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result(s) for
"Sarnaik, Sharada"
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The spleen in the sickling disorders: an update
by
Rabah, Raja
,
Khatib, Rana
,
Sarnaik, Sharada A.
in
Anemia, Sickle Cell - complications
,
Anemia, Sickle Cell - physiopathology
,
Anemia, Sickle Cell - therapy
2009
In early life, patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) can have acute, life-threatening emergencies related to splenic hypofunction (overwhelming bacterial sepsis), as well as anemic crises from acute splenic sequestration because of sudden pooling of blood in the spleen. The landmark penicillin prophylaxis study in 1985 showed a remarkable decrease in mortality from sepsis in young children with SCD who were treated with oral penicillin prophylaxis compared to placebo. Since that study, newborns are screened for SCD and placed on oral penicillin prophylaxis in nearly all of the United States, as well as in other countries where the disease is highly prevalent. The previously described permanent, complete and nearly universal “autosplenectomy” emerging by late childhood or early adulthood is now challenged by recent findings of reversibility of splenic dysfunction by the antisickling drug hydroxyurea or by successful allogeneic stem cell transplantation, even in older patients. Imaging techniques for hypofunction of the spleen are the most commonly used modalities to guide the clinician in decisions regarding medical or surgical management.
Journal Article
A Phase 3 Trial of l-Glutamine in Sickle Cell Disease
by
Osunkwo, Ifeyinwa
,
Blake, Osbourne A
,
Lasky, Joseph L
in
Adenine
,
Administration, Oral
,
Adolescent
2018
A year-long, phase 3, randomized trial involving patients with sickle cell disease showed that the median number of pain crises was 25% lower and the median number of hospitalizations was 33% lower with
l
-glutamine supplementation than with placebo.
Journal Article
Hydroxycarbamide versus chronic transfusion for maintenance of transcranial doppler flow velocities in children with sickle cell anaemia—TCD With Transfusions Changing to Hydroxyurea (TWiTCH): a multicentre, open-label, phase 3, non-inferiority trial
2016
For children with sickle cell anaemia and high transcranial doppler (TCD) flow velocities, regular blood transfusions can effectively prevent primary stroke, but must be continued indefinitely. The efficacy of hydroxycarbamide (hydroxyurea) in this setting is unknown; we performed the TWiTCH trial to compare hydroxyurea with standard transfusions.
TWiTCH was a multicentre, phase 3, randomised, open-label, non-inferiority trial done at 26 paediatric hospitals and health centres in the USA and Canada. We enrolled children with sickle cell anaemia who were aged 4–16 years and had abnormal TCD flow velocities (≥200 cm/s) but no severe vasculopathy. After screening, eligible participants were randomly assigned 1:1 to continue standard transfusions (standard group) or hydroxycarbamide (alternative group). Randomisation was done at a central site, stratified by site with a block size of four, and an adaptive randomisation scheme was used to balance the covariates of baseline age and TCD velocity. The study was open-label, but TCD examinations were read centrally by observers masked to treatment assignment and previous TCD results. Participants assigned to standard treatment continued to receive monthly transfusions to maintain 30% sickle haemoglobin or lower, while those assigned to the alternative treatment started oral hydroxycarbamide at 20 mg/kg per day, which was escalated to each participant's maximum tolerated dose. The treatment period lasted 24 months from randomisation. The primary study endpoint was the 24 month TCD velocity calculated from a general linear mixed model, with the non-inferiority margin set at 15 cm/s. The primary analysis was done in the intention-to-treat population and safety was assessed in all patients who received at least one dose of assigned treatment. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01425307.
Between Sept 20, 2011, and April 17, 2013, 159 patients consented and enrolled in TWiTCH. 121 participants passed screening and were then randomly assigned to treatment (61 to transfusions and 60 to hydroxycarbamide). At the first scheduled interim analysis, non-inferiority was shown and the sponsor terminated the study. Final model-based TCD velocities were 143 cm/s (95% CI 140–146) in children who received standard transfusions and 138 cm/s (135–142) in those who received hydroxycarbamide, with a difference of 4·54 (0·10–8·98). Non-inferiority (p=8·82 × 10−16) and post-hoc superiority (p=0·023) were met. Of 29 new neurological events adjudicated centrally by masked reviewers, no strokes were identified, but three transient ischaemic attacks occurred in each group. Magnetic resonance brain imaging and angiography (MRI and MRA) at exit showed no new cerebral infarcts in either treatment group, but worsened vasculopathy in one participant who received standard transfusions. 23 severe adverse events in nine (15%) patients were reported for hydroxycarbamide and ten serious adverse events in six (10%) patients were reported for standard transfusions. The most common serious adverse event in both groups was vaso-occlusive pain (11 events in five [8%] patients with hydroxycarbamide and three events in one [2%] patient for transfusions).
