| Literature DB >> 26303626 |
Jo Howard1, Baba Inusa2, Christina Liossi3, Eufemia Jacob4, Patrick B Murphy5,6, Nicholas Hart7,8, Johanna Gavlak9,10, Sati Sahota11, Maria Chorozoglou12, Carol Nwosu13, Maureen Gwam14, Atul Gupta15, David C Rees16,17, Swee Lay Thein18,19, Isabel C Reading20,21, Fenella J Kirkham22,23,24, Man Yeung Edith Cheng25,26.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sickle cell anaemia (SCA) is an inherited disorder of haemoglobin. Patients experience long-term health care problems, affecting quality of life (QOL) including frequent acute pain, which is difficult to document in trials except as hospital admissions. Pilot data suggests that overnight respiratory support, either supplementary oxygen or auto-adjusting continuous positive airways pressure (APAP), is safe and may have clinical benefit. This pilot trial aims to determine which intervention is more acceptable to participants and whether there are other advantages of one over the other, e.g. in respiratory function or haematological parameters, before conducting the Phase 2 trial of overnight respiratory support funded by the National Institutes of Health Research. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26303626 PMCID: PMC4548303 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-015-0883-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Protocol details
| Protocol title: | Prevention of Morbidity in sickle cell disease 2a – pilot phase (Improvement of Pain and Quality of Life in Participant with Sickle Cell Disease with Nocturnal Oxygen Therapy or Auto | |
|---|---|---|
| Protocol number and date | Protocol Version 8 5February 2014 | |
| Protocol chair/principal investigator: | Fenella Kirkham MD FRCPCH | |
| Professor of Paediatric Neurology | ||
| Institute of Child Health (University College London) | ||
| Office: 44 207 | ||
| Fax: 44 207 | ||
| Email: fenella.kirkham@ucl.ac.uk | ||
| Protocol team/co | Prof David Rees MD MRCP MRCPath | Dr Jo Howard MRCP FRCPath |
| Professor in Paediatric Haematology | Consultant Haematologist | |
| King's College Hospital | Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust | |
| Tel: 0207 346 3242 | Tel: 0207 188 2741 | |
| Fax 0207 346 4689 | Fax 0207 188 2728 | |
| Email: david.rees@kingsch.nhs.uk | Email: jo.howard@gstt.nhs.uk | |
| Dr Baba Inusa MB FRCPCH | Prof Swee Lay Thein | |
| Consultant Paediatrician, | Professor of Molecular Haematology | |
| Evelina Children’s Hospital, | King’s College Hospital | |
| London SE1 | Tel: 0207 848 5443 | |
| Tel: 020 7177 7177 | sl.thein@kcl.ac.uk | |
| Email: Baba.Inusa@gstt.nhs.uk | ||
| Dr Christina Liossi | Dr Nicholas Hart | |
| Senior Lecturer in Health Psychology | Consultant in Respiratory and Critical Care | |
| University of Southampton | Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS | |
| Tel: 02380594645 | Foundation Trust | |
| Fax | Tel: 0207 188 7608 | |
| Email: cliossi@soton.ac.uk | Email: Nicholas.hart@gstt.nhs.uk | |
| Ms Carol Nwosu | Dr Man Ying Edith Cheng | |
| Chief Executive Officer | Statistician | |
| Sickle Cell and Young Stroke Survivors | University of Southampton | |
| Suite R, 7th Floor, Hannibal House | Research Design Service | |
| London UK | UK | |
| Tel : 0844209292 | Tel: 02380795704 | |
| Email: Carolnwosu@scyss.org | Email: m.y.cheng@soton.ac.uk | |
| Associate Professor | Ms Maria Chorozoglou | |
| Assistant Professor Paediatrics | Snr RF in Health Economics | |
| Department of Nursing | Wessex Institute | |
| University of California | Faculty of Medicine | |
| Tel: 310 267 1823 | University of Southamptom | |
| Email: eufemia@sonnet.ucla.edu | UK | |
| Tel : 02380597457 | ||
| Email: M.Chorozoglou@soton.ac.uk | ||
| Study sites | Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust | |
Participant eligibility criteria for participation in the POMS2a trial
| Inclusion criteria | |
|---|---|
| 1 | Recruitment will be through sickle cell clinics at Guy’s and St Thomas’ (including Evelina Children’s Hospital) |
| 2 | Age > 8 years |
| 3 | Informed consent with assent in accordance with the institutional policies (UK ethical committee) and European or US Federal guidelines must be signed by the participant or participant's parent or legally authorised guardian acknowledging written consent to join the study. Where appropriate, participants < 16 years will be requested to give their assent to join the study |
| 4 | HbSS diagnosed by standard techniques (HPLC, IEF and MS). Participating institutions must submit documentation of the diagnostic haemoglobin analysis |
| 5 | Able to speak and understand English |
| 6 | Participant or parent/guardian able to use iPad mini via wireless |
| Exclusion criteria | |
| 1 | Participant already on overnight respiratory support, or has used it in the past |
| 2 | Hospital admission for acute sickle complication within the past 1 month |
| 3 | Participant with > 6 admissions for acute sickle complications within the past 12 months |
