Mboizi Vincent, Nabaggala Catherine, Munube Deogratias, Ssenkusu John M, Kasirye Phillip, Kamya Samson, Kawooya Michael G, Boehme Amelia, Minja Frank, Mupere Ezekiel, Opoka Robert, Rosano Caterina, Green Nancy S, Idro Richard
Global Health Uganda, Kampala, Uganda.
Department of Paediatrics and Child Health, Makerere University College of Health Sciences, Kampala, Uganda.
medRxiv. 2024 Jan 13:2024.01.12.24301208. doi: 10.1101/2024.01.12.24301208.
Children with sickle cell anemia (SCA) in Sub-Saharan Africa are at high risk of sickle cerebrovascular injury (SCVI). Hydroxyurea, a commonly used disease-modifying therapy, may prevent or decrease SCVI for reduced incident stroke, stroke risk and potentially cognitive dysfunction. We aim to test the impact of daily hydroxyurea therapy on these outcomes in Ugandan children with SCA. We hypothesize that hydroxyurea therapy over 36 months will prevent, stabilize or improve these complications of SCA.
The BRAIN SAFE II study is an open-label, single-arm trial of daily hydroxyurea for 270 children with SCA (HbSS) in Uganda, ages 3-9 years. Following baseline assessments, participants began hydroxyurea therapy and clinically followed per local guidelines. Standard hydroxyurea dose is escalated to maximum tolerated dose (MTD). SCVI is assessed by cerebral arterial velocity using Doppler ultrasound, with cognitive function determined by formal neurocognitive testing (primary outcomes). Structural SCVI is assessed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and angiography (MRA) in a sub-sample of 90 participants ages ≥5 years, along with biomarkers of anemia, inflammation and malnutrition (secondary outcomes). At trial midpoint (18 months) and completion (36 months), primary outcomes will be compared to participants' baseline to determine hydroxyurea impact and relationships to secondary outcomes.
This open-label, single-arm trial will examine the impact of hydroxyurea on preventing or ameliorating SCA SCVI in children, assessed by reducing incident stroke, stroke risk and neurocognitive dysfunction. Trial results will provide important insight into the role of hydroxyurea therapy on critical manifestations of SCVI in children with SCA.
撒哈拉以南非洲地区的镰状细胞贫血(SCA)患儿面临镰状脑血管损伤(SCVI)的高风险。羟基脲是一种常用的病情改善疗法,可能预防或减少SCVI,从而降低中风发生率、中风风险以及潜在的认知功能障碍。我们旨在测试每日羟基脲疗法对乌干达SCA患儿这些结局的影响。我们假设36个月的羟基脲疗法将预防、稳定或改善SCA的这些并发症。
BRAIN SAFE II研究是一项开放标签、单臂试验,对乌干达270名3至9岁的SCA(HbSS)患儿每日使用羟基脲进行治疗。在基线评估之后,参与者开始羟基脲治疗,并按照当地指南进行临床随访。标准羟基脲剂量逐步增加至最大耐受剂量(MTD)。通过多普勒超声测量脑动脉速度评估SCVI,通过正式的神经认知测试确定认知功能(主要结局)。在90名年龄≥5岁的参与者子样本中,通过磁共振成像(MRI)和血管造影(MRA)评估结构性SCVI,同时评估贫血、炎症和营养不良的生物标志物(次要结局)。在试验中点(18个月)和结束时(36个月),将主要结局与参与者的基线进行比较,以确定羟基脲的影响以及与次要结局的关系。
这项开放标签、单臂试验将通过降低中风发生率、中风风险和神经认知功能障碍来检验羟基脲对预防或改善儿童SCA的SCVI的影响。试验结果将为羟基脲疗法在SCA患儿SCVI关键表现中的作用提供重要见解。