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Substudy of CADRE: for People With Extreme Phenotype: BIOCADRE

A Substudy of the CADRE Study: Determination of Clinical Markers in Patients With Extreme Sickle Cell Disease Phenotype

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Observational
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03352986
Acronym
BIOCADRE
Enrollment
300
Registered
2017-11-24
Start date
2017-05-15
Completion date
2019-12-31
Last updated
2017-11-24

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Sickle Cell Disease

Keywords

Sickle cell disease, anemia, Africa

Brief summary

BIOCADRE is a CADRE substudy and aims to characterize more precisely the sickle cell patients with extreme phenotype.

Detailed description

Sickle cell disease (SCD) is the most frequent monogenic disease in the world, due to a unique mutation on the β-globin gene. Most affected individuals live in sub-Saharan Africa, yet, the natural history of the disease in Africa remains largely unknown. SCD usually presents in childhood and is characterized by the association of a chronic hemolytic anemia with episodes of acute vaso-occlusive events and progressive vascular organ damage. SCD is now widely recognized as a vascular disease with marked endothelial dysfunction. Hemolysis probably plays a key role by reducing NO bioavailability, but other involved mechanisms are not fully understood. The project aims at better understanding SCD chronic vascular complications and in particular to explore extensively the different mechanisms associated with hemolysis. This will be addressed through both an epidemiological approach and a hypotheses-driven pathophysiological approach. On the one hand, a descriptive and analytic epidemiological study will isolate clusters of clinical, functional and usual biological phenotypes in SCD patients and look for new mechanistic and biological markers predictive of chronic vascular complications in SCD with SS phenotype. Investigators will specifically investigate i) microcirculation functions using peripheral arterial tonometry, ii) blood and plasma viscosities, iii) level of plasma blood cell derived microparticles, free hemoglobin, and the free heme content of erythrocytes-derived microparticles and expression of Duffy erythrocyte antigen, the unique erythroid receptor for chemokines. One the other hand, investigators will test novel markers and modifiers of hemolysis and heme metabolism and assess their relationship with inflammation and vascular phenotypes.These different biomarkers will be compared between the selected subgroups of patients with extreme vascular phenotype. Methods: The project involves a transversal case control study, nested in the CADRE cohort, recently built up by Partner 1 and African collaborators. CADRE is the largest ongoing epidemiological cohort, including 4,300 SCD patients and 1,000 controls in five west and central African countries, in which various chronic complications of SCD have already been registered. The present second phase study will be conducted in the centres of Dakar and Bamako. Patients' selection will be performed in the existing database to obtain 6 subgroups of 40 SS patients with one of the main vascular chronic complications or none of them, for a total of 240 patients. Selected patients will be recalled during one year in parallel in the 2 recruiting centres. Clinical phenotyping, usual biology, functional microvascular functions (peripheral arterial tonometry), and blood/plasma viscosities analyses will be performed in the African recruiting centres after training of technicians, PhD and MD students by the French partners. Plasma samples, microparticles and extracellular DNA, will be prepared and frozen for further analyses in the partner's laboratories. DNA will be collected for each subject. A principal component analysis will isolate clusters of clinical complications, functional and biological markers and a multivariate logistic regression will quantify the effect of these markers on the risk of vasculopathy, with adjustment on all known SCD modifying factors. Expected results: 1) The identification of high risk SCD patients for chronic vascular complications using new biomarkers, 2) A better understanding of chronic vascular disease process at the mechanistic and biological (viscosity, hemolysis, erythrocyte derived microparticles, inflammatory cytokines and receptors) levels, 3) The identification of endophenotypes and constitution of DNA bank for further genetic studies.

Interventions

biological analysis will be performed in the 6 groups of patients

peripheral arterial tonometry will be performed in the 6 groups of patients

Sponsors

Institut National de la Santé Et de la Recherche Médicale, France
CollaboratorOTHER_GOV
Cardiologie et Développement
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Observational model
COHORT
Time perspective
PROSPECTIVE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
10 Years to No maximum

Inclusion criteria

* sickle cell patients with extreme phenotypes: SS-hemoglobin

Exclusion criteria

* transfusion in the previous 2 months * vaso-occlusive crisis in the previous 15 days * infection in the previous 8 days

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Description of microcirculation by peripheral arterial tonometry1 yearEndoPAT2000®, Itamar Medical Ltd,

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Dosage of microparticles1 yearIn plasma: microparticles of erythrocytic, platelet, monocytic, neutrophilic and endothelial origin by flow cytometry
Determination of free hemoglobin1 yearIn plasma
Measurement of neutrophil extracellular trap (NET)1 yearIn plasma
Measure of blood viscosities1 yearIn whole blood by viscosimeter
Genotyping of the alpha-globin gene associated with persistence of fetal hemoglobin1 yearIn saliva DNA
Genotyping of the polymorphisms associated with persistence of fetal hemoglobin1 yearIn saliva DNA
Measurement of proinflammatory cytokines by ELISA1 yearIn plasma by ELISA

Countries

Mali, Senegal

Contacts

Primary ContactBrigitte Ranque, MD
brigitte.ranque@aphp.fr0156092772

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026