View clinical trials related to Hemophilia A.
Filter by:Emicizumab is a monoclonal bispecific antibody with a terminal half-life of 28 days which is now licensed in the treatment of severe haemophilia A with or without inhibitors. Some heterogeneity in residual emicizumab concentrations have been reported according to age, body mass index or drug therapeutic regimen. Some cases of neutralizing antidrug antibodies have been also reported. Whether monitoring emicizumab plasma concentration could predict the residual bleeding risk under emicizumab is unknown. As conventional coagulation assays are not adapted for emicizumab monitoring, this study aims to assess the value of monitoring residual emicizumab plasma concentration by UPLC-MS/MS in bleeding risk prediction.
In this observational study researchers want to learn more about the safety of drug Jivi over a long period of time. Jivi (generic name: Damoctocog alfa pegol) is an approved blood clotting Factor VIII (FVIII) medication for the treatment of hemophilia A (bleeding disorder resulting from a lack of FVIII). It is manufactured via recombinant technology and has an extended half-live, i.e. it will stay longer in the body than other FVIII products. Therefore Jivi acts longer in the body which reduces the frequency of drug injections. This study will enroll previously treated patients with hemophilia A who are receiving Jivi regularly at their treating doctors to prevent bleeding. Observation for each patient will last for at least 4 years, and medical data will be collected during patients' routine visits at their treating doctors.
The primary objectives of the study are to evaluate the efficacy of Recombinant Human Coagulation Factor VIII-Fc Fusion Protein for Injection (FRSW107) in the Prevention and Treatment of Bleeding in patients with hemophilia A. The secondary objectives are to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Recombinant Human Coagulation Factor VIII-Fc Fusion Protein for Injection (FRSW107) in the prevention and treatment of bleeding episodes, to investigate the quality of life in patients who used the FRSW107.
This is a Phase IIIb, multicenter, open-label, single-arm study of prophylactic emicizumab in previously untreated and minimally treated patients at study enrollment from birth to ≤12 months of age with severe hemophilia A (intrinsic factor VIII [FVIII] level <1%) without FVIII inhibitors. The study is designed to evaluate the efficacy, safety, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of emicizumab administered at 3 milligrams per kilogram of body weight (mg/kg) once every 2 weeks (Q2W) for 52 weeks. After 1 year of treatment, participants will continue to receive emicizumab (1.5 mg/kg once every week [QW], 3 mg/kg Q2W or 6 mg/kg once every 4 weeks [Q4W]) over a 7-year long-term follow-up period under this study frame.
This is a first-in-human, non-randomized, open label, single treatment, Phase 1 study in approximately 7 patients with severe hemophilia A. The study will evaluate gene therapy by transplantation of autologous CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells transduced ex vivo with the CD68-ET3 lentiviral vector.
Hemophilia is a rare hematological disorder characterized by a partial or complete deficiency of clotting factor VIII or IX.Bleeding disorders mainly affect the musculoskeletal system. Intra-articular bleeding is an important complication related to hemophilia and usually occurs in large synovial joints such as knees and ankles. Initially, these bleeds occur non-specific spontaneously and usually affect one joint, and repeated bleeding makes that joint a target joint. Postural balance can be defined as the ability to maintain a stable posture for maximum duration with minimal body sway, or to hold the body centre of gravity (CoG) over its base support in varying conditions (1). Somatosensorial information from mechanoreceptors, visual and vestibular receptors is required to maintain postural balance. Postural balance is tried to be controlled by the postural adjustments provided by the contraction of the lower limb muscles and trunk muscles before perturbation. Spontaneous hemarthrosis is a distinctive feature of severe haemophilia, and that recurrent bleedings may likely to cause postural balance disorders by disrupting proprioceptive inputs from mechanoreceptors in the joint. Data on how bleeding affects postural balance in children with hemophilia is unclear.In the relationship between the clinical evaluation of hemophilia and postural balance, there is little research in the literature.
