Cardiovascular Risk Markers and Response to Statins After Kawasaki Disease
Kawasaki DiseaseThe purpose of this study is to determine whether Chilean children with history of Kawasaki disease have endothelial dysfunction years after the acute phase of the disease, and if this condition can be modified by treatment with statins.
Prevention of Coronary Aneurysms in Kawasaki Syndrome
Cardiovascular DiseasesCoronary Aneurysm2 moreTo test the efficacy of intravenous gamma globulin (IVGG) in preventing coronary artery aneurysms in children with Kawasaki Syndrome.
Multiparametric Echocardiography and Cardiac Biomarkers in Pediatric Inflammatory Heart Diseases...
MyocarditisPediatric Inflammatory Multisystem Syndrome1 moreAcquired inflammatory or infectious cardiac diseases, in pediatrics, include Kawasaki disease, myocarditis, and Covid-19-related Pediatric Multisystemic Inflammatory Syndrome (PIMS). These 3 inflammatory cardiac diseases have clinical, biological, and echographic similarities and differences. Nevertheless their modalities of monitoring, management and evolution are different. The investigators wish to retrospectively analyze biological and echocardiographic data of Kawasaki disease, myocarditis, PIMS patients managed at Nancy Children Hospital from January 1, 2017 to June 31, 2023. The primary objective of this study is to identify, for these 3 pathologies, the prognostic factors of initiation of inotropic support. The secondary objective is to identify the prognostic factors of degradation of ventricular function.
A Blood Test to Diagnose Kawasaki Disease
Kawasaki DiseaseA case-control cohort study is being conducted to develop and validate the performance of a whole blood gene expression qPCR test to distinguish KD from other febrile conditions by collecting whole blood sample from KD patients in the first 7 days of illness and from febrile controls immediately after presentation and before clinical diagnosis is confirmed.
Study of Efficacy and Safety of Canakinumab in Pediatric Patients With Kawasaki Disease
Kawasaki DiseaseThe purpose of this trial is to evaluate whether, in Intravenous Immunoglobulin-naïve or refractory patients diagnosed with active Kawasaki disease, administration of canakinumab controls fever and acute phase reactants.
Methylprednisolone Pulse Therapy for Coronary Artery Dilatation or Aneurysm Formation in Kawasaki...
Mucocutaneous Lymph Node SyndromeIn this study, the investigator plan to prescribe Methylprednisolone pulse therapy in Kawasaki disease patients with coronary artery lesions or aneurysm formation beyond acute stage to investigate the role for vasculitis of KD or regression of dilatation.
A Trial to Evaluate the Efficacy of Immunoglobulin Plus Steroid for Prevention of Coronary Artery...
Kawasaki DiseaseSteroid1 moreBackground: Kawasaki disease (KD), most popular acquired heart disease in childhood, is characterized by diffuse vasculitis, especially on the middle-sized muscular arteries. IVIG and aspirin are currently standard treatment. However, 10-15% of KD patients have poor response to such treatment and suffer from higher risk of coronary involvement. Recently, combination of prednisolone and IVIG has been shown effective to lower the chance of refractory to IVIG treatment and subsequent coronary lesions. However, no randomized trial on the steroid efficacy was ever conducted in Taiwan. Aim: Prospectively randomized open-label trial to evaluate the add-on effect of prednisolone in the refractory KD children. Methods: For the KD patients with fever persisted or relapsed 24 hours after the ending of IVIG infusion, they will be randomized into two group: IVIG group (I) and IVIG + prednisolone group (P). The KD patients in the P group will have in addition to IVIG, oral prednisolone 2mg/kg/day for at least 5 days. The difference in the response rate and percentage of coronary involvement will be compared between I and P groups. Predicted results: We plan to enroll 100 refractory KD patients, 50 patients for each group. We predict the risk of coronary involvement can be reduced from 30% to 15%.
Safety and Vascular Remodelling After BVS Implantation for Stenotic or Occluded Lesions in Children...
Kawasaki DiseaseTo investigate the safety and long-term vascular remodeling after bioresorbable vascular scaffold (BVS) implantation for stenotic or occluded lesion in children or young adults with Kawasaki disease (KD). Background: KD occurs worldwide, most prevalent in Japan and East Asian countries. Coronary artery lesion is the predominant determinant of KD outcome in the long-term. Children with KD with aneurysms at least 6 mm in maximal diameter had a greater than 50% chance of developing a clinically significant stenotic lesion during follow-up. They are at risk of myocardial infarction-related sudden death or congestive heart failure as young adults. Bypass surgery could be the reasonable strategy but the long-term patency of the graft remains unsatisfactory. Percutaneous angioplasty with drug-eluting stents (DES) implantation is the alternative. However, metallic stenting remains problematic in several aspects mainly due to the restriction of vessel expansive remodeling. The novel BVS has the potential to be free from the limitation due to scaffold degradation.
