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Sickle Cell Disease clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT00834899 Terminated - Sickle Cell Disease Clinical Trials

A Safety Study of Eptifibatide in Patients With Sickle Cell Disease

Start date: January 2009
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This study will evaluate the safety of eptifibatide in sickle cell patients and how well it works during the course of painful crises. The overall hypothesis that we seek to test is that increased platelet activation and the resultant inflammatory responses are important contributors to the problems of sickle cell disease. Sickle cell disease has been referred to both as a condition associated with increased risk of blood clots and increased inflammation. A painful crisis represents the most common cli nical problem in sickle cell disease, but the treatment of these crises remains inadequate.

NCT ID: NCT00773890 Terminated - Sickle Cell Disease Clinical Trials

TRF-1101 Assessment in Sickle Cell Disease

Start date: July 2008
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This study is designed to assess the safety, tolerability, and activity of TRF-1101 on microvascular blood flow, vascular endothelial injury, and vasoocclusive pain associated with sickle cell disease.

NCT ID: NCT00663507 Terminated - Sickle Cell Disease Clinical Trials

Kidney Transplantation in Patients With Sickle Cell Disease

Start date: March 2008
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this research is to better characterize the components and mechanisms of the immune systems of persons with sickle cell disease who have had a kidney transplant and are immunosuppressed. If we can improve our scientific understanding of the fundamental mechanisms involved in patient outcomes, we can potentially maximize the benefits that we seek from transplantation in sickle cell patients with end stage renal disease.

NCT ID: NCT00595530 Terminated - Sickle Cell Disease Clinical Trials

Low-Dose Ketamine Infusion for Children With Sickle Cell Disease-Related Pain

Start date: March 4, 2008
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Acute pain episodes associated with sickle cell disease (SCD) are very difficult to manage effectively. Opioid tolerance and side effects have been major roadblocks in our ability to provide these patients with adequate pain relief. This pilot study is designed to examine the safety and feasibility of using ketamine, an N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist, in the inpatient seeing with children and adolescents who have sickle cell vasoocclusive pain. Previous research suggests that in subanesthetic doses, ketamine may be able to prevent the development of opiate tolerance and facilitate better pain relief with lower opiate doses, allowing for less respiratory depression, less sedation, easier ambulation, less deconditioning, shorter hospital stays, and better quality of life. The goal of this pilot study is to evaluate the safety and feasibility of using a continuous infusion of ketamine, in conjunction with opiates, in the inpatient setting for sickle cell vasoocclusive pain. It is hypothesized that using a low dose ketamine infusion in conjunction with opiates will be a safe and feasible practice for the treatment of sickle cell pain.

NCT ID: NCT00578344 Terminated - Sickle Cell Disease Clinical Trials

Bone Marrow Transplantation, Hemoglobinopathies, SCALLOP

SCALLOP
Start date: July 2005
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Patients are being asked to participate in this study because they have severe sickle cell anemia (SCD) with or without the beta thalassemia trait. Sickle cell anemia is an illness where the red blood cells change shape and can clog up blood vessels. This keeps the body from getting the oxygen it needs. Thalassemia is when the body does not make enough hemoglobin, something that helps the oxygen get to the places it needs to go in the body. The patient may or may not need to get regular blood transfusions (getting more blood) to improve their quality of life (feel better) and prevent organ damage (problems with the brain, heart, lung, kidney, and gonad, for example.). The transfusions can also cause problems, including iron overload (too much iron in the blood), which can be fatal (patients can die) without regular deferoxamine shots. Even with the best usual treatments, people with thalassemia or SCD die sooner. There is no proven cure. We would like to treat patients using bone marrow transplantation, a treatment that has been used for people with SCD. The transplant uses healthy "matched" bone marrow. This comes from a brother or sister who does not have sickle cell disease or severe thalassemia. If the treatment works, the sickle cell disease or thalassemia may be cured. This treatment has been used to treat patients with sickle cell disease or thalassemia. It has worked in most cases. We hope, but cannot promise, that the transplanted marrow will make healthy cells, and patients will not have sickle cell disease or severe thalassemia anymore. We do not know what effect this treatment will have on the damage that has already been done by the disease. Finding that out is the main reason for this study. Currently, very little has been reported about organ function after bone marrow transplants in patients with sickle cell anemia.