| 4 | Existing respiratory failure |
| 5 | Decompensated cardiac failure |
| 6 | History of severe epistaxis |
| 7 | Trans-sphenoidal surgery, or trauma that could have left a cranio-nasopharyngeal fistula |
| 8 | Perforated ear drum |
| 9 | Bullous lung disease |
| 10 | Bypassed upper airway |
| 11 | Pneumothorax |
| 12 | Participant at increased risk of aspiration |
| 13 | Pneumocephalus has been reported in a participant using nasal Continuous Positive Airways Pressure. Caution should be used when prescribing APAP for susceptible participants such as those with: cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) leaks, abnormalities of the cribriform plate, prior history of head trauma, and/or pneumocephalus |
| 14 | Pregnancy |
| 15 | Participants on chronic blood transfusion regimes, or has had blood transfusion within past 3 months |
| 16 | Any acute or chronic condition which would limit the participant’s ability to complete the study |
| Temporary exclusion criteria | |
| 17 | Sinus or middle ear infection |
Fig. 1Flow chart for the interventions and support from the respiratory physiologist
Laboratory findings to be reported to the sponsor within a maximum of 7 days
| Variables | Measurement level that may be consider as adverse events |
|---|---|
| Haemoglobin | Fall of > 20 g/l from baseline is significant |
| Reticulocytes | 10–100 x 109 fall < 10 × 109 is significant |
| Lactate dehydrogenase | Increase of > 1.5 x from baseline is significant. |
| Bilirubin | Increase of > 1.5 x from baseline is significant |
| Creatinine | Increase of > 1.5 from baseline is significant |
| Erythropoeitin | Fall of > 50 % from baseline is significant |
| Oximetry | Decrease in baseline oximetry of > 3 % from baseline |
The relationship between an adverse event and the intervention
| Type of adverse events and relationship to the intervention | Description |
|---|---|
| Unrelated | • No temporal association to study intervention |
| • An alternative aetiology has been established | |
| • The event does not follow the known pattern of response to study intervention | |
| • The event does not reappear or worsen with re-challenge | |
| Unlikely to be related | • No temporal association to study intervention |
| • Event could readily be produced by clinical state, environmental or other interventions | |
| • The event does not follow the known pattern of response to study intervention | |
| • The event does not reappear or worsen with re-challenge | |
| Possibly related | • Reasonable temporal relationship to study intervention |
| • The event is not readily produced by clinical state, environmental, or other interventions | |
| • The event follows a known pattern of response to the study intervention or as yet unknown pattern of response | |
| Definitely related | • There is a reasonable temporal relationship to the study intervention |
| • The event is not readily produced by clinical state, environmental, or other interventions | |
| • The event follows a known pattern of response to the study intervention | |
| • The event decreases with de-challenge and recurs with re-challenge | |
| Unassessable | • Anything that does not fall into the above categories |
Details of study flow and duration of each interventions period
| Screening visit | Trial entry (Day 1) | Days 8–14 | Days 15–21 | Days 22–28 | Day 29 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Participant given PIS | x | |||||
| Inclusion/Exclusion reviewed | x | x | ||||
| Consent signed | x | |||||
| Daytime oximetry | x | x | x | |||
| Overnight oximeter issued | x | |||||
| Oximeter collected | x | |||||
| Spirometry | x | x | x | |||
| Lung volume testing (adults) | x | x | x | |||
| Quality of life evaluation | x | x | x | |||
| Blood tests/urine tests | x | x | x | |||
| Smartphone issued | x | |||||
| Daily pain diary for next week | x | x | x | x | ||
| Intervention 1 commenced | x | |||||
| Sleep physiologist to review participant at home to set up intervention 1, review participant and adverse events | x | |||||
| Intervention 1 stopped (courier to pick up) | x | |||||
| Intervention 2 commenced | x | |||||
| Sleep physiologist to review participant at home to set up intervention 2, review participant and adverse events | x | |||||
| Intervention 2 stopped (courier to pick up) | x | |||||
| Qualitative interview with participant and parent/guardian | x | x | ||||
| Medical/nursing review of compliance and adverse event reporting | x | x |
Normal measurement range
| Parameters | Normal measurement and range |
|---|---|
| Pain diary | Pain rates whilst receiving the intervention will be reviewed with baseline pain rates |
| Haemoglobin | 130–170 g/l normal range in men, 120–150 g/l in women, 115–145 g/l in children |
| Haemoglobin F % | 0–1.5 % |
| Reticulocytes | 10–100 x 109 |
| Lactate dehydrogenase | 24–280 IU/l |
| Bilirubin | 0–21 μmol/l |
| Creatinine | 45–85 μmol/l |
| Erythropoietin | 5–25 IU/l |
| Daytime oximetry | >94 % |