New ways to prevent stroke and reduce excess iron in sickle cell anemiaSeptember 01, 2005Clinical trial designed to determine if hydroxyurea can replace blood transfusions and if monthly blood withdrawal can substitute for daily injections to treat iron overload, according to St. Jude St. Jude Children's Research Hospital will lead a national Phase III clinical trial to investigate whether a new combination treatment can prevent a secondary stroke in children with sickle cell anemia (SCA) and eliminate the need for nightly injections with a drug that reduces iron overload in these patients. The five-year study, called Stroke With Transfusions Changing to Hydroxyurea (SWiTCH), is supported by a grant of more than $18 million from the National Institutes of Health (National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute) and includes 20 major pediatric sickle cell centers in addition to St. Jude. The study is now being organized and will enroll the first children in spring 2006. SCA is an inherited disease in which the oxygen-carrying protein in the red blood cells is abnormal, giving the red cells a twisted (sickled) shape that can disrupt circulation, leading to pain, stroke, and other disabling and sometimes fatal complications. SWiTCH holds promise for greatly simplifying and improving the long-term care of children with the disease who have suffered strokes, according to Russell E. Ware, M.D., Ph.D., chief of the Hematology Division at St. Jude and principal investigator of the clinical trial. "Sickle cell anemia is a relentless disease that increasingly disables children as they grow," Ware said. "In fact, children with stroke receive difficult treatments with their own complications that must be treated. There is reason to hope that SWiTCH could finally give us a better way to enhance the lives of these children, who suffer daily from their disease and face the threat of stroke and early death." The current treatment for children with SCA who have suffered strokes includes monthly blood transfusions to provide red cells that are not sickled. This ongoing treatment must later be combined with nightly injections of a drug (Desferal ®) that eliminates excessive iron buildup caused by regular blood transfusions. Excessive iron damages internal organs-a condition called hemochromatosis. The nightly injections of Desferal, an iron chelator, are painful and inconvenient, often prompting children to forego the injection, since iron buildup does not initially cause the child discomfort, but the injections always do. Chelators are molecules that bind to metals so they can be eliminated from the body. The goal of SWiTCH is to compare patient outcomes using blood transfusions with outcomes using hydroxyurea. Hydroxyurea will not completely eliminate the sickled red cells, but it is expected to stimulate production of enough red cells carrying fetal hemoglobin to reduce SCA symptoms. The study will also compare the efficacy of daily at-home injections of Desferal with the less painful and more convenient monthly removal of blood (phlebotomy) at a medical facility. Half of the children in SWiTCH will remain on the standard treatment (transfusions and chelator) while the other half will be treated with the alternative treatment (hydroxyurea and phlebotomy). clude children who have already suffered one stroke and are at risk for additional strokes because of blood vessel damage in their brains. "This is the first study to directly compare transfusions with hydroxyurea for the treatment of SCA," Ware said. "If hydroxyurea can successfully substitute for transfusions in children who already have cerebrovascular disease and damage to their brains, we will be very interested in also seeing if the drug can prevent this process as well. That would spare children with SCA from suffering first strokes and greatly improve their lives." St. Jude Children's Research Hospital |
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| Related Sickle Cell Anemia Current Events and Sickle Cell Anemia News Articles Governor recognizes stem cell research at Einstein Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University hosted a roundtable discussion on stem cell research with New York Governor David A. Paterson today. Faster, cheaper way to find disease genes in human genome passes initial test University of Washington (UW) researchers have successfully developed a novel genome-analysis strategy for more rapid, lower cost discovery of possible gene-disease links. NHLBI stops study of pulmonary hypertension treatment in sickle cell patients The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) of the National Institutes of Health has stopped a clinical trial testing a drug treatment for pulmonary hypertension in adults with sickle cell disease nearly one year early due to safety concerns. Embryo's heartbeat drives blood stem cell formation Biologists have long wondered why the embryonic heart begins beating so early, before the tissues actually need to be infused with blood. Simulated gene therapy In a recent issue of The Journal of Chemical Physics, published by the American Institute of Physics (AIP), a group of researchers at the University of California, Berkeley and Los Alamos National Laboratory describe the first comprehensive, molecular-level numerical study of gene therapy. Studies examine quality of care for hospitalized sickle cell disease patients A study assessing the quality of care for patients with sickle cell disease in a variety of hospital settings will be presented at a press conference on Saturday, December 6, at 9:30 a.m., during the 50th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Hematology in San Francisco, CA. Ultrasound screening helps prevent stroke in children with sickle cell disease Screening with an ultrasound machine has proved highly successful in preventing stroke among children with sickle cell disease, by identifying children who are then preventively treated with blood transfusions. Consortium develops new method to manipulate genetic material A multi-institutional team of researchers, including scientists at the University of Minnesota Medical School, have developed a powerful tool for genomic research and medicine. Effective treatment for sickle cell underused by doctors Uncertainties about proper use and possible long-term effects of hydroxyurea in the treatment of sickle cell anemia may be wrongly influencing doctors to avoid prescribing it to those in serious need, according to results of a literature review by specialists at Johns Hopkins. Researchers at UCLA engineering discover theoretical model to predict jamming Researchers at the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science have come up with a theoretical model to predict when granular materials become jammed. More Sickle Cell Anemia Current Events and Sickle Cell Anemia News Articles |
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