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Participants are being asked to take part in this clinical trial, a type of research study, because investigators want to learn more about oxygen usage in the brain. Patients diagnosed with sickle cell disease are at risk for difficulties with thinking and academic skills. The brain requires a consistent supply of oxygen for normal function, but this supply is reduced among patients with sickle cell disease. The development of new treatments to improve cerebrovascular functioning is needed to limit these difficulties. Transcranial photobiomodulation (i.e., light stimulation to the brain) has the potential to improve cerebrovascular and neurocognitive functioning among patients with sickle cell disease.Participants will be selected randomly (like the flip of a coin) to receive either active light therapy or placebo (no active light treatment).
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Patients diagnosed with sickle cell disease (SCD) of any genotype, between the ages of 8-17 years will be recruited through the Sickle Cell Clinical Research and Intervention Program (SCCRIP). Recruited participants will be selected randomly to receive TPBM (CytonBrite, 1064nm LED) or a sham condition using a randomized block design involving 2 (TPBM): 1(sham) randomization. The groups will be divided by genotype (SS/SB0 and SC/SB+) and age (8-12 and 13-17) such that there will be four subgroups that are randomly assigned.
Participants will be asked to complete a baseline side effects questionnaire (modified Patient Report of Incidence of Side Effects and Visual Analog Pain Scale) and caregivers will complete a medical/demographics questionnaire.
After completing the baseline questionnaires, a functional near infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) headband (NIRSport2) will be fitted for the participant based on the circumference of their head. The cap is then fitted with emitters and detectors to capture changes in cerebral hemodynamics in the frontal cortex.
Prior to wearing the headband, participants will complete an assessment to estimate overall intellectual abilities based on their vocabulary skills (NIH Picture Vocabulary Test). Then the participants will complete four cognitive measures associated with frontal functioning while wearing the fNIRS headband. These tasks measure processing speed and working memory and take approximately 5-6 minutes each to complete.
Photobiomodulation using the CytonBrite PBM device will be performed immediately following the initial fNIRS exam. The CytonBrite headpiece will be placed on the head. The six LED probes will be positioned over the forehead, and the probes will be adjusted per device specifications to maximize light penetration to the prefrontal cortex. The patient will receive 10 minutes of continuous wave light or sham.
Following stimulation or sham, the fNIRS cap will be placed in the same location and the same cognitive measures will be completed (4 measures of frontal functioning). Changes in cerebral hemodynamics and cognitive performance on four measures (2 working memory and 2 processing speed tasks) from pre- to post-stimulation will be compared between the two groups. This will take about 30 minutes.
The cap will be removed, and the caregiver and the participant will complete brief rating forms assessing perceived feasibility and acceptability of the intervention (FIM and AIM). Additionally, participants will be asked to report any side effects they experienced immediately following the intervention.
Among the participants that were randomized to TPBM, the sample (both caregiver and participant) will be further randomized to complete a brief (~10-15 minutes) interview assessing the perceived feasibility and acceptability of the TPBM intervention.
Approximately one-week post-intervention, participants will complete the side effects questionnaires virtually.
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60 participants in 4 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Andrew Heitzer, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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