Comparative Prevalence of Psychiatric Manifestations in Purely Obstetrical Antiphospholipid Syndrome...
Antiphospholipid SyndromeThe main objective of this study is to estimate the lifetime prevalence of major psychiatric disorders (axis I DSM-IV; Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, version IV) in a large sample of patients with developed clinical signs of pure obstetrical antiphospholipid syndrome (suspected APS).
Hydroxychloroquine Versus Placebo: Impact on Thrombotic Relapse in Primary Antiphospholipid Syndrome...
Primary Antiphospholipid SyndromeAntiphospholipid syndrome (APS) combines thrombotic (venous and/or arterial) and/or obstetrical manifestations, along with biological anomalies related to the presence of antiphospholipid antibodies. Despite actual treatment recommended by international guidelines, the relapse rate in APS is high and survival is 65% at 15 years. Hydroxychloroquine has demonstrated its efficacy and benefits in the treatment of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus, but there is no current consensus concerning the efficacy of this treatment in the secondary prevention of thrombotic events in primary APS, even though several in vitro experimental and animal model data, along with several clinical studies have suggested a beneficial effect of this drug in this indication. Considering the prevalence of primary APS in the general population and of the number of clinical events observed in patients with primary APS and receiving conventional treatment with vitamin K anticoagulants (VKA), the consortium expects a minimum clinically relevant difference of 70%. Considering a prevalence of thrombotic events for the entire studied primary APS population of 10% at 2 years, the consortium expects a 70% decrease in thrombotic events under Hydroxychloroquine treatment administered in addition to VKA treatment in primary APS, i.e. a 3% prevalence in the Hydroxychloroquine group at 2 years. The consortium proposes a drug trial, phase III, national multicentric, comparative, randomized, superiority, double-blind, controlled with 2 compared groups (Hydroxychloroquine versus placebo) study. The enrolment period will be 24 months. The main aim of this trial is to comparatively assess at 24 months the number of new thrombotic events (venous and arterial) in primary antiphospholipid syndrome in patients treated with VKA plus Hydroxychloroquine versus VKA plus placebo, in a multicentre, prospective randomized, double-blind, versus placebo study.
Hypercoagulable Phenotype by Thrombinography (in Presence of C Protein Dynamic Inhibitory System)...
Venous ThrombosisThe purpose is to determine the hypercoagulable phenotype by thrombinography associated to an increased risk of symptomatic and objectively confirmed first venous thrombotic event. This is a case-control study in a population with patients having systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and/or antiphospholipid antibodies (APL). Secondary purposes are: To determine the frequency of hypercoagulable phenotype in study population; To analyze the sensibility: consequences of variation of hypercoagulable phenotype threshold on the importance of risk; To identify (genetic and not) factors for hypercoagulable phenotype and their frequency in different groups.
Evaluation of Precision and Accuracy of INR Measurements in a Point of Care Device (OPTIMAL)
Deep Vein ThrombosisAtrial Fibrillation5 moreComparison of capillary whole blood INR determined by LumiraDx Instrument to venous plasma INR determined by laboratory reference method (IL ACL ELITE PRO) for method comparison and assessment of accuracy and bias by regression analysis and other analytical methods.
Multi-organ Screening for Asymptomatic Ischaemia in Antiphospholipid Syndrome
Antiphospholipid SyndromeIntroduction AntiPhospholipid antibody Syndrome (APS) is an acquired autoimmune disorder defined by the presence of persistent thrombosis or obstetric manifestations together with the presence of persistent antiphospholipid antibodies (aPL). Patients are young and at high risk of recurrence. The current challenge is the identification of patients at high risk of organ damage that directly impact morbidity and mortality. Small vessels thrombosis can be asymptomatic but detectable by MRI. Apart from APS, it was shown that the detection of asymptomatic ischemic events identify patients at risk for symptomatic ischemic events. Demonstrating this in patients with APS would prevent thrombotic complications. The investigators' hypothesis is that a significant proportion of patients with APS would have asymptomatic organ involvement. Objectives The primary objective is to determine the frequency of asymptomatic target organ (s) (heart, brain, kidney) in APS patients. Secondary objectives are (i) to determine the frequency of each type of MRI abnormality, (ii) to identify the factors associated with asymptomatic target organ lesion, (iii) to describe the parameters of echocardiography associated with cerebral and cardiac MRI, and (iv) to assess the feasibility of a one-time cardiovascular and brain MRI. Methods and analysis This is a prospective interventional, cross-sectional, non-randomized, monocentric clinical study. The investigators expect to include 50 consecutive patients with APS followed in the department of Vascular Medicine at Nancy University Hospital. Within 15 days post-inclusion, a one-time cardiac and cerebral MRI will be performed. For each patient, the number of target organs involvements will be calculated and the frequencies will be compared by Fisher or chi-2 tests.
Eculizumab to Enable Renal Transplantation in Patients With History of Catastrophic Antiphospholipid...