Trial of Atorvastatin on the Persistent Coronary Aneurysm in Children With Kawasaki Disease
Kawasaki DiseaseAneurysm1 moreBackground Kawasaki disease (KD) is characterized by fever, bilateral nonexudative conjunctivitis, erythema of the lips and oral mucosa, changes in the extremities, rash, and cervical lymphadenopathy. Incidence of late coronary artery aneurysms or ectasia, which may lead to myocardial infarction (MI), sudden death, or ischemic heart disease, decreased after the introduction of intravenous immunoglobulin therapy. However, significant persistent coronary arterial lesions or aneurysms may still occur in about 1-3 % of the patients. Atorvastatin (Lipitor®), a kind of statin, is a selective competitive inhibitor of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase. This drug had been safely and widely used for treatment of adult hyperlipidemia, prevention of coronary heart disease and familial hypercholesterolemia in childhood. In addition to the cholesterol-lowering effects, statins exerts diverse cellular, cholesterol-independent effects, including improvement in endothelial function, inhibition of neurohormonal activation, and reduction in levels of proinflammatory cytokines. Based on the above concepts, some patients with infrarenal abdominal aortic aneurysms received statin therapies and then the growth rate of aneurysms slowed down. Therefore, the investigators may hypothesize that Atorvastatin is helpful in the regression of persistent coronary lesions in KD patients due to its effect of anti-inflammation. In NTUH, there are about 20 KD patients with coronary lesions persistent for many years. And the investigators plan to conduct the clinical trial with atorvastatin to evaluate the effects of Atorvastatin on the persistent coronary arterial lesions/aneurysms in children with Kawasaki disease including safety and efficacy. Methods There are around 20 KD patients eligible for this study. After they sign the IRB-approved ICF, they will be enrolled for this study. Briefly, this study is divided into three stages: screening & enrollment stage (I), treatment & follow-up stage (II) for 1 year and final data analysis stage (III). Measurements include basic vital sign, electrocardiography, liver function, muscle enzyme, inflammatory markers and echocardiography. Predicted results 1.Oral atorvastatin therapy can effectively prevent the progression of coronary lesions in KD patients.
Doxycycline Treatment to Prevent Progressive Coronary Artery Dilation in Children With Kawasaki...
Kawasaki DiseaseCoronary AneurysmKawasaki disease (KD) affects infants and young children causing inflammation of the skin and blood vessels including the coronary arteries of the heart. Despite the currently available therapy, about one third of children develop enlargement of the coronary arteries that can lead to serious complications such as coronary artery stenosis, heart attack and even death. Kawasaki disease is the most common heart disease in children in the USA and it is especially common among the children of Hawaii. Every year, 50-90 children are diagnosed with KD in Hawaii and unfortunately there is no medication available to successfully prevent coronary artery damage in a subset of cases. During the first few weeks of the illness, cells of the immune system attack the coronary arteries and release a special substance (MMP) that is responsible for the coronary artery enlargement. There is a common antibiotic, doxycycline that can specifically block the action of this special substance (MMP). Research done on animals with KD showed that doxycycline was able to block this special substance and prevent enlargement of coronary arteries. Research in adults with enlargement of the main artery in their abdomen also showed that doxycycline may improve the outcome. Based on these studies doxycycline may be a promising therapy for children with KD, who develop enlargement of the coronary arteries. The investigators' proposed research study will assess the usefulness of doxycycline in preventing the progressive enlargement of coronary arteries in children with KD. The investigators plan to perform a small (pilot) study to evaluate how good is doxycycline in preventing coronary artery enlargement. The investigators will treat 50 children with KD and enlarged coronary arteries for three weeks with doxycycline and assess the change in coronary arteries as well as the blood levels of the special substance (MMP). If doxycycline proves to be beneficial in this small study, the investigators are going to design a large research study involving multiple institutions on Hawaii and the mainland and will recruit more children to be certain about the value of the proposed treatment. The investigators' proposal may change the treatment protocol of KD and could present a possible treatment for children with enlarged coronary arteries preventing potentially devastating consequences.