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Arginine Therapy for the Treatment of Pain in Children With Sickle Cell Disease

Arginine Therapy for the Treatment of Pain in Children With Sickle Cell Disease

Recruiting
7-21 years
All
Phase 1/2

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Overview

The purpose of this study is to determine whether giving extra arginine to patients with sickle cell disease seeking treatment for vaso-occlusive painful events (VOE) will decrease pain scores, decrease need for pain medications or decrease length of hospital stay or emergency department visit.

Description

Arginine is a simple amino acid that is found in many foods and is part of the proteins in a human's body. Patients with sickle cell disease have low levels of the amino acid arginine and these low levels may be related to pain episodes. Increasing levels of arginine in the blood may lower pain and/or lower the amount of pain medication (like morphine) that is needed to treated them. It may also decrease the amount of time spent in the hospital.

Available data suggest that, L-arginine is a safe & efficacious intervention with narcotic-sparing effects in pediatric SCD patients with VOE. The addition of a higher loading dose to the standard dose or use of a continuous infusion may provide additional clinical benefits by overcoming multiple mechanisms that limit global arginine bioavailability in SCD.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Established diagnosis of sickle cell disease--Hemoglobin SS (Hb-SS) or Sβᴼ-thalassemia
  • 7-21 years of age
  • Weight >= 25kg (55lbs)
  • Pain requiring medical care in an acute care setting (emergency department (ED), hospital ward, day hospital, clinic) requiring parenteral opioids, not attributable to non-sickle cell causes.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Decision to discharge home from acute care setting.
  • Diagnosis of sickle cell disease with any of the following types: hemoglobin SC disease (HbSC), hemoglobin beta thalassemia (Hb-Beta Thal), hemoglobin SD disease (HbSD), hemoglobin SE disease (HbSE), hemoglobin SO disease (HbSO), hemoglobin AS carrier (Hb AS)
  • Hemoglobin less than 5 gm/dL
  • Immediate Red cell transfusion anticipated
  • Renal dysfunction: Creatinine >1.0 or 2 x baseline
  • Mental status or neurological changes
  • Acute stroke or clinical concern for stroke
  • Pregnancy
  • Allergy to arginine
  • Previous hospitalization < 7 days
  • Use of inhaled nitric oxide, sildenafil or arginine within the last 14 days
  • Not an appropriate candidate in the investigator's judgement

Study details
    Sickle Cell Disease

NCT02447874

Emory University

25 June 2024

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