In parallel with the growth of American Thrombosis and Hemostasis Network's (ATHN) clinical studies, the number of new therapies for all congenital and acquired hematologic conditions, not just those for bleeding and clotting disorders, is increasing significantly. Some of the recently FDA-approved therapies for congenital and acquired hematologic conditions have yet to demonstrate long-term safety and effectiveness beyond the pivotal trials that led to their approval. In addition, results from well-controlled, pivotal studies often cannot be replicated once a therapy has been approved for general use.(1,2,3,4) In 2019 alone, the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has issued approvals for twenty-four new therapies for congenital and acquired hematologic conditions.(5) In addition, almost 10,000 new studies for hematologic diseases are currently registered on www.clinicaltrials.gov.(6) With this increase in potential new therapies on the horizon, it is imperative that clinicians and clinical researchers in the field of non-neoplastic hematology have a uniform, secure, unbiased, and enduring method to collect long-term safety and efficacy data. ATHN Transcends is a cohort study to determine the safety, effectiveness, and practice of therapies used in the treatment of participants with congenital or acquired non-neoplastic blood disorders and connective tissue disorders with bleeding tendency. The study consists of 7 cohorts with additional study "arms" and "modules" branching off from the cohorts. The overarching objective of this longitudinal, observational study is to characterize the safety, effectiveness and practice of treatments for all people with congenital and acquired hematologic disorders in the US. As emphasized in a recently published review, accurate, uniform and quality national data collection is critical in clinical research, particularly for longitudinal cohort studies covering a lifetime of biologic risk.(7)
Moroctocog-alfa (AF-CC) is indicated for the control and prevention of hemorrhagic episodes and for routine and surgical prophylaxis in patients with hemophilia A (congenital factor VIII deficiency or classic hemophilia). The current single country, multi-centric, open label, non-randomized pragmatic clinical trial is a post-approval study to fulfill the Central Drugs Standard Control Organization (CDSCO) request for supplementary information relating to the use of moroctocog-alfa (AF-CC) in Indian subjects with hemophilia A. The primary objective of study is to study the safety of moroctocog alfa (AF-CC) when administered for prophylaxis with respect to incidence of FVIII inhibitor development. The secondary objectives are to evaluate the incidence of adverse events (AEs) and serious adverse events (SAEs) in subjects receiving moroctocog alfa (AF-CC) prophylaxis, to evaluate the efficacy of moroctocog alfa (AF-CC) during a prophylaxis regimen, to evaluate the total annualized consumption of moroctocog alfa (AF-CC) by subjects following a prophylaxis regimen, to evaluate the efficacy of moroctocog alfa (AF-CC) for the treatment of breakthrough bleeding episodes (on-demand treatment) while following a prophylaxis regimen. Fifty male subjects aged >/= 12 years to ≤65 years with moderate or severe hemophilia A will be enrolled in the study. The subjects will be selected based on protocol specified eligibility criteria. The overall treatment duration for each subject will be up to 8 weeks, with up to a 4-week screening period and a subsequent post-treatment 28-day safety observation period. Subjects are requested to continue in the study until 24 exposure days (EDs) or a period of up to 8 weeks on moroctocog alfa (AF-CC) treatment had occurred (whichever occurs first). Efficacy and safety assessments will be performed as specified in the protocol.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and dose escalation of SHP648 an adeno-associated viral vector for gene transfer in hemophilia B participants.
Haemophilia is a rare bleeding disorder, characterized by factor VIII (HA) or factor IX (HB) deficiency. The absence or the reduction of fVIII or fIX result in impaired thrombin generation and clot formation, causing excessive bleeding (mainly haemarthrosis). Osteoporosis is a systemic bone disease characterized by a low bone mineral density (BMD). A decrease of mean BMD has been described in haemophilic patients compared to healthy controls in several studies. So, osteoporosis could be an underestimated haemophilia-related comorbidity. None of the following risk factors (reduced physical activity, joint damage, vitamin D deficiency and /or hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection) has been retained as a cause of osteoporosis in haemophilic patients. Another hypothesis is that bone loss could be directly linked to fVIII or fIX and/or thrombin deficiency. The aim of this study is to evaluate the prevalence of the bone loss in HA and B patients, according to the type, the severity and the presence (or not) of a prophylactic treatment (depending on the age at which it was began) and to compare it to a control population. The investigators will also evaluate the relation between BMD and FVIII, fIX and thrombin potential.