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Curative Versus Disease-Modifying Therapies in Children With Severe Sickle Cell Disease

Completed
Conditions
Sickle Cell Disease
Interventions
Behavioral: Quality of Life measures
Registration Number
NCT01369160
Lead Sponsor
Emory University
Brief Summary

The research proposed is a pilot study of pediatric and adolescent/young adult patients who have received the curative intervention (MSD-SCT), disease-modifying interventions (HU or CT) or SCC (control), with respect to three clinically important outcomes: quality-of-life (QOL), neurocognitive function, and reproductive potential. Comparable cohorts will be identified for each of the groups, drawing from patients treated by the SCD program of Children's Healthcare of Atlanta (CHOA). QOL measures and neuropsychiatric testing and will be administered. Reproductive endocrine function markers (laboratory studies and pubertal staging), will be collected and analyzed. A tracking system of such patients will also be developed, gathering available retrospective data and setting up a mechanism for collection of new data.

Detailed Description

sickle cell disease (SCD), but a significant proportion experience clinically severe disease requiring more aggressive intervention. Widely applicable curative therapy with a favorable toxicity profile remains elusive for such patients.

Three distinct intervention strategies are currently available for children with severe sickle cell disease (SCD): oral hydroxyurea (HU), chronic blood transfusions (CT), and allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (SCT) from an HLA-matched sibling donor (MSD). Each intervention has distinct advantages and disadvantages. Many patients do not receive specific intervention, and continue standard comprehensive care (SCC).

Though indications for these therapies overlap, to date there are no comparative outcomes data, leaving families and physicians without adequate information upon which to base therapeutic decisions. The gold standard for obtaining such data would be a randomized, prospective study comparing each intervention, though this may or may not be feasible to conduct. Before such a trial is considered, a large cross-sectional trial should be conducted to establish comparisons among the four therapeutic groups (HU, SCT, CT, SCC) with respect to the outcomes that clinicians and families deem most important.

The research proposed is a pilot study of pediatric and adolescent/young adult patients who have received the curative intervention (MSD-SCT), disease-modifying interventions (HU or CT) or SCC (control), with respect to three clinically important outcomes: quality-of-life (QOL), neurocognitive function, and reproductive potential. Comparable cohorts will be identified for each of the groups, drawing from patients treated by the SCD program of Children's Healthcare of Atlanta (CHOA). QOL measures and neuropsychiatric testing and will be administered. Reproductive endocrine function markers (laboratory studies and pubertal staging), will be collected and analyzed. A tracking system of such patients will also be developed, gathering available retrospective data and setting up a mechanism for collection of new data.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
33
Inclusion Criteria
  • Greater than or equal to 3 years of age
  • Homozygous hemoglobin S (HbSS)
  • Severe disease, defined as having one or more of the following:
  • recurrent (2 or more episodes per year) acute chest syndrome (ACS),
  • frequent (3 or more episodes per year) vaso-occlusive pain events, defined as episode lasting 4 hours and requiring hospitalization or outpatient treatment with parenteral narcotics
  • Any combination of 3 acute chest syndrome episodes and vaso-occlusive pain episodes (defined as above) yearly for 3 years.
  • any stroke, defined as central nervous system (CNS) event lasting longer than 24 hours, plus objective imaging evidence of CNS vasculopathy, with or without residual neurologic findings
  • At least one year has elapsed since start of therapy for severe disease (CT, HU, MSD-BMT or SCC).
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Exclusion Criteria
  • Inadequate medical records to support eligibility criteria
  • Patients less than 1 year from start of therapy (CT, HU, MSD-BMT or SCC).
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Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
2Quality of Life measureshydroxyurea
4Quality of Life measuresstandard comprehensive care (SCC, control)
3Quality of Life measuresmatched sibling donor stem cell transplantation (MSD-SCT)
1Quality of Life measuresChronic Transfusion
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
quality of life5 years after last patient enrolled
neuropsychiatric testing1 year after last patient enrolled
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (2)

Children's Healthcare of Atlanta/Emory University

🇺🇸

Atlanta, Georgia, United States

Children's Healthcare of Atlanta

🇺🇸

Atlanta, Georgia, United States

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