Kawasaki disease (KD) is an acute febrile systemic vasculitis most commonly seen in children under the age of 5 years old. This trial has been designed as a multi-center, prospective, randomized controlled, evaluator-blinded trial with two parallel groups to determine whether IVIG alone as the primary therapy in acute-stage KD is as effective as IVIG combined with high-dose aspirin therapy. The primary endpoint is defined as CAL formation at 6-8 weeks.
Background: Kawasaki disease (KD) is an acute febrile systemic vasculitis most commonly seen in children under the age of 5 years old. High-dose aspirin is often administered, but the duration of such treatment varies. Many centers reduce the aspirin dose once the patient is afebrile, even before treating said patient with IVIG. However, a randomized controlled trial regarding high-dose aspirin in the acute stage of KD has not previously been carried out. Methods/design: This trial has been designed as a multi-center, prospective, randomized controlled, evaluator-blinded trial with two parallel groups to determine whether IVIG alone as the primary therapy in acute-stage KD is as effective as IVIG combined with high-dose aspirin therapy. The primary endpoint is defined as CAL formation at 6-8 weeks. Patients meeting the eligibility criteria are randomly assigned (1:1) to a test group (that receives only IVIG) or a standard group (that receives IVIG plus high-dose aspirin). This clinical trial is conducted at seven medical centers in Taiwan. Discussion: Since high-dose aspirin has significant anti-inflammatory and anti-platelet functions, it does not appear to lower the frequency of disease outcomes. Furthermore, it can decrease hemoglobin levels. Therefore, the investigators have initiated this randomized controlled trial to determine whether high-dose aspirin is necessary in the acute stage of KD.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
All patients will receive IVIG (2g/kg) in 10-12 hours alone, without high-dose aspirin.
All patients will receive IVIG (2g/kg) in 10-12 hours plus high-dose aspirin (80-100mg/kg/day, divided into four doses) till fever subside.
Kaohsiung Veterans General Hospital
Kaohsiung City, Taiwan
RECRUITINGKaohsiung Chang Gung Memorial Hospital
Kaohsiung City, Taiwan
RECRUITINGTaichung Veterans General Hospital
Taichung, Taiwan
coronary artery lesions
Time frame: 8 weeks
IVIG resistance
Time frame: 7 days
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Tungs' Taichung Metroharbor Hospital
Taichung, Taiwan
RECRUITINGLinkou Chang Gung Memorial Hospital
Taipei, Taiwan
RECRUITING