View clinical trials related to Hemophilia A.
Filter by:The purpose of the study is to improve the understanding of key patient reported outcomes such as quality of life as well as clinical outcomes in hemophilia A, in a global real world setting.
This study evaluates how safe gene therapy treatment with AAV5-hFIX is in adult patients with severe or moderately severe hemophilia B and severe bleeding type.
The primary objective of the study is to evaluate the effectiveness of prophylactic treatment with recombinant Factor VIII Fc fusion protein (rFVIIIFc) and recombinant Factor IX Fc fusion protein (rFIXFc) therapy as assessed by patient treatment burden and health economic outcomes while maintaining disease control in males with hemophilia A or B.
Background Hemophilia is a sex-linked genetic disorders. When the joint or the muscles is bleeding, it may cause haemarthrosis, synovium, cartilage tissue thickening, joint activity (Range of Motion) decreasing and other musculoskeletal and related disorder. Patients will produce pain in the action, compensatory action occurs, thus causing recurrent of bleeding, and joint damage. There is high rate of ankle joint bleeding in hemophilia. The ankle articular joint disease will affect lower limbs activities, and the functional activities will impaired. Review studies, in addition to physical therapy, Kinesio taping is a common intervention to improve other subjects' static balance, proprioception, functional ankle stability, correct poor posture. The main intervention of this study is physical therapy and Kinesio taping, expect to improve the stability and muscular strength of lower extremities, and balance, correcting gait and lower extremity functional activities of subjects with hemophilia.
Comparison of prophylaxis and on-demand treatment in children with moderate to severe hemophilia A. This study determines to compare the efficacy of prophylaxis and on-demand treatment in moderate to severe hemophilia A children in King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital, Bangkok, Thailand
The purpose of this post-approval study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of Benefix in subjects with hemophilia B in usual care settings in China.
Therapy of patients with severe hemophilia (including hemophilia with inhibitors) and other severe bleeding disorders could be monitored and guided based upon special clotting assays , eg thrombin generation and thromboelastography. In this study blood sampled from patients with bleeding disorders will be evaluated applying ex- vivo spiking assays with various coagulation concentrates to potentially address the feasibility of replacement /bypass agents/ combined therapy for future bleeding episodes. Patients that will be further treated by any regimen potentially suggested (as standard care- not within trial) will be thereafter followed , including repeated lab studies to assess the impact of therapy upon hemostasis.
This study is a prospective, single center, observational, 2-cohort study of adult patients with severe Hemophilia A. There is no randomization procedure and all patients will be treated as per usual clinical practice. Patients will be followed up for 18 months after enrolment.
This trial is designed to assess if there is evidence of subclinical joint bleeding on MRI/X-Ray in adults with severe Haemophilia A while on standard and/or pharmacokinetically tailored prophylaxis regimens. Participants with severe Haemophilia A will have longitudinal MRI and XRay imaging of their elbows, ankles and knees at 0, 6 and 18 months while on standard ( 0-6 months) and then pharmacokinetically tailored (7-18 months) recombinant Factor VIII prophylaxis.
One of the major shortcomings in studying bone disease in hemophilia is the lack of fracture outcome data demonstrating the clinical significance of decreased BMD and altered bone biomarkers in the hemophilia population. This study demonstrates that PwH have an increased risk of fracture compared to the general population and that the issue of bone health will increase in importance as the PwH population ages.