View clinical trials related to Von Willebrand Disease.
Filter by:The WIL-33 study aims to determine the efficacy, pharmacokinetics, immunogenicity and safety of wilate as routine prophylaxis in up to 12 paediatric patients (eight evaluable) with severe von Willebrand Disease VWD (defined as screening von Willebrand factor ristocetin cofactor activity [VWF:RCo] <20%) under the age of 6 years, over a period of 12 months.
Description of the long-term evolution of patients with von Willebrand disease and treated with Voncento® and of the hemostatic efficacy in the prevention and the treatment of non-surgical bleeding episodes and prevention of surgical bleeding during 2 years after patient inclusion.
Establish a Latin-American network of centers and professionals with the aim of: - To register VWD patients in retrospective/prospective study, using a database, available online, common to all - To register the bleeding history, the treatment and the events of VWD patients in the region - To investigate the influence of VWD on quality of life
The primary aim of this study is to prospectively investigate the current bleeding tendency of children and adults with VWD.
The purpose of this phase 3 study is to investigate the efficacy and safety, including immunogenicity, thrombogenicity and hypersensitivity reactions, as well as pharmacokinetics (PK), health related quality of life (HRQoL) and pharmacoeconomics of prophylactic treatment with recombinant von Willebrand factor (rVWF) (vonicog alfa) in adult participants with severe von Willebrand disease (VWD).
The main aim of the study is to check effectiveness, side effects, and tolerability of recombinant von Willebrand Factor (rVWF), with or without ADVATE, in the treatment and control of nonsurgical bleeding events in pediatric participants (less than (<)18 years of age) with severe hereditary von Willebrand disease (VWD). The participants will be treated with rVWF for 12-18 months. Their von Willebrand Disease will be treated by their doctor according to their doctor's usual clinical practice. During the study, participants will be followed up at clinics or over telephone calls.
The present Project is a third phase of the previous PCM-EVW-ES Project (Batlle et al. Thromb & Haemost 2015) with the aim of its extension, further analysis with an innovation development in the field of von Willebrand disease (VWD) based in the newer recently available methodologies. The aim of this project is to help the physician in a more uniform characterization and therapy of VWD in clinical practice, at an international level. A reduction of the expenses in the diagnosis process by using the new methodologies is pursued.
Von Willebrand Disease (VWD) is defined as an inherited bleeding disorder that is caused by deficiency or dysfunction of von Willebrand factor (VWF), a plasma protein that mediates the initial adhesion of platelets at sites of vascular injury and also binds and stabilizes blood clotting factor VIII (FVIII) in the circulation. The most severe forms of VWD are usually easy to diagnose (obvious hemorrhagic symptoms and major VWF deficiency), whereas the mild forms of the disease are still difficult to confirm. It is indeed reported that about 1% of the population carry mild biological VWF deficiency without any bleeding tendency and any "actual disease". On the contrary, some patients with severe bleeding history can carry a true VWF abnormality, well-confirmed by genetic studies, without any VWF deficiency when evaluated with standard biological methods, such as Ristocetin Cofactor activity (VWF:RCo). However, in these patients, the use of alternative methods, such as PFA-100 (Platelet Fonction Analyzer-100), the study of Factor VIII (FVIII:C) to VWF (FVIII:C/VWF) ratio or the evaluation of VWF activity using more specialized methods such as VWF:CB (VWF-Collagen Binding) assay can detect the VWF deficiency and possible hemorrhagic predisposition. In this project, the investigators plan to assess the performance of VWF:CB in the diagnosis of VWF deficiency in patients with unexplained bleeding history.
This is a multi-centre, open-label, single-arm, phase 4, post-marketing study to further investigate the efficacy and safety of Voncento in subjects with Von Willebrand Disease (VWD) in whom treatment with a Von Willebrand Factor (VWF) product is required as on-demand therapy, for prophylactic therapy, or during surgery. Subjects will be treated with Voncento either as an on-demand regimen (eg, to treat a non-surgical spontaneous or traumatic bleeding event) or prevention regimen (eg, to prevent an anticipated bleeding event) at a dose prescribed by the Investigator in accordance with the Voncento Summary of Product Characteristics (SmPC), or with a prophylaxis regimen (regular treatment with Voncento at a frequency of 1-3 times per week). Voncento will also be given to prevent and treat any surgical bleeding events.
Multicenter, prospective, non-controlled study in a pediatric cohort (<6 years-old) with severe (type 2 or 3) hereditary Von Willebrand Disease (VWD).