View clinical trials related to Primary Immunodeficiency.
Filter by:The purpose of the study is to determine whether biweekly (every 2 weeks) administration of Immune Globulin Subcutaneous (Human), 20% Caprylate/Chromatography Purified (IGSC 20%) produces a steady-state area under the concentration versus time curve (AUC) of total Immunoglobulin G (IgG) that is non-inferior to that produced by weekly administration of IGSC 20% in treatment-experienced participants with primary immunodeficiency (PI).
The purpose of this study is to demonstrate bioequivalence of IVIG-PEG with Gamunex-C (IVIG-C) at steady-state as determined by comparing total Immunoglobulin G (IgG) area under the concentration-time curve during the defined dosing interval ([AUC0-τ] either every 3 weeks [AUC0-21 days] or every 4 weeks [AUC0-28 days]) and maximum concentration in a dosing interval (Cmax) in participants diagnosed with primary humoral immunodeficiency (PI) currently receiving chronic IVIG replacement treatment.
Summary for SCGAM-03: Clinical phase III study to monitor the safety, tolerability and efficacy of subcutaneous human immunoglobulin (Octanorm) in patients with primary immunodeficiency diseases who have completed the SCGAM-01 trial. Summary for SCGAM-03 in Canada: Clinical phase III study to monitor the safety, tolerability and efficacy of subcutaneous human immunoglobulin (octanorm) in patients with primary immunodeficiency diseases, including (but not limited to) those who have completed the SCGAM-01 trial
1. study the pharmacokinetics of mini-pooled intravenous immunoglobulin( MP-IVIG) 2. Study the safety and efficacy of a newly developed preparation of MP-IVIG in children with primary immunodeficiency (PID) : - Adverse reaction of MP-IVIG(anaphylaxis and haemolysis)( no or mild or moderate) - Prevention of severe bacterial infection - Improvement of general health(weight gain and mentality) - Integration in to social live 3. Compare the efficacy of MP-IVIG to standard IVIG in children with primary immunodeficiency (PID).
This is a multicentre prospective audit to determine the incidence of immunodeficiency in children with IPD. Aims and/or research question of the project 1. To determine the incidence of primary immunodeficiency in children >2 years who present with IPD 2. To determine the types of immunodeficiency associated with IPD in children
Patients with primary immunodeficiency disorders (PID) on intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) treatment may experience adverse events (AEs). Patients who experience AEs on any 10% IVIG solution will be changed to octagam 5% for six infusions to evaluate the potential benefit for reduction of AEs on a lower concentration IVIG product.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether bilateral orthotopic lung transplantation (BOLT) followed by cadaveric partially-matched CD3+/CD19+ depleted bone marrow transplant (BMT) is safe and effective for individuals aged 10 through 45 years with the diagnosis of primary immunodeficiency (PID) and end-stage lung disease. The enrollment goal: 8 participants who receive both BOLT and BMT.
Long-term observational study on the utilisation and outcomes of HyQvia (a product consisting of recombinant human hyaluronidase and a human normal immunoglobulin 10% solution) under everyday clinical practice conditions.
This multicenter, open-label, parallel-arm, non-randomized study is designed to evaluate safety and tolerability of higher infusion parameters of IgPro20 in subjects with primary immunodeficiency (PID). A total of 45 subjects (including at least 14 [30%] pediatric subjects ≤ 17 years of age and at least 9 [20%] obese subjects with body mass index [BMI] of ≥30 kg/m2) with confirmed PID will be evaluated in the study. The study will include three cohorts of 15 subjects each as follows: i) Pump-Assisted Volume Cohort (weekly infusions), volume per injection site of 25 mL up to 50 mL, ii) Pump Assisted Flow Rate Cohort (weekly infusions), flow rate per injection site of 25 mL/hour up to 100 mL/hour, iii) Manual Push Flow Rate Cohort (2 to 7 infusions per week), flow rate per injection site of 25 to 30 mL/hour up to 120 mL/hour (equivalent of approximately 0.5 mL/minute up to 2 mL/minute). Each cohort will test 3 infusion parameter levels (4 for the pump-assisted flow rate cohort), repeated at least 4 times over a duration of 12 weeks (16 weeks for the flow rate cohort). After 4 infusion weeks at each level, qualifying subjects (responders) will switch to the next infusion parameter level (eg, from 25 to 50 mL/h). During the study, the weekly dose will remain unchanged (as prescribed by treating physician, usually within 100-200 mg/kg per week range); only the respective infusion parameter under evaluation will change.
Most immunodeficiencies are related to severe immunoglobulin deficiencies which require lifelong replacement therapy with immunoglobulin G (IgG) to reduce the incidence and severity of infections. IgG can be administered intravenously (IGIV) every 21 or 28 days or subcutaneously every week or every other week (IGSC) for subjects who do not tolerate IV infusions or have difficulties with venous access. No head-to-head data are available to directly compare HyQvia with conventional SCIG. However, SCIG is indicated for administration frequencies from daily up to every other week dosing while HyQvia is indicated for infusion frequencies every 2-4 weeks. This study is designed to assess the IgG trough level after switching from standard SCIG to every other week HyQvia and HyQvia every 3-4 weeks