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Sickle Cell Hemoglobinopathies and Bone Health

U

UConn Health

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Sickle Cell Trait
Sickle Cell Disease

Treatments

Other: Healthy volunteers without SCT
Other: Volunteers with SCD
Other: Healthy volunteers with SCT

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02306993
14-136-6

Details and patient eligibility

About

This research study has two purposes. The first purpose is to determine whether having sickle cell trait (SCT) is a risk factor for the development of bone thinning at an earlier age than expected. Nearly 10% of African Americans (AA) carry sickle cell trait and most of them are unaware of it. African Americans are less likely to develop thin bones than whites, but if they sustain a bone fracture, they are more likely to die from it. We believe having sickle cell trait may lead to bone thinning and predispose a subset of African Americans to dangerously thin bones. The second purpose is to try to understand why individuals with sickle cell disease (SCD) have thinner bones than healthy individuals do. Doctors have already discovered that people with sickle cell disease have very thin bones, but they have not determined why. Our study will try to identify whether the bone thinning is from the body not making enough bone or from the body losing bone once it is made.

Full description

SCD is a hereditary disease arising only when two parents carrying sickle cell trait (SCT) conceive a child. SCT is clinically silent but very common in African Americans with a ~10% prevalence, although most carriers are unaware of their status. There are no data on bone mineral density (BMD) or vitamin D status in these individuals. Although it is clear that those with SCD have accelerated bone thinning the effect of SCT on bone metabolism or fractures has not been studied. Although the incidence of hip fracture in AA women is about half that of white women, the etiology and risk factors of fractures in AA women are not clearly defined, and it is intriguing to postulate that SCT may have a relationship to bone metabolism and fracture risk in this population, and thus contribute to racial disparity. We hypothesize that the mechanisms underlying altered bone homeostasis in SCD are different than in the general population but perhaps similar to those with SCT. We also hypothesize that SCT is a state of reduced bone mineralization which may contribute to racially disparate outcomes among AAs with bone fractures. Our objectives are (1) to define the mechanisms of bone loss in SCD and (2) to evaluate parameters of bone metabolism in human subjects with SCT compared to those with normal hemoglobin and those with SCD. We will investigate the effect of SCD and SCT on bone homeostasis in premenopausal AA subjects via serum bone turnover markers, calciotrophic hormones and bone mineral density (BMD) testing. We hypothesize that premenopausal AA women with SCT will have significantly lower BMD and higher serum bone turnover markers than race- and age-matched control AA women. In addition, we will explore Vitamin D status and its relationship to bone turnover and BMD in all three groups. We further postulate that bone homeostasis in SCT subjects will be intermediate between healthy controls and subjects with SCD.

Enrollment

45 estimated patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 45 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age 18-45 years.
  • Female.
  • Regular menstrual periods.
  • Self-identification of African American race.

Exclusion criteria

  • Taking oral contraceptives or medications known to influence bone metabolism (e.g. Glucocorticoids, anti-resorptive or anabolic medications for osteoporosis, pharmacologic Vit D dosing).
  • Known metabolic bone disorder (e.g. uncontrolled thyroid disease, hyperparathyroidism).
  • Pregnant, breast-feeding, or within 3 months post-partum.
  • Taking an investigational drug.

Trial design

45 participants in 3 patient groups

Healthy volunteers without SCT
Description:
Includes Healthy African American female volunteer between the ages of 18 and 45 years without sickle cell trait. Their blood and bone density x-ray will help researchers gain a better understanding of what might be different about the way having sickle cell trait affects bone.
Treatment:
Other: Healthy volunteers without SCT
Healthy volunteers with SCT
Description:
Includes Healthy African American female volunteer between the ages of 18 and 45 years with sickle cell trait. Their blood and bone density x-ray will help researchers gain a better understanding of what might be different about the way having sickle cell trait affects bone.
Treatment:
Other: Healthy volunteers with SCT
Volunteers with SCD
Description:
Healthy African American female volunteer between the ages of 18 and 45 years with sickle cell disease. Their blood and bone density x-ray will help researchers gain a better understanding of what might be different about the way having sickle cell disease affects bone.
Treatment:
Other: Volunteers with SCD

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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