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Hemophilia clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT02803502 Recruiting - Hemophilia Clinical Trials

Does the Thrombin Generation Test Performed During the Pharmacokinetic Profile of the Substitutive Factor VIII Bring Benefits to the Personalized Treatment of Pediatric Patients and Adult Hemophilia A Patients Under Prophylaxis ?

Start date: January 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In the context of hemophilia, it is well know that the level of factor VIII alone does not reflect the clinical phenotype of the patients in an accurate way. At equal factor VIII levels, certain patients will bleed more than others. The thrombin generation test (TGT) is a test that seems to provide a better prediction of the overall hemostatic status of an individual patient. In a previous study, the investigators have established normal reference values of the thrombin generation curve in children aged 6 months to 16 years and adults. The goal was to evaluate the use of this test in different clinical contexts and in severe hemophilia patients in particular. A pilot study showed that the patients having a thrombin generation <150 had a severe phenotype, whether those who received an appropriate prophylaxy had a thrombin generation superior to 150. Moreover, the investigators now have access to a software tool that allows them to individually determine the pharmacokinetic profile of the factor VIII injected to each patient. The factor VIII concentration is measured at injection and 30 minutes, 1 hour, 2 hours and 24 hours afterwards. The introduction of these concentrations in the software allows to obtain the half-life of factor for a given patient, the maximum peak, and the minimum factor level (though level). The injected dosis might be sufficient (disappearance of substantial diminution of the bleedings) or unsufficient (persisting bleeding) for a given patient. This study aims: - to measure the pharmacokinetic profile of factor VIII by two different methods, the time-based method and the chromogenic method - to correlate the results with the TGT results obtained at the same time points and determine which method gives the best correlation - to link the clinical symptomatology (improved symptomatology or not) with the TGT results - to determine which minimal TGT result is linked to a minimal bleeding rate - to adapt the prophylactic dosis of the patient in a personalized way.

NCT ID: NCT02726139 Withdrawn - Hemophilia A Clinical Trials

Improved Factor VIII Inhibitor Evaluation

IFIE
Start date: July 15, 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Commercial one and two-stage factor VIII assays may not detect some clinically significant inhibitor antibodies. The purpose of the proposed study is to standardize and validate a platelet-based factor VIII activity assay with greater sensitivity to clinically important inhibitory antibodies. Investigators will evaluate the platelet-dependent inhibitory activity vs. conventional inhibitory activity in stored patient plasmas and correlate to bleeding histories

NCT ID: NCT02601170 Completed - Hemophilia Clinical Trials

Platelet-Rich Plasma Intra-Articular Injection in Treating Hemophilic Arthropathy

Start date: June 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Severe hemophilia is characterized by frequent and lifelong bleeding, with more than 60% of bleeds occurring into joints . Repeated joint bleeding leads to chronic synovitis, cartilage damage and bony destruction. Currently available treatment of hemophilic arthropathy, such as analgesics, NSAIDs, and hyaluronic acid (HA), are predominantly directed toward the symptomatic relief of pain and inflammation, but they do little to reduce joint cartilage degeneration. Platelet-Rich Plasma (PRP) is a simple and minimally invasive method that provides a natural concentrate of autologous growth factors from the blood. This method is now being increasingly applied in clinical practice to treat musculoskeletal disorders, such as tendon repairment and osteoarthritis. To the best of our knowledge, no study applies PRP for arthropathy of knee joint in hemophilia patients. The aim of the study is to investigate the efficacy, safety and duration of benefit of single PRP injection versus five weekly intra-articular injections of HA in patients with hemophilic arthropathy of knee.

NCT ID: NCT02586012 Terminated - Hemophilia Clinical Trials

Weight-based Dosing in Hemophilia A

Start date: September 2015
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Hemophilia A is an inherited (genetic) disease where a protein, factor VIII (FVIII), which promotes blood clotting is missing or does not work properly. Individuals with hemophilia A are at risk for bleeding. Bleeding is prevented and/or treated with recombinant factor VIII (rFVIII), which is an FDA-approved treatment for Hemophilia A. Obesity is common among patients with hemophilia. Some studies have shown that obese hemophilia patients may be able to prevent bleeding with a lower dose of clotting factor than the dose they are currently receiving. The lower dose is calculated based on what a patient should weigh rather than what he does weigh. This is a clinical research study to test whether calculating rFVIII dosing based on lean body mass and ideal body weight (what a person should weigh based on his height) in overweight and obese patients with hemophilia is more accurate than calculating rFVIII dosing based on what a person actually weighs.

NCT ID: NCT02585635 Completed - Hemophilia Clinical Trials

Risk Models to Optimise Prophylaxis Schedules in Children With Haemophilia

MOrPH
Start date: March 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The MOrPH study is designed to identify optimal prophylaxis schedules for children with haemophilia. This involves development of combined pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic models. Interpretation of model outputs will be informed by two surveys. The first will survey families of children with haemophilia to ascertain families' values and preferences concerning prophylaxis schedules. The second will survey haemophilia physicians to ascertain the criteria physicians use to prescribe prophylaxis schedules.

NCT ID: NCT02569359 Terminated - Hemophilia Clinical Trials

Efficacy and Safety of Shea Nut Oil in Hemophilic Arthropathy

Start date: April 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Recurrent hemarthrosis results in synovitis and destructive arthropathy in hemophilic patients. Prophylactic replacement, physical therapy, cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibitors, corticosteroids, and radionucleotide synovectomy are some of the typical modalities used in the managements hemophilic synovitis and arthropathy. In clinical practice, the choice of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) also needs to take into consideration the risk for cardiovascular events and should be used at the lowest effective dose and for the shortest duration.This study will investigate the safety and efficacy of Shea nut oil for the treatment of hemophilic arthropathy.