For high-risk children with sickle cell anaemia and abnormal TCD velocities who have received at least 1 year of transfusions, and have no MRA-defined severe vasculopathy, hydroxycarbamide treatment can substitute for chronic transfusions to maintain TCD velocities and help to prevent primary stroke.
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health.
Journal Article
Hydroxycarbamide in very young children with sickle-cell anaemia: a multicentre, randomised, controlled trial (BABY HUG)
by
Thompson, Bruce W
,
Goldsmith, Jonathan C
,
Rogers, Zora R
in
Acute Chest Syndrome - etiology
,
Acute Chest Syndrome - prevention & control
,
adults
2011
Sickle-cell anaemia is associated with substantial morbidity from acute complications and organ dysfunction beginning in the first year of life. Hydroxycarbamide substantially reduces episodes of pain and acute chest syndrome, admissions to hospital, and transfusions in adults with sickle-cell anaemia. We assessed the effect of hydroxycarbamide therapy on organ dysfunction and clinical complications, and examined laboratory findings and toxic effects.
This randomised trial was undertaken in 13 centres in the USA between October, 2003, and September, 2009. Eligible participants had haemoglobin SS (HbSS) or haemoglobin Sβ
0thalassaemia, were aged 9–18 months at randomisation, and were not selected for clinical severity. Participants received liquid hydroxycarbamide, 20 mg/kg per day, or placebo for 2 years. Randomisation assignments were generated by the medical coordinating centre by a pre-decided schedule. Identical appearing and tasting formulations were used for hydroxycarbamide and placebo. Patients, caregivers, and coordinating centre staff were masked to treatment allocation. Primary study endpoints were splenic function (qualitative uptake on
99Tc spleen scan) and renal function (glomerular filtration rate by
99mTc-DTPA clearance). Additional assessments included blood counts, fetal haemoglobin concentration, chemistry profiles, spleen function biomarkers, urine osmolality, neurodevelopment, transcranial Doppler ultrasonography, growth, and mutagenicity. Study visits occurred every 2–4 weeks. Analysis was by intention to treat. The trial is registered with
ClinicalTrials.gov, number
NCT00006400.
96 patients received hydroxycarbamide and 97 placebo, of whom 83 patients in the hydroxycarbamide group and 84 in the placebo group completed the study. Significant differences were not seen between groups for the primary endpoints (19 of 70 patients with decreased spleen function at exit in the hydroxycarbamide group
vs 28 of 74 patients in the placebo group, p=0·21; and a difference in the mean increase in DTPA glomerular filtration rate in the hydroxycarbamide group versus the placebo group of 2 mL/min per 1·73 m
2, p=0·84). Hydroxycarbamide significantly decreased pain (177 events in 62 patients
vs 375 events in 75 patients in the placebo group, p=0·002) and dactylitis (24 events in 14 patients
vs 123 events in 42 patients in the placebo group, p<0·0001), with some evidence for decreased acute chest syndrome, hospitalisation rates, and transfusion. Hydroxyurea increased haemoglobin and fetal haemoglobin, and decreased white blood-cell count. Toxicity was limited to mild-to-moderate neutropenia.
On the basis of the safety and efficacy data from this trial, hydroxycarbamide can now be considered for all very young children with sickle-cell anaemia.
The US National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; and the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.
