Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
Same as current

Summary

Conditions
  • Healthy Controls
  • Sickle Cell Disease
  • ? Thalassemia
Type
Observational
Design
Observational Model: CohortTime Perspective: Other

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 7 years and 125 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

This is primarily an observational trial in patients with chronic anemia syndromes (sickle cell disease and thalassemia) and control subjects. The key purpose is to understand how brain blood flow reserve (the ability of the brain to increase its flow in response to stress) is altered in patients wi...

This is primarily an observational trial in patients with chronic anemia syndromes (sickle cell disease and thalassemia) and control subjects. The key purpose is to understand how brain blood flow reserve (the ability of the brain to increase its flow in response to stress) is altered in patients with chronic anemia. Since this parameter may depend on anemia severity, we will perform the MRI monitoring prior to and following clinically indicated transfusions in a subset of patients. Most patients will already be prescribed hydroxyurea as part of their standard of care. Since hydroxyurea could impact brain blood flow, there is also a small pilot study (20 patients, nonrandomized, open label) where MRI imaging will be performed prior to and following administration of hydroxyurea up to maximum tolerated dose. The study will enroll 90 adult subjects with transfusion independent sickle cell disease (70 SS, 10 SC, 10 S?0) and 60 patients with transfusion-dependent sickle cell disease. It will also include 10 transfusion independent thalassemia patients and 20 transfusion dependent thalassemia patients as well as 40 control subjects recruited from first degree relatives of the sickle cell disease population. All eligible subjects will be asked to provide informed consent before participating in the study. Treatment: All patients will undergo baseline phlebotomy, brain MRI, and neurocognitive testing. The MRI will include measurements of brain blood flow prior to and following administration of 16 mg/kg of acetazolamide to maximally vasodilate the cerebral vasculature. All transfusion dependent patients will have their MRI performed immediately prior to a routinely scheduled transfusion at their hemoglobin nadir. 20 sickle cell disease patients on chronic simple transfusions and 10 thalassemia patients on chronic simple transfusions will undergo repeat MRI assessment of cerebral blood flow and reactivity following their clinically indicated blood transfusion. 10 sickle cell disease patients on exchange transfusions will undergo repeat MRI assessment of cerebral blood flow and reactivity following their clinically indicated exchange transfusion; this transfusion will be performed to lower their hemoglobin S percentage by 25% points while keeping the total hemoglobin unchanged (isocrit exchange). 20 non transfusion dependent sickle cell disease patients not already receiving hydroxyurea will be placed on hydroxyurea following their baseline exam and titrated to maximal tolerated dose. They will then undergo a repeat MRI within two months of reaching that dose and be given the option to continue on hydroxyurea or stop. Safety Assessment: All patients will have a physician present during the MRI examination to monitor vital signs and response to acetazolamide. Patients placed onto hydroxyurea will have monthly study visits with monitoring of complete blood count, vital signs, complete metabolic panel, and hemoglobin electrophoresis. Adverse events will be assessed at every study visit after the first dose through to the last subject visit. Efficacy Assessments: Baseline cerebrovascular reserve (CVR) predictors will be assessed by multivariate regression after appropriate transformations. Potential independent predictors include oxygen content, hemoglobin subtype, as well as markers of hemolysis, inflammation, and iron overload.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT03715972
Collaborators
  • National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
  • Academisch Medisch Centrum - Universiteit van Amsterdam (AMC-UvA)
  • Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Investigators
Principal Investigator: John C Wood, M.D., PhD CHLA/USC