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Sickle Cell Trait in Football Players

University of South Florida logo

University of South Florida

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Sickle Cell Trait

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01891877
NCAA (Other Identifier)
SCT in Football

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study will look at the five different types of sickle cell and their relation to self-reported ill health to determine whether or not one or two of the sickle cell haplotypes are correlated with worse health outcomes. Participants can do complete the study in under half an hour in the privacy of their own home.

Full description

Sickle cell anemia is a disease which results from the inheritance of two hemoglobin S (Hb S) genes. Sickle-cell anemia individuals are referred to as Hb SS patients, and are known to suffer from a variety of life-threatening symptoms. Paramount in the clinical complications of sickle cell patients is the "sickle-cell crisis". If a crisis is not stopped by prompt medical attention, it may result in death. It is becoming increasingly clear that some sickle cell anemic patients have more benign clinical profiles than do others. The genetic reason for such clinical differences has been well determined: although the mutation that changes the "normal" hemoglobin gene is the same in all patients, the genetic material outside of the gene influences how the gene is expressed. This genetic material is referred to as the beta-globin haplotype. Carriers of the sickle cell gene are referred to as Hb AS individuals. Hb AS carriers usually have a normal life free of the clinical problems associated with the disease suffered by sickle cell patients. However, it is becoming increasingly clear that under strenuous situations, some Hb AS carriers do experience heat illness and other life threatening problems while others do not. The purpose of this project is to determine if there is a genetic reason for why some athlete carriers of the sickle cell trait experience heat illness, while others do not. Although the genetic reason for the different clinical outcomes of sickle cell anemic patients is now well understood (different haplotypes result in different disease courses), the possibility that the same haplotypes might be the reason why some sickle cell carriers have worse clinical profiles has never been explored. In this project we will work with a sickle-cell trait registry of athletes, and we will test the haplotypes of Hb AS athletes who have and who have not had heat illness. Our study is the first to attempt to clarify if there is a genetic reason for this occurrence. Total participation time for the study is thirty minutes or less. Information provided by the participant will be analyzed within one year of participation. Deidentified results will be kept for five years, per the University of South Florida's Institutional Review Board protocol, and will be available upon request to the principal investigator. Participants can do complete the study in under half an hour in the privacy of their own home.

Enrollment

20 estimated patients

Sex

Male

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • over the age of 18
  • male
  • has previously played or currently plays high school or college football
  • carries sickle cell trait

Exclusion criteria

  • under the age of 18
  • female
  • does not carry sickle cell trait
  • has not played or does not play high school or college football

Trial design

20 participants in 1 patient group

Current or Former Football Players
Description:
Any former or current high school or college football players who carries sickle cell trait.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Lorena Madrigal, PhD Anthropology; Carroll N Flansburg, in progress

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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