Journal Article
Sickle cell diseases: current therapeutic options and potential pitfalls in preventive therapy for transcranial Doppler abnormalities
by
Sarnaik, Sharada A.
in
Anemia, Sickle Cell - complications
,
Anemia, Sickle Cell - therapy
,
Cerebrovascular Circulation
2005
Sickle cell disease is an important and common hemoglobinopathy that is highly prevalent worldwide. Recent clinical research has clarified the natural history, and newer, exciting therapeutic maneuvers have been developed, including stem cell transplantation, a curative, albeit toxic strategy. There is a need for early identification of a severe disease profile so that these newer therapeutic interventions can be offered before severe organ damage occurs. Investigative methodologic research by radiologists to discover early organ damage can be important to successful planning of treatment protocols. Stroke is one complication, which, if diagnosed early, can be satisfactorily managed with more aggressive therapy. The advent of transcranial Doppler and MRI have greatly increased the ability to detect early CNS disease.
Journal Article
Stroke in sickle cell disease
by
Serajee, Fatema J.
,
Altinok, Deniz
,
Huq, A.H.M. Mahbubul
in
Flow velocity
,
Hemorrhage
,
Neurology
2010
Abstract
Sickle cell disease (SCD) is the second commonest cause of stroke in the pediatric population. Cerebrovascular complications in SCD may involve large or small vessels and present as large infarctions, intracranial or subarachnoid hemorrhage, moyamoya disease or silent infarcts. Predictors of stroke in SCD include high blood flow velocity on transcranial Doppler, low hemoglobin value, absence of alpha-thalassemia, high white cell count, hypertension, silent brain infarction, and a history of chest crisis. Regular blood transfusions are used for primary and secondary prevention of stroke in SCD. Other management strategies include stem cell transplantation, and surgery for moyamoya disease.
Journal Article
Determining the longitudinal validity and meaningful differences in HRQL of the PedsQL™ Sickle Cell Disease Module
by
Leonard, Julie
,
Chumpitazi, Corrie E.
,
Mahajan, Prashant
in
Acute pain crises
,
Adolescent
,
Analysis
2017
Background
Detecting change in health status over time and ascertaining meaningful changes are critical elements when using health-related quality of life (HRQL) instruments to measure patient-centered outcomes. The PedsQL™ Sickle Cell Disease module, a disease specific HRQL instrument, has previously been shown to be valid and reliable. Our objectives were to determine the longitudinal validity of the PedsQL™ Sickle Cell Disease module and the change in HRQL that is meaningful to patients.
Methods
An ancillary study was conducted utilizing a multi-center prospective trial design. Children ages 4–21 years with sickle cell disease admitted to the hospital for an acute painful vaso-oclusive crisis were eligible. Children completed HRQL assessments at three time points (in the Emergency Department, one week post-discharge, and at return to baseline (One to three months post-discharge). The primary outcome was change in HRQL score. Both distribution (effect size, standard error of measurement (SEM)) and anchor (global change assessment) based methods were used to determine the longitudinal validity and meaningful change in HRQL. Changes in HRQL meaningful to patients were identified by anchoring the change scores to the patient’s perception of global improvement in pain.
Results
Moderate effect sizes (0.20–0.80) were determined for all domains except the Communication I and Cognitive Fatigue domains. The value of 1 SEM varied from 3.8–14.6 across all domains. Over 50% of patients improved by at least 1 SEM in Total HRQL score. A HRQL change score of 7–10 in the pain domains represented minimal perceived improvement in HRQL and a HRQL change score of 18 or greater represented moderate to large improvement.
Conclusions
The PedsQL™ Sickle Cell Disease Module is responsive to changes in HRQL in patients experiencing acute painful vaso-occlusive crises. The study data establish longitudinal validity and meaningful change parameters for the PedsQL™ Sickle Cell Disease Module.
Trial Registration
ClinicalTrials.gov (study identifier:
NCT01197417
). Date of registration: 08/30/2010
Journal Article
Outpatient Treatment of Febrile Children with Sickle Cell Disease
1994
To the Editor:
The study by Wilimas et al. (Aug. 12 issue)
1
was well designed and addressed an important clinical problem. I cannot, however, agree with the authors' conclusion that intravenous ceftriaxone has been proved to be an appropriate treatment for selected febrile children with sickle cell disease. Since none of the randomized patients had sepsis, the investigators proved that outpatient ceftriaxone is an effective treatment for children without sepsis. In view of the apparent ability of the selection criteria to distinguish children with sepsis from other patients, it may be concluded that the optimal outpatient treatment for children at . . .
Journal Article