Antiphospholipid Antibody SyndromeEnd Stage Renal DiseaseCatastrophic Antiphospholipid Antibody Syndrome (CAPS) is a rare condition in which life-threatening blood clots form in multiple organs simultaneously and can lead to multi-organ system failure and death. The causes of CAPS are not entirely understood, but CAPS episodes are often triggered by stressful events such as infections, surgery, or trauma. For patients who survive an episode of CAPS, permanent kidney failure is not uncommon because the kidneys are the organ system most frequently affected in CAPS. Kidney transplantation is the treatment of choice for end-stage kidney disease, but patients with a history of CAPS are exceptionally high-risk kidney transplant recipients because the chance that surgery itself could trigger a life-threatening or transplant-threatening episode of CAPS is significant. As a result, patients with CAPS are not generally considered candidates for transplantation. Despite this, these patients have a severely decreased life-expectancy on dialysis and their long-term survival and quality of life would be greatly increased by a successful kidney transplant. In this trial, a drug called eculizumab will be tested for its ability to prevent CAPS after kidney transplantation in patients with a prior history of CAPS. Eculizumab is an inhibitor of the complement system, which is believed to be important in generating the inflammatory environment that leads to diffuse clotting of blood vessels in CAPS. The investigators hypothesize that by blocking the complement cascade using eculizumab, in conjunction with blocking the coagulation system, that kidney transplantation can be safely and successfully performed in patients with a history of CAPS.
Steroids and Antiphospholipid Syndrome- Related Pregnancy Loss
Antiphospholipid SyndromeDoes the addition of steroids during the first trimester to the standard aspirin + heparin treatment reduce the miscarriage rates in women with antiphospholipid antibodies and recurrent first trimester miscarriage in those who had an unsuccessful pregnancy with aspirin + heparin?
Medium-term Follow-up of Patients With Obstetric Antiphospholipid Syndrome: MRI Study of White Matter...
Antiphospholipid SyndromeThe investigators hypothesize that the white matter of patients with obstetric antiphospholipid syndrome deteriorates over time
Pharmacogenetics of Warfarin in Puerto Ricans.
Atrial FibrillationDeep Vein Thrombosis3 moreWarfarin (Coumadin) is a prescribed "blood thinner" medication used to make the blood less thick in people with high risk of forming blood clots. Despite the various methods to monitor this drug, life-threatening bleeding is a common undesired effect and might result in patient death. Patients starting warfarin therapy may require several weeks or even months to reach the appropriate blood level of warfarin. This blind practice could place the patient at high risk. There are several demographic and clinical factors that significantly influence how much warfarin the patient needs to attain the desired response. Genes, which control hereditary traits, are also important. Now, the investigators know that by using the information encoded in patient's genes the investigators are able to individualize the therapy. Two genes are considered to be involved in warfarin response (CYP2C9 and VKORC1). This study proposes to ascertain what CYP2C9 and VKORC1 variants are present in warfarin-treated Puerto Rican patients. To this purpose, a novel physiogenomic array comprising 384 variants in 222 genes of cardio-metabolic relevance will be used so the investigators are able to determine the structure of the Puerto Rican population in terms of ancestral contributions and how the admixture may impact the prevalence of CYP2C9 and VKORC1 variants. Secondly, the investigators will assess the association of these variants to clinical responses in order to develop a better method of dose estimation. The expected result is the improvement of warfarin therapy in Puerto Ricans. The proposed study will fill a gap in the knowledge of warfarin pharmacogenetics, providing new information on the prevalence of CYP2C9 (metabolism) and VKORC1 (sensitivity) polymorphisms in Puerto Ricans as well as their role in the warfarin response variability observed in this admixed population.
Safety and Efficacy of Anti-Pandemic H1N1 Vaccination in Rheumatic Diseases
Rheumatoid ArthritisSpondyloarthritis10 moreThe prognosis of rheumatic diseases has improved considerably with development of therapy. However, infections are considered the most important cause of morbidity and mortality in this group of patients. One of the ways to prevent such complications is vaccination. In 2009, a new pandemic strain of influenza virus (A/H1N1/2009) has emerged raising major concerns for public health. Patients under immunosuppressive therapy have indication for immunization against influenza virus H1N1. There are, however, concerns about possibility of reactivation of autoimmune diseases, determine adverse events and insufficient immunogenicity in these patients. The lack of studies evaluating the efficacy and safety of the vaccine against influenza A(H1N1)/2009 in these rheumatic patients led to the development of this research. The objectives of this study are to evaluate the humoral response and safety of the vaccine virus A(H1N1)/2009 in immunosuppressed patients with rheumatic diseases compared to healthy controls. We have recruited 400 patients with rheumatoid arthritis, 350 with spondyloarthritis, 1000 with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), 150 with dermatomyositis (DM), 100 with mixed connective tissue disease, 150 with systemic vasculitis, 250 with systemic sclerosis (SSc) , 100 with Sjögren's syndrome, 100 with antiphospholipid syndrome, 100 patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis, 80 with juvenile SLE, and 80 with juvenile DM, followed at our Rheumatology Outpatient Division and Unit Pediatric Rheumatology Children's Institute, HC-FMUSP. The control group was recruited were 200 healthy employees of ICHC-FMUSP. Informed consent was obtained from all participants and the study was approved by the Local Ethical Committee. All subjects were vaccinated against influenza virus A/(H1N1)/2009 (vaccine approved and supplied by Instituto Butantan-São Paulo). Blood samples was collected to measure levels of antibodies inhibiting hemagglutination by influenza virus A (H1N1)/2009 immediately prior to vaccination and 21 to 28 days after vaccination., Participants fulfilled a questionnaire on the immediate side effects of the vaccine. All patients with rheumatoid arthritis, spondyloarthritis, SLE, DM, systemic vasculitis, juvenile idiopathic arthritis, juvenile SLE, and DM were assessed before and 21 days after vaccination for clinical, laboratory parameters of disease activity as well as treatment. Continuous variables will be compared by t-test to evaluate differences between patients with rheumatic diseases versus healthy controls. Differences between categorical variables will be evaluated using the chi-square or Fisher exact test. Statistical significance was set at p<0.05.