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Hemangioma of Infancy clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT00967226 Terminated - Clinical trials for Hemangioma of Infancy

Propranolol Versus Prednisolone for Treatment of Symptomatic Hemangiomas

Start date: July 2009
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Hemangiomas are relatively common lesions in infants. Most go away spontaneously after one year of life and do not need treatment. Others require treatment because they cause significant symptoms such as pain, or difficulty with breathing, eating or ambulating. Steroids have classically been used to treat hemangiomas and help to shrink them in 1/3 - 2/3 of patients. Unfortunately, steroids have many side effects in babies so physicians have sought other ways to treat them. Recently, the use of propranolol, a heart medication, was serendipitously found to reduce the size of hemangiomas. It appears to have many fewer side effects than steroids but it is not yet known if it works as well as steroids. This study seeks to compare the effect and the side effects of propranolol versus steroids for treating hemangiomas that cause symptoms in infants.