Von Willebrand Diseases Clinical Trial
Official title:
Is Gingival Bleeding a Symptom of Patients With Type 2 and 3 Von Willebrand Disease? A Case-Control Study
Von Willebrand disease (VWD) is the most common inherent bleeding disorder resulting in prolonged bleeding time. Gingival bleeding is a frequently reported symptom of VWD. However, gingival bleeding is also known as a leading symptom of plaque-induced gingivitis and untreated periodontal disease. Gingival bleeding in VWD patients may be triggered by gingival inflammation and not a genuine symptom. Thus, this study evaluates whether type 2 and 3 VWD determines an increased susceptibility to gingival bleeding in response to the oral biofilm.
Patients
All patients with type 2 and 3 VWD consecutively consulting the Haemophilia Centre, Medical
Clinic III/Institute for Transfusion medicine, Hospital of the Johann Wolfgang
Goethe-University Frankfurt/Main are asked to participate in this study as cases. They are
asked for bleeding and subjective symptoms indicating periodontal disease.
The study complies with the rules of the Declaration of Helsinki and was approved by the
Institutional Review Board for Human Studies of the Medical Faculty of the Goethe-University
Frankfurt/Main (Application# 143/15). All participating individuals are informed on risks and
benefits as well as the procedures of the study and give written informed consent.
Controls
For each case (VWD) a respective hematologically healthy control is recruited from the
gingivitis and periodontitis patients of the Department of Periodontology, Centre for
Dentistry and Oral Medicine (Carolinum), Johann Wolfgang Goethe-University Frankfurt/Main.
Each control is matched to one of the respective cases for sex, age (±5 years), self-reported
smoking status (current smoker/non-smoker), number of remaining teeth (±2 teeth), and
periodontal diagnosis (gingivitis, chronic or aggressive periodontitis).
All participants are asked about current and past cigarette smoking habits. Patients who
report smoking or have quit smoking for less than five years are classified as smokers.
Additionally the amount of carbon monoxide (CO) in exhaled air is measured using a device
(Bedfont Smokerlyzer; Bedfont Scientific Ltd, Rochester, Great Britain).
Hematologic examinations
20 ml of blood are sampled from an arm vein. The following data are assessed at the
Haemophilia Centre for clinical routine during VWD patient care and due to study design in
the controls:
- von Willebrand parameters (VWF antigen [VWF:Ag], Ristocetin cofactor [VWF:RCo],
coagulation factor VIII [FVIII:C])
- Current medication if any VWF:Ag and VWF:RCo were measured turbidimetrically using a
device (BCS, Siemens, Marburg, Germany). FVIII:C was assessed with specific agents on a
coagulation analyser (ACL-300®, Instrumentation Laboratory, Kirchheim, Germany).
Periodontal examinations
The following clinical parameters are assessed at 6 sites per tooth (mesiobuccal, buccal,
distobuccal, mesiolingual, lingual, distolingual):
- modified Gingival Bleeding Index (GBI)
- modified Plaque Control Record (PCR)
- PPD and recession to the nearest 0.2 mm using an electronic probe (Florida Probe,
Version 3.2, Gainesville, USA). Recession is assessed from the cemento-enamel junction
(CEJ) to the gingival margin. At sites where the CEJ was destroyed by restorations the
restoration margin (RM) is used as reference. At sites where the CEJ or RM is located
apically from the gingival margin the value for recession is negative
- Bleeding on probing (BOP) recorded as positive when bleeding occurs within 30 seconds
from probing. For each patient a BOP index is calculated providing the amount of sites
with positive BOP in % per patient.
Attachment loss (PAL-V) is calculated as sum of PPD and recession.
All individuals are classified into the following diagnoses:
- plaque-induced gingivitis (PPD < 3.6 mm; PAL-V ≤ 2 mm),
- generalized mild, localized moderate chronic periodontitis (PPD ≥ 3.6 mm; vertical
probing attachment level [PAL-V] 3 to 4 mm ≤ 30% of sites; 1 to 2 mm > 30% of sites),
- generalized mild, localized severe chronic periodontitis (PPD ≥ 3.6 mm; PAL-V ≥ 5 mm ≤
30% of sites; 1 to 2 mm > 30% of sites)
- generalised moderate chronic periodontitis (PPD ≥ 3.6 mm; PAL-V 3 to 4 mm > 30%)
- generalised moderate localised severe chronic periodontitis (PPD ≥ 3.6 mm; PAL-V 3 to 4
mm > 30%; ≥ 5 mm ≤ 30%)
In all individuals hematological and periodontal examinations are obtained within 24 hours.
After dental and periodontal examination all patients receive oral hygiene instructions and
professional tooth cleaning. In cases of untreated periodontal disease periodontal treatment
is offered. VWD are asked to report any bleeding complications after periodontal probing and
professional tooth cleaning.
Statistical analysis
The individual patient is used as statistical unit. All analyses are performed on patient
level. GBI is defined as the main outcome variable and BOP as secondary outcome variable. All
other parameters are control variables. Up to now there are no studies comparing GBI or BOP
between VWD type 2 and 3 cases and hematologically healthy controls and there are no standard
deviations of mean GBI and BOP for cases and controls. To detect a clinically relevant
inter-group difference of 4% GBI or BOP with a type 1 error alpha < 0.05 and a test power of
80% with a standard deviation of group means of 5.5% a sample size of at least 31 individuals
is required per group. Thus, it was decided to recruit 31 VWD cases and respectively matched
31 controls.
