View clinical trials related to Thrombocytopenia.
Filter by:The study aims at determining if dietary phytoestrogens can be risk factors for Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE). Dietary enquiry and phytoestrogens measurements will be performed in blood and urine of patients with SLE in an active phase of the disease, in patient with other autoimmune diseases and in healthy volunteers. Subjects will be premenopausal women and when possible at a define stage of the menstrual cycle. Free blood estradiol will be assayed as a confounding risk factor.
This is a 2 part (Part A and B) adaptive, open-label, dose-finding study of PRN1008 in patients with ITP who are refractory or relapsed with no available and approved therapeutic options, with a platelet count <30,000/μL on two counts no sooner than 7 days apart in the 15 days before treatment begins. The dose-finding portion of the study has been completed. Part B treatment dose is 400 mg twice daily.
The study evaluates the safety and potential early signals of efficacy of allogeneic Thrombosomes in bleeding thrombocytopenic patients
Isolated prolonged thrombocytopenia (PT) is a common complication after allogeneic stem cell transplantation with significant poor prognosis. No standard treatment is available. The current study assigned PT randomly to 2 arms: intervention arm with N-acetyl-L-cysteine (NAC) and control arm with supportive therapy.This is a prospective randomized controlled study.
It seems reasonable to assume that patients who present significant bleeding symptoms may have different quality of platelets than those without bleeding. This question was addressed in a study that examined platelet function in adult ITP patients, which try to determine whether this correlated with bleeding risk. Previous reports have suggested that measuring platelet function may help define patients at highest risk of bleeding. In addition, Middelburg and colleagues corrected platelet function for quartile of platelet count, using <32×10^9/L as the lowest cohort and >132×10^9/L as the top quartile. They demonstrated that increased platelet reactivity (as measured by flow cytometry) was associated with decreased risk of bleeding but particularly for those patients with the lowest platelet counts. Further studies in a larger cohort are needed to confirm this correlation. Our study aimed at standardizing a prediction model to evaluate the bleeding risk of adult ITP patients with the use of platelet function tests.
Study of Romiplostim for Chemotherapy-induced Thrombocytopenia in Adult Subjects with Gastrointestinal, Pancreatic, or Colorectal Cancer
XIENCE 28 Global Study is a prospective, single arm, multi-center, open label, non-randomized trial to further evaluate the safety of 1-month (as short as 28 days) dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) in subjects at high risk of bleeding (HBR) undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with the approved XIENCE family (XIENCE Xpedition Everolimus Eluting Coronary Stent System [EECSS], XIENCE Alpine EECSS, XIENCE PROX EECSS, XIENCE ProA EECSS or XIENCE Sierra EECSS of coronary drug-eluting stents
To evaluate the efficacy of romiplostim for the treatment of CIT in patients receiving chemotherapy for the treatment of lymphomas measured by the ability to administer on-time, full-dose chemotherapy.
This phase II trial studies how well fludarabine phosphate, cyclophosphamide, total body irradiation, and donor stem cell transplant work in treating patients with blood cancer. Drugs used in chemotherapy, such as fludarabine phosphate and cyclophosphamide, work in different ways to stop the growth of cancer cells, either by killing the cells, by stopping them from dividing, or by stopping them from spreading. Radiation therapy uses high energy x-rays to kill cancer cells and shrink tumors. Giving chemotherapy and total-body irradiation before a donor peripheral blood stem cell transplant helps stop the growth of cells in the bone marrow, including normal blood-forming cells (stem cells) and cancer cells. It may also 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. The donated stem cells may also replace the patient?s immune cells and help destroy any remaining cancer cells.
Phase 3b open-label, multicenter study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of avatrombopag in subjects with thrombocytopenia scheduled for operations to critical sites or operations with a high risk of bleeding.