View clinical trials related to Vaso-occlusive Crisis.
Filter by:This Phase 3 study will assess the safety and efficacy of a single dose of inclacumab, a P-selectin inhibitor, for a vaso-occlusive crisis (VOC) after an index VOC in participants with sickle cell disease (SCD). Participants will be randomized to receive either inclacumab or placebo.
This is an open label extension study in subjects with Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) who have completed the double blind Phase 3 study (B5201002).
In patients with SCD, the use of low dose anticoagulation as an outpatient may lead to a significant decrease in morbidity and as a result, decrease healthcare utilization and costs. This study attempts to critically avoid admissions by reducing daily pain scores and pain crisis as an outpatient by use of a novel oral anticoagulant.
Patients who have sickle cell VOC are usually treated with opioids, such as morphine. However, this current way of treating them has not improved the health, medical outcomes, or rates of hospitalizations. In addition, since VOC can happen very frequently over a long period of time, giving opioids over and over again can cause both short-term and long-term problems. Nitrous oxide (N2O) is a way of treating pain that may provide a better alternative to repeatedly giving opioids over long periods of time. N2O has been shown to provide up to 3 hours of pain relief in inpatient patients with VOC whose pain did not improve with morphine infusions, and is used extensively in France, where almost half of 85 pediatric emergency departments use nitrous oxide to treat children with VOC whose pain did not get better with standard treatment with morphine. However, pain relief which N2O provides in the acute setting has not been well described. Therefore, the purpose of our study is to describe how well N2O can relieve the pain in patients with SCD who present to the emergency department and are experiencing a VOC.
The purpose of this study is to determine the effectiveness of A 001 infusion in preventing acute chest syndrome in sickle cell disease (SCD) subjects with vaso-occlusive crisis, fever, and elevated serum C-reactive protein (CRP).
Acute chest syndrome is a severe respiratory complication of sickle cell disease. The standard prevention of this dangerous complication is spirometry in wich patient is required to take deep breaths trough a little device several times a day. This treatment is compromised when pain in important or when the patient is asleep and cannot participate. The investigators hypothesised that non invasive ventilation in wich patient have no effort to take might be a better prevention than spirometry and may improve pain and quality of sleep. Children with vaso-occlusive crisis necessitating morphinic treatment will be randomly assigned with either spirometry or ventilation and the investigators will monitor for occurrence of acute chest syndrome, pain and quality of sleep.
The painful episode is the most common problem experienced by children with sickle cell disease. Although various treatments are available during painful episodes, the medication most commonly given for pain is a pain medication such as morphine. Fluids are also used. Even with these treatments, many children still have severe pain that is difficult to control. In addition to pain medications, there are other medications that may be useful. Methylprednisolone (solumedrol) and prednisone are a group of medications called steroids that may be helpful for painful episodes. These medications are known to lower the amount of inflammation (this means swelling, tenderness, and soreness) in the body. Because this medication may help with your pain, you are being asked to be a part of this study. These types of medications are used in other illnesses such as asthma, especially during times when the illness has gotten worse. The main purpose of this study is to see if the methylprednisolone and prednisone will lower the amount of pain and the length of hospital stay. In addition to the pain medication you will normally receive, you will be assigned to one of 2 groups: 1) the experimental group with the active form of the medicine, or 2) a comparison group without the active form of the medicine. In either group, you will still receive all of the treatments you would normally receive for a painful episode, including pain medicines and fluids. You and your doctors will not know what group you will be assigned. If you decide to be a part of the study the following will happen: For the first 5 days, you will be asked to: 1) describe your current pain (0=no pain to 10=a lot of pain), worst pain (0=no pain to 10=a lot of pain), least pain (0=no pain to 10=a lot of pain), and the amount of pain relief (0=no relief to 10=complete relief); 2) describe any signs or symptoms you feel, including filling out a pain scale form each day; 3) and take the medicines for 5 days, either at home or when in the hospital. Thirty days after the study, a study researcher will call and will ask questions about your pain, any painful episodes, and any medications you had. If you are discharged home sooner than 5 days after the start of the study, research staff will call you to ask you these questions, remind you to fill out your pain forms, and remind you to take your medicine. If you are discharged home, you will be given pain scales to fill out each day at home.