View clinical trials related to Hypofibrinogenemia.
Filter by:This study compares the results of the existing fibrinogen concentration monitoring technology to the Electrochemical-based device, a point-of-care and rapid method,using a small amount of extra blood obtained in Type A Aortic Dissection Surgery.
Fibrinogen concentrate is produced by different manufacturers using different purification technologies. The products available in Italy are three: RiaSTAP (CSL Behring), FIBRYGA (Octapharma), and FibCLOT (LFB). RiaSTAP and FIBRYGA are sold in 1-gram vials, and FibCLOT - in 1.5-gram vials. A recent in vitro study assessed how these products affected the clot firmness measured by the ROTEM FIBTEM maximum clot firmness (MCF) parameter. In vitro conditions, FibCLOT was verified to be the most efficient in increasing clot firmness. The present study is aimed to assess, in a series of patients undergoing cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass, the hypothesis that the FibCLOT fibrinogen is superior to the RiaSTAP fibrinogen in increasing the FIBTEM MCF parameter in a clinical model of bleeding (postoperative bleeding after complex cardiac surgery).
The goal of this quality improvement study is to compare pathogen-reduced cryoprecipitate with traditional cryoprecipitate in liver transplant and cardiovascular patients. The investigators hypothesize that by having immediate access to a readily available thawed blood product that replaces fibrinogen (the main substrate of a blood clot), early bleeding can be treated before it escalates into uncontrolled hemorrhage, and therefore additional blood products, like platelets, plasma and red blood cells can be avoided. Participants will be given one of the two FDA-approved blood products.
Determine whether clinical decision support (best practice advisory) improves provider adherence to transfusion guidelines for all four major blood components (red blood cells, plasma, platelets, and cryoprecipitate) using a randomized study design to reduce risk of bias. Alerts will be visible to the experimental ordering provider group, while they will not be visible to the control. Both groups still have access to information about best practices: local clinical transfusion guidelines are available and education on blood transfusion best practices will continue regardless of randomization assignment.
This is a phase 3, multi-center, prospective, open-label, single-arm, clinical trial to be carried out in subjects with congenital fibrinogen deficiency manifested as afibrinogenemia or severe hypofibrinogenemia. This clinical trial is planned to be performed at study sites in multiple countries. It is planned to include a maximum of 32 adult and pediatric subjects with congenital fibrinogen deficiency in order to provide at least 28 evaluable acute bleeding episodes and/or surgical procedures.
The purporse of this study is evaluate whether fibrinogen concentrate reduces postoperative bleeding in pediatric cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary by-pass.
The goal of the study is to determine whether the use of Human Fibrinogen Concentrate (RiaSTAP) will decrease blood loss and the need for component blood therapy in neonates and infants undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass.
This is a multinational, multicenter, prospective, open-label historically controlled Phase IIIb non-inferiority clinical trial on the efficacy and safety of Fibrinogen Concentrate (Human). It is estimated that 150-300 patients in the U.S. suffer from afibrinogenemia. Substitution with cryoprecipitate or alternative treatments have limited safety and efficacy. The primary purpose of the study is to demonstrate the hemostatic efficacy of Fibrinogen Concentrate (Human) by adequately controlling acute bleeding (spontaneous or after trauma) in patients with congenital fibrinogen deficiency (afibrinogenemia and hypofibrinogenemia). Cryoprecipitate hemostatic efficacy data from a retrospective physician survey will be used as a historical control.