For all individuals, cigarette pack years are calculated. Group frequencies (VWD, control)
are expressed for sex, current smoking. Group means and standard deviations are calculated
for GBI, BOP, age, number of remaining teeth, pack years, CO, PCR, VWF:Ag, VWF:RCO, FVIII:C.
Further, for each individual the following variables are calculated to describe the
periodontal status:
- Mean±standard deviation of PPD and PAL-V
- Percentage of PPD < 4 mm, 4 to 6.8 mm, ≥ 7 mm
- Sum of all PPD, i.e. the sum of the PPD measured at all sites within a patient
- Sum of all PPD with BOP, ), i.e. the sum of the PPD measured at all sites exhibiting BOP
within a patient
- Periodontal inflamed surface area (PISA). For each patient PPD were entered into an
Excel sheet that can be downloaded freely (http://www.parsprototo.info/pisa.html).
From these group means and standard deviations are calculated. Comparisons between groups for
dichotomous parameters are made by χ² or Fisher's exact test and for all other parameters by
Mann-Whitney-U test. A post-hoc analysis is performed to estimate the test power that would
be required to find a clinically relevant inter-group difference (δ) of 5% for GBI and BOP
index with a type 1 error (α) of 0.05 for the actual sample size.
Using stepwise linear backward multiple regression analysis, factors shall be identified that
influence GBI and BOP. The following independent variables are entered into the model for
GBI: group (VWD/control), sex, age, number of remaining teeth, PCR, CO, pack years, PISA. The
following independent variables are entered into the model for BOP: group (VWD/control), sex,
age, number of remaining teeth, PCR, CO, pack years, PISA. Due to the fact that mean PPD is
mathematically coupled to sum of PPD, sum of PPD with BOP, and PISA these 4 variables are not
entered into the regression model at the same time. PISA provides the best representation of
the subgingival inflamed area. Thus, PISA is chosen for the final model. The following
parameters are described by dummy variables: group (control = 0, VWD = 1), sex (male = 0,
female = 1), smoking status (never and former smoker = 0, current smoker = 1). All factors
with p < 0.1 are kept in the models. For statistical analysis a PC program is used (SystatTM
for Windows Version 12, Systat Inc., Evanston, USA).
;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Recruiting |
NCT04398628 -
ATHN Transcends: A Natural History Study of Non-Neoplastic Hematologic Disorders
|
||
Completed |
NCT03621020 -
Clinical Performance Evaluation of T-TAS 01 PL Chip
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT04146376 -
Von Willebrand Factor in Pregnancy (VIP) Study
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT03715673 -
Von Willebrand Antigen and Activity as Novel Biomarkers of Hemostasis in Inflammatory Bowel Disease
|
||
Completed |
NCT03875924 -
REAL-LIFE DATA OF CONSTITUTIONAL VON WILLEBRAND DISEASE IN WESTERN FRANCE (HOPSCOTcH-WILL)
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT03773159 -
Development of a Device for Evaluating Primary Hemostasis Under Whole Blood Flow Conditions
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT04119908 -
Videomicroscopy for the Prediction of Bleeding in Constitutional Haemorrhagic Diseases
|
N/A | |
Not yet recruiting |
NCT04106323 -
A Study of Factor Inhibitors in Adult Patients With Hemophilia and Von Willebrand's Disease in Upper Egypt
|
||
Active, not recruiting |
NCT03853486 -
ATHN 9: Severe VWD Natural History Study
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT05776069 -
Study of VGA039 in Healthy Volunteers and Patients With Von Willebrand Disease
|
Phase 1 | |
Recruiting |
NCT04344860 -
Prevent Postpartum Hemorrhage in Women With Von Willebrand Disease: The VWD-WOMAN Trial
|
Phase 3 | |
Completed |
NCT04053699 -
Bleeding Incidence in VWD Patients Undergoing On-Demand Treatment
|
||
Not yet recruiting |
NCT06205095 -
A Pilot Crossover Trial of Prophylactic Wilate Compared to Placebo for Heavy Menstrual Bleeding in Patients With VWD
|
Phase 3 | |
Completed |
NCT04052698 -
Clinical Study to Investigate the Efficacy and Safety of Wilate During Prophylaxis in Previously Treated Patients With VWD
|
Phase 3 | |
Recruiting |
NCT04887324 -
Real-life Data of Constitutional Von Willebrand Disease in Western France
|
||
Not yet recruiting |
NCT05916469 -
Heavy Menstrual Bleeding Progestin Treatment in Bleeding Disorders Study
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT03327779 -
World Bleeding Disorders Registry
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT03070912 -
Frequency of Hemorrhages Associated With the Functional Anomalies of Willebrand Factor in Emergency Patients
|
||
Completed |
NCT04466878 -
Prognostic Value of Implementing VCE on Top in Constitutional VWD-patients With GI-bleeding
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT04810702 -
Impact of Von Willebrand Factor and Its Multimers on Angiogenesis
|