NCT ID: NCT02548143 Completed - Hemophilia Clinical Trials

LR769 in Congenital Hemophilia Patients With Inhibitors Undergoing Elective Surgery or Invasive Procedures

PerSept3
Start date: August 25, 2016
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study, PerSept 3, is to evaluate LR769 for the prevention of excessive bleeding and achievement of hemostasis in congenital hemophilia A or B patients who have inhibitors to Factor VIII or Factor IX , are aged 6 months to 75 years, inclusive; and who are undergoing elective surgical or other invasive procedures. Administration of LR769 will be performed just prior to surgery/procedure and will be repeated during and after the surgery/procedure to achieve and maintain adequate hemostasis as determined by the investigator's judgment.

NCT ID: NCT02546622 Completed - Hemophilia Clinical Trials

ATHN 2: Factor Switching Study

Start date: September 2015
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This is a longitudinal, observational study of patients with Hemophilia A or B who are planning to switch to a newly approved coagulation factor replacement product, or who have recently switched factor products. The study will follow each patient for up to 1 year. Patients will be recruited at Hemophilia Treatment Centers (HTC) which are ATHN-affiliates. The primary outcome being studied is the development of inhibitor (i.e., antibodies to factor) at 1 year or 50 exposure days, whichever comes first. The study will be conducted at approximately 30 HTCs, with a planned enrollment of 600 patients.The entire study duration is projected to be approximately 6 years. In addition, optional substudies will be included for some products, as "Product-Specific Modules". These will be questionnaires to collect data for subjects receiving selected Factor products. For example, subjects receiving Kovaltry will be approached to participate in the 'Kovaltry Product-Specific Module'; subjects receiving Adynovate will be approached to participate in the 'Adynovate Product-Specific Module'. Questions will be related to product use, perceptions of product use, and other post-marketing consumer data.

NCT ID: NCT02540187 Completed - Hemophilia Clinical Trials

Tissue Factor Pathway Inhibitor (TFPI) and Haemorrhagic Manifestations in Haemophilia A and B Patients

Start date: February 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Haemophilia is a rare and serious congenital defect of blood coagulation due to a genetic mutation on a sexual chromosome. It affects quasi-essentially the men and it is responsible for bleeding. There are two types of haemophilia: Haemophilia A, (85 % of cases), due to a factor VIII (FVIII) deficiency and Haemophilia B (15 % of cases) due to factor IX (FIX) deficiency. According to the intensity of the defect, there are three forms of haemophilia: severe (FVIII or FIX lower than 1 %), moderate (factor level between 1 and 5 %), minor (factor level between 5 and 40 %). For a same level of factor VIII or IX, hemorrhagic manifestations are variable from one patient to the other. Moreover, several studies showed that haemophilic B patients bleed less and consume fewer anti-hemophilic concentrate that haemophilic A patients. The main inhibitors of the coagulation are antithrombin, Protein C-Protein S-Thrombomodulin system, and tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI). TFPI is the specific and exclusive inhibitor of tissue factor pathway that is the main way by which plasmatic coagulation starts. TFPI is a potent direct inhibitor of factor Xa and Xa-dependent inhibitor of the VIIa-Tissue Factor (TF) complex. In hemophilic patient, the production of Xa by the amplification pathway being strongly altered because of factor VIII or IX deficiency, thrombin generation (via Xa) comes exclusively from TFPI regulated tissue factor pathway. We can thus say that if haemophilic patients bleed, it is also because of the presence of TFPI that inhibits at the same time Xa and the complex TF-VIIa as soon as factor Xa is generated.

NCT ID: NCT02453542 Recruiting - Hemophilia Clinical Trials

Global Haemostatic Methods Following Administration of Bypassing Agents to Patients With Haemophilia With Inhibitors

Start date: March 2015
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Background The treatment of haemophilia A and B has been revolutionized by the use of factor concentrate, both as prophylaxis and to treat bleeding episodes (on-demand treatment). However, despite its advantages, repeated treatment with factor concentrate can lead to development of inhibitors (antibodies) towards the coagulation factor in the concentrate. Another patient group in which the bleeding symptoms are difficult to treat because of inhibitors towards coagulation factors, most commonly FVIII, is patients with acquired haemophilia. Patients with high antibody titers exhibit a deficient or no response to factor concentrates and usually need treatment with bypassing agents, namely factor eight inhibitor bypassing agent (FEIBA®, Baxter) och recombinant activated factor VII (rFVIIa, Novo-Seven®, Novo Nordisk). The effect of the treatment cannot be accurately monitored by traditional coagulation tests. The aim of the study is to evaluate the utility of the global haemostatic methods in patients with haemophilia with inhibitors. The objective is to improve the monitoring of the treatment effect and thus increase the safety of the patient and the effectiveness of the treatment. Patients and methods Patients The primary cohort will consist of fifteen patients with inherited haemophilia with inhibitors as well as five adult patients with acquired haemophilia who are followed up at the Coagulation Department of the Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden. Blood samples will be collected from those patients at specific time points (see Design of the study) during the course of two years (for each patient). The treatment (type, dose, duration) will be determined by the treating physician. Methods (selection) - Thrombin generation (Calibrated Automated Thrombogram, CAT® and a commercial kit from Siemens®). - Overall haemostatic potential (OHP) Design of the study Timeframe for blood sampling: i) baseline (inclusion in the study), and ii) prior and after administration of bypassing agents to either treat bleeding symptoms or before an invasive procedure or as prophylaxis. Data analysis The variations in coagulation markers measured as described above (Methods) will be associated to the clinical symptoms (bleeding), the level of coagulation factors (if measurable) and the titers of the inhibitors.