View clinical trials related to Purpura.
Filter by:It is known that intravenous immunoglobulins can induce hemolysis, but the mechanism is not known in detail. The primary objective of this study was to investigate the specificity of antigens on red blood cells in patients with chronic immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) who have shown signs of clinically relevant hemolysis following treatment with the intravenous immunoglobin Privigen®. The study was to explore potential mechanisms of hemolysis by analysis of the specificity of the antibodies possibly involved. To distinguish between clinically non-relevant hemolysis and a relevant intravascular hemolysis, an independent adjudication by a committee was performed for each patient with signs of hemolysis determined in the laboratory or in the clinic. This study was requested as a post-marketing commitment study by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA). By September 2014, no case of clinically significant intravascular hemolysis was found, and the FDA agreed to halt the study and analyze all hemolysis-relevant endpoints using FDA criteria for hemolysis in addition to analyses planned in the protocol. The study was not restarted.
This will be a randomized, open-label, four-group, two-period, replicate design study to evaluate the effect of food on within and between subject variability in second generation formulation 20-mg tablet strengths, Lots P01008ZZA and P01009ZZA, administered as single doses of 40mg to 84 healthy male and female subjects. The study is powered to detect both a reduction in either the within or between subject variability (coefficient of variation [CV]%) of approximately 35%.
Immunologic thrombcytopenic purpura (ITP) affects both children and adults. The incidence is estimated in adults about 1,6/100 000/per year. Chronic and relapsing forms of the disease that represent 70% of adult cases are associated with impairment of quality of life related to treatments side effects and bleeding. ITP is secondary to the destruction of circulating platelets through an auto-immune process and to a decrease of platelet production in bone marrow. Auto antibodies are usually directed against epitopes of the GPIIb/IIIa, expressed by platelets. The destruction of the platelets seems to occur mainly in the spleen through antibody dependent cytotoxicity. Both macrophages and cytotoxic T lymphocytes subsets participate to the platelet destruction through the CD16, the low affinity receptor for the Fc of IgG. Thus the CD16 "pathway" is a target for treatments in ITP as for example intravenous immunoglobulins and more recently inhibitors of the syk kinase.
This study was a Phase II, single-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial to determine whether anti-vWF Nanobody is safe and effective as adjunctive treatment in patients with aTTP. Patients received either placebo or anti-vWF Nanobody as adjunctive therapy to plasma exchange (PE).
The purpose of this study is to describe the number of months with a platelet response over a 12 month treatment period and to describe ITP remission rates in adults with ITP receiving romiplostim.
The purpose of this study is to determine the response rate and response duration with the combination of low-dose rituximab and high-dose dexamethasone in the treatment of adult immune thrombocytopenic purpura.
A open-label, multi-center 2-year safety study to ascertain the baseline levels of bone marrow fibers in previously treated adults with chronic immune (idiopathic) thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) and to evaluate the long-term effect of eltrombopag on bone marrow fibers. The study will also describe the long-term safety and tolerability of oral eltrombopag treatment in subjects with chronic ITP.
This is a randomized, open-label, five-period, balanced crossover study conducted in approximately 40 healthy adult subjects enrolled at one study center in the USA. Subjects receive five eltrombopag treatments: tablet fasted, Powder for Oral Suspension (PfOS) fasted, PfOS with a high calcium meal, PfOS 2 hours prior to a high calcium meal, and PfOS 2 hours after a high calcium meal, and each treatment is a single 25 mg dose. There is a 10 to 14 day washout between periods, and between the last dose of study drug and the follow-up visit. During each treatment period, subjects undergo serial PK sampling over 72 hours for measurement of plasma eltrombopag concentrations. Safety is assessed by vital signs, clinical safety laboratory assessments, and adverse events reporting.
This is an extension study designed to assess the safety and durability of platelet count increases with romiplostim treatment of thrombocytopenic patients with immune (Idiopathic) thrombocytopenia purpura. This study is available to pediatric patients who have completed a previous romiplostim ITP study and meet the eligibility criteria of this study.
Since Idiopathic Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP) affects women who are of reproductive capacity and taking into account the lack of data concerning Eltrombopag (Promacta) use during pregnancy, the Eltrombopag (Promacta) Registry will be an essential component of the ongoing risk management for Eltrombopag (Promacta). The Registry will detect and record the events (live births, spontaneous abortions, stillbirths, elective terminations, therapeutic terminations, any serious pregnancy outcome, major and minor congenital anomalies, outcomes including preterm, small for gestation age, or intrauterine growth restriction adverse adverse effects on the following: immune system development, platelet number and function, neoplasm formation, bone marrow reticulin formation, thrombotic events) in the mother and/or the neonate/infant. The adverse events in the infant will be assessed through at least the first year of life. The Pregnancy Registry will compare the pregnancy and fetal outcomes of women exposed to eltrombopag Tablets during pregnancy to an unexposed control population. This study will be a prospective observational, exposure follow-up study.