NCT ID: NCT00512577 Terminated - Sickle Cell Disease Clinical Trials

Transfusion Alternatives Pre-operatively in Sickle Cell Disease (TAPS)

TAPS
Start date: July 2007
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

TAPS is a sequential trial which aims to investigate whether the administration of a blood transfusion pre-operatively to patients with sickle cell disease (HB SS or Hb SB0 thal)having low or medium risk elective surgery increases or decreases the overall rate of peri-operative complications. The proportion of patients with peri-operative complications in two randomised groups of transfused and untransfused patients will be compared.

NCT ID: NCT00492531 Terminated - Sickle Cell Disease Clinical Trials

Sildenafil Therapy for Pulmonary Hypertension and Sickle Cell Disease

Start date: June 2007
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This study will examine whether the drug sildenafil can lower blood pressure in the pulmonary artery (the blood vessel that leads from the heart to the lungs) in patients with sickle cell disease and pulmonary hypertension (high blood pressure in the lungs). It will see if this treatment can reduce disease complications, such as shortness of breath, pain crisis, pneumonia, and increase survival. Patients 12 years of age and older with sickle cell disease and pulmonary hypertension may be eligible for this study. Participants are randomly assigned to receive sildenafil or placebo (sugar pill) for 16 weeks. Before starting treatment, patients have baseline studies, including a pregnancy test for females of childbearing age; a chest x-ray; pulmonary function tests to measure how much air the patient can breathe in and out; an echocardiogram (heart ultrasound); a 6-minute walk test to measure exercise capacity; a quality-of-life assessment and a pain inventory. Patients with moderate to severe pulmonary hypertension undergo heart catheterization to evaluate the severity of hypertension before beginning sildenafil therapy. During treatment, patients are monitored with the following: - Blood tests: weeks 6, 10 and 16. - Echocardiogram: weeks 6 and 16. - 6-minute walk test: weeks 6, 10 and 16. - Measurements of weight, blood pressure and heart rate: weeks 6, 10 and 16. - Pregnancy test for women of childbearing age: weeks 6, 10 and 16. - Pain questionnaire once a day for a week: weeks 6 and 1.0 - Quality-of-life questionnaire: week 16. - Heart catheterization: week 16 for patients with moderate to severe hypertension. At the end of the 16-week period, patients may opt to continue to receive sildenafil and monitoring in an open-label phase of the study for up to 1 year.

NCT ID: NCT00489281 Terminated - Sickle Cell Disease Clinical Trials

Non-Myeloablative Bone Marrow Transplant for Patients With Sickle Cell Anemia and Other Blood Disorders

Start date: June 23, 2008
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

RATIONALE: Giving low doses of chemotherapy, such as fludarabine and cyclophosphamide, and total-body irradiation before a donor bone marrow transplant helps stop the growth of abnormal cells. It also helps stop the patient's immune system from rejecting the donor's stem cells. When the healthy stem cells from a donor are infused into the patient they may help the patient's bone marrow make stem cells, red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets. Sometimes the transplanted cells from a donor can make an immune response against the body's normal cells. Giving sirolimus and mycophenolate mofetil after transplant may stop this from happening. PURPOSE: This phase II trial is studying how well giving fludarabine and cyclophosphamide together with total-body irradiation followed by a donor bone marrow transplant works in treating patients with sickle cell anemia and other blood disorders.

NCT ID: NCT00350844 Terminated - Sickle Cell Disease Clinical Trials

Hydroxyurea for Children and Young Adults With Sickle Cell Disease and Pulmonary Hypertension

Start date: July 2006
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this study is to test the hypothesis that hydroxyurea is effective for the specific treatment of secondary pulmonary hypertension found on screening in children and young adults with sickle cell disease.

NCT ID: NCT00294541 Terminated - Sickle Cell Disease Clinical Trials

A Study Evaluating the Long-Term Safety of ICA-17043 in Sickle Cell Disease Patients With or Without Hydroxyurea Therapy

Start date: February 2006
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This trial is a follow-up companion study to Protocol ICA-17043-10, a Phase III, multi-center, efficacy and safety study of ICA-17043. This is an open-label extension study collecting safety data on the use of ICA-17043 in subjects with sickle cell disease (SCD) (e.g., HbSS, HbSC, HbSb0-thalassemia, HbSb+-thalassemia subjects). All subjects who have successfully completed ICA-17043-10 will, if deemed appropriate by their study Investigator and appropriate consent by subject is given, enroll in the ICA-17043-12 study (Study 12). Only patients who participated in ICA-17043-10 are eligible for this open label study