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Trials in sickle cell disease

Trials in sickle cell disease
Trials in sickle cell disease

Children with sickle cell disease are at risk of developing neurologic complications, including stroke, transient ischemic attack, seizures, coma, and a progressive reduction in cognitive function. Transcranial Doppler ultrasound, magnetic resonance imaging, and overnight pulse oximetry appear to predict, making prevention an achievable goal so that there is now a focus on randomized controlled trials. The Stroke Prevention Trial in Sickle Cell Anemia (STOP) reported a reduction in the number of overt clinical strokes experienced by those children with critically high transcranial Doppler velocities (>200 centimeters per second) who were chronically transfused. Two additional Phase III studies and two pilot trials have been funded. STOP II focused on whether it is safe to discontinue blood in prophylactically transfused children when their velocities had remained normal for at least 30 months. The Silent Infarct Transfusion trial is designed to determine whether children with sickle cell anemia and silent cerebal infarcts, approximately 20% of the population, will have a decrease in the progressive neurologic complications after receiving regular blood transfusion therapy. Pilot safety and feasibility trials of low-dose aspirin and overnight respiratory support are also beginning. The collaboration provides an infrastructure for future clinical trials in this vulnerable group of children.

0887-8994
450-458
Kirkham, Fenella J.
1dfbc0d5-aebe-4439-9fb2-dac6503bcd58
Lerner, Norma B.
3c018e97-f8bd-4672-a27f-b986dc613902
Noetzel, Michael
f6698ae3-df53-47e4-be74-cadd701dcefe
DeBaun, Michael R.
76559153-80c6-4642-bdf8-672a75570dfe
Datta, Avijit K.
bfb3ae05-e720-41ed-8dd9-acd47e754245
Rees, David C.
8edfda69-3e13-4e7a-83b9-6bb2784f1968
Adams, Robert J.
986e8734-04c8-419d-be83-09eb9a6ee915
Kirkham, Fenella J.
1dfbc0d5-aebe-4439-9fb2-dac6503bcd58
Lerner, Norma B.
3c018e97-f8bd-4672-a27f-b986dc613902
Noetzel, Michael
f6698ae3-df53-47e4-be74-cadd701dcefe
DeBaun, Michael R.
76559153-80c6-4642-bdf8-672a75570dfe
Datta, Avijit K.
bfb3ae05-e720-41ed-8dd9-acd47e754245
Rees, David C.
8edfda69-3e13-4e7a-83b9-6bb2784f1968
Adams, Robert J.
986e8734-04c8-419d-be83-09eb9a6ee915

Kirkham, Fenella J., Lerner, Norma B., Noetzel, Michael, DeBaun, Michael R., Datta, Avijit K., Rees, David C. and Adams, Robert J. (2006) Trials in sickle cell disease. Pediatric Neurology, 34 (6), 450-458. (doi:10.1016/j.pediatrneurol.2005.10.017).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Children with sickle cell disease are at risk of developing neurologic complications, including stroke, transient ischemic attack, seizures, coma, and a progressive reduction in cognitive function. Transcranial Doppler ultrasound, magnetic resonance imaging, and overnight pulse oximetry appear to predict, making prevention an achievable goal so that there is now a focus on randomized controlled trials. The Stroke Prevention Trial in Sickle Cell Anemia (STOP) reported a reduction in the number of overt clinical strokes experienced by those children with critically high transcranial Doppler velocities (>200 centimeters per second) who were chronically transfused. Two additional Phase III studies and two pilot trials have been funded. STOP II focused on whether it is safe to discontinue blood in prophylactically transfused children when their velocities had remained normal for at least 30 months. The Silent Infarct Transfusion trial is designed to determine whether children with sickle cell anemia and silent cerebal infarcts, approximately 20% of the population, will have a decrease in the progressive neurologic complications after receiving regular blood transfusion therapy. Pilot safety and feasibility trials of low-dose aspirin and overnight respiratory support are also beginning. The collaboration provides an infrastructure for future clinical trials in this vulnerable group of children.

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More information

Published date: June 2006

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 429363
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/429363
ISSN: 0887-8994
PURE UUID: 0225419d-6f8b-477a-b51a-23c402af6994
ORCID for Fenella J. Kirkham: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2443-7958

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Date deposited: 26 Mar 2019 17:30
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:54

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Contributors

Author: Norma B. Lerner
Author: Michael Noetzel
Author: Michael R. DeBaun
Author: Avijit K. Datta
Author: David C. Rees
Author: Robert J. Adams

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