle cell disease (SCD) is the most common genetic disorder in the United States, and occurs primarily among African Americans. Management of painful episodes associated with SCD, referred to as vaso-occlusive crises (VOC), is the most common reason for SCD patients to visit the ED. Currently, there is no standard approach to managing VOC pain in the ED that is widely accepted and used, and pain management for vaso-occlusive crisis in persons with SCD is very different between providers and not based on research. Many times, patients who come to the ED with sickle cell pain feel that they do not receive adequate pain control. If EDs could provide efficient, effective, safe, patient-centered analgesic management, it may be possible to improve pain management for adults with SCD experiencing a VOC. Guidelines for treating vaso-occlusive crises caused by sickle cell disease will soon be published by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health. These guidelines recommend patient-specific pain treatment protocols or a standardized pain management protocol for SCD when a patient does not already have a pain treatment protocol designed for them. The purpose of this pilot study is to compare these two ways to treat vaso-occlusive pain in the ED for adults with sickle cell disease, and to determine if a large randomized controlled trial is feasible and required.
The purpose of this Phase II dose-ranging study is to investigate pharmacokinetic (PK) and pharmacodynamic (PD) properties of various doses of ticagrelor followed by 4 weeks of twice-daily treatment in paediatric patients with sickle cell disease
The purpose of this research is to use non-invasive imaging technologies to study how the human brain processes pain. The investigators will use contact heat to induce pain and record data scalp EEG and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). What the investigators learn from this study will help us gain insights in pain management with broad socioeconomic impacts
The purpose of this study is to assess the tolerance and efficacy of mobilizing hematopoietic stem cells after a single injection of plerixafor (0.24mg/kg) in 3 adult patients (or 5, if results of the first 3 patients are not reproducible) affected by sickle cell disease.
The purpose of the study is to develop patient-provider clinical support tools to improve clinical practice, patient self-management, and disease outcomes in sickle cell disease during transition to adult care. The investigators hypothesize that these clinical support tools (patient tool, provider tool, and patient/parent web-based portal) will be feasible, user friendly, and beneficial. The investigators hypothesize that participants will demonstrate better disease self-efficacy at the end of the 6 week intervention and maintain these gains during the follow-up period (up to 1 year post-intervention).
Multi-phase, patient navigator-based program in the Richmond and Tidewater regions of Virginia to demonstrate: 1. the feasibility of using patient navigators to improve the percentage of children and adult (age 15 and older) patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) in SCD specialty care 2. the efficacy of using patient navigators to improve hydroxyurea (HU) (re-)initiation and adherence among adult patients with SCD eligible for HU (Patient navigators may also be known as public health workers.)
The purpose of this research study is to test the safety and efficacy of a drug called Plerixafor. Plerixafor is approved by the US FDA for use in increasing blood stem cell counts before collection in cancer patients. It is not yet approved for patients with sickle cell disease. The investigators want to find out if Plerixafor can be used to increase cell counts in patients with sickle cell disease.
Acute and chronic pulmonary complications with concomitant inflammatory response are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in children with sickle cell disease (SCD). Acute chest syndrome (ACS), defined broadly as an increase in respiratory effort, fever and new radiodensity on chest x-ray, is a major cause of death in children and adults with SCD. There is a high rate of ACS in children between 1 and 4 years of age that is associated with an asthma diagnosis, and children with ACS events before 4 years of age have a 50% rate of being hospitalized for either ACS or pain within 1 year of admission. For children with SCD that develop ACS, the investigators propose that the use of budesonide inhalation suspension (BIS) will attenuate pulmonary inflammation after an ACS episode and will decrease future vaso-occlusive pain and ACS episodes. Through a single-arm prospective feasibility trial and in preparation for a limited-institution randomized trial, the investigators plan to test the following primary hypothesis for a phase III definitive trial: In children with SCD admitted to the hospital for an ACS episode between 1 and 4 years of age, low dose BIS for 6 months will result in a 50% reduction in the recurrent incidence rate of ACS or pain requiring hospitalization. Through this trial, the investigators will determine the acceptability of and adherence to BIS in the study population. The investigators will track respiratory symptoms in cases versus controls over 6 months. Finally, the investigators will explore the impact of BIS on biological correlates (sVCAM-1).
This is a clinical study evaluating the efficacy and safety of rivipansel (GMI-1070) in treating subjects with sickle cell disease (SCD) who are 6 years of age or older experiencing a pain crisis necessitating hospitalization.