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About
The purpose of this study is to determine whether oral famotidine, a histamine type 2 receptor antagonist already widely used with very few side effects in other indications in children, is effective in reducing endothelial expression of P-selectin in children with sickle cell disease (SCD).
This pilot study will constitute the essential prerequisite for a randomized clinical trial comparing the efficacy of famotidine with that of placebo in the prevention of vaso-occlusive crises in SCD patients.
Full description
Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a frequent and severe hemoglobinopathy, considered the first monogenic disease in the world. It is responsible for chronic hemolytic anemia, painful vaso-occlusive crises secondary to obstruction of the microcirculation by sickled red blood cells adhering to the vascular endothelium, and progressive organ damage secondary to ischemia/reperfusion phenomena.
Although the molecular bases are well known, the pathophysiology is still incompletely understood and therapeutic options remain limited. We have recently demonstrated an increase in plasma histamine levels (associated with mast cell activation) in SCD patients, particularly ≤ 18 years of age, at baseline and even more markedly during vaso-occlusive crises (Allali, Br J Haematol 2019). In vitro, an increase in the adhesion of red blood cells of SCD patients to human endothelial cells after stimulation with histamine has been described, via an increased expression of the adhesion molecule P-selectin. Abolition of this effect in the presence of famotidine, a histamine type 2 (H2) receptor antagonist, suggests that histamine is responsible for an increased adhesion mediated by P-selectin via stimulation of the H2 receptors. Therefore, our hypothesis is that long-term use of oral antihistamine therapy with famotidine may prevent vaso-occlusion by decreasing P-selectin expression by endothelial cells.
The main objective of the study is to assess the effect of famotidine on P-selectin expression after 29 days of oral treatment.
The secondary objectives are:
The experimental design will be a monocentric, prospective, non-comparative, pilot cohort study. The population studied will be that of children aged 1 to 17 years and 10 months, followed at the Necker-Enfants malades hospital for SS or Sβ0 SCD and having presented at least one vaso-occlusive crisis during the year prior to inclusion. All the children included will be treated for 29 days with famotidine in oral suspension, at a dosage of 0.5 mg/kg/12h (with a maximum dose of 80 mg/day, regardless of the patient's weight). Patient recruitment will take place in the General Pediatrics and Infectious Diseases department/SCD Center of the Necker-Enfants malades Hospital in consultation or during hospitalization. The selection visit will take place 3 months before the inclusion visit and the research itself will comprise 3 visits (D0, D29 and D36/End of study).
Treatment will be started on D1, in the morning.
During the inclusion visit will be carried out:
During the follow-up visit at D29, will be carried out:
Famotidine treatment will be discontinued at the end of this research visit. A phone call is scheduled 7 days after stopping treatment to monitor the occurrence of adverse events (i.e. on D36) and will correspond to the end of the research.
The various visits will be carried out by the principal investigator or by his collaborators (registered pediatricians and trained in research from the General Pediatrics and Infectious Diseases Department/SCD Center).
The number of patients to be included will be 30, or 2 to 3 patients/month for 12 months. The total duration of the research will be 13 months and 1 week:
This study of the effect of famotidine on the expression of P-selectin in children with SCD will constitute the essential prerequisite for the performance of a randomized clinical trial comparing the efficacy of famotidine with that of a placebo in the prevention of vaso-occlusive crises.
Oral antihistamine treatment with famotidine, which is already widely used with very few side effects in other indications in children, may constitute an inexpensive, original and innovative therapeutic approach in SCD.
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Within 3 months prior to inclusion:
In the month preceding inclusion:
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30 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Prissile BAKOUBOULA, PhD; Slimane ALLALI, MD, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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