The goal of this study is to determine if there is a positive effect of prophylactic red blood cell (RBC) transfusion of leukoreduced, ABO, Rh (D/Cc/Ee) and Kell matched blood compared to standard of care on the number of episodes of acute sickle cell disease (SCD) manifestations or pregnancy-related complications requiring acute health care encounters (acute care/ER/Hospital visits) or resulting in death over the entirety of pregnancy until 2 months post-partum in women with SCD. RBC transfusion is the only disease-modifying therapy for pregnant women with SCD, and it is considered a standard treatment option however, there exists no consensus on the role of transfusion therapy in preventing SCD-related pregnancy complications. Participants will be randomly assigned to repeated red blood cell transfusions or the standard of care. Participants will be on study for about 8-10 months (Pregnancy through 2 months post-partum).
Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a common genetic disorder that results from the homozygous presence of abnormal β-globin chains (hemoglobin Hb SS, Hb SC, HbSβ thalassemia). SCD causes red blood cells to become rigid, leading to various acute and chronic manifestations: chronic hemolytic anemia, poor growth, acute vaso-occlusive pain crises (VOC), priapism (in men) acute ischemic stroke, acute chest syndrome (ACS), and chronic organ damage within the spleen, kidneys, liver, lungs and heart. High rates of both maternal and fetal morbidity and mortality complicate pregnancy in patients affected by SCD. SCD pregnancies have been linked to higher rates of obstetrical complications, including preeclampsia, venous thromboembolism, intrauterine growth restriction, preterm delivery, and small-for-gestational-age infants. In addition, sickle-related maternal complications are common during pregnancy. More than 50% of women with SCD have a VOC in the antenatal period (76% for HbSS vs 27% for Hb SC). ACS in pregnancy is seen in 7% to 20% of women with HbSS and approximately 5% in women with HbSC. Prophylactic transfusion therapy has established benefits in stroke prevention and preoperative optimization in SCD patients, but its use in pregnancy has not been established. Because hydroxyurea (HU) may be teratogenic, RBC transfusion is the only disease-modifying therapy available for pregnant women with SCD. The decision to put a pregnant woman with SCD on chronic transfusion therapy is entirely based on provider preference and patient willingness. RBC transfusions are considered a standard treatment option for pregnant women with SCD and transfusion therapy widely used, however there exists no consensus among providers on the role of chronic transfusion therapy in preventing SCD-related pregnancy complications and no prospective randomized controlled study investigating the role of prophylactic transfusion for prevention of both maternal and fetal morbidity has been done.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
50
For participants randomized to the prophylactic transfusion intervention group, the first RBC transfusion will occur within 3 weeks of randomization. All transfusions will be managed per SOC. SOC prophylactic RBC transfusion management is as follows: transfusions are performed at 3-6 week intervals with the intent to maintain a pre-transfusion hemoglobin S level at \<30%. All participants will have a complete blood count, reticulocyte count, hemoglobin fractionation, complete metabolic profile with LDH, ferritin, and type/screen at baseline and within 3 days of all monthly transfusions. All RBC transfusions must be compatible between the recipient and the donor and antigen matched for Rh (D/Cc/Ee) and Kell antigens at a minimum. For participants with a previous history of RBC alloimmunization, extended matched RBCs will be provided (Rh, Kell, Duffy, Kidd, S/s) per NHLBI/ASH guidelines to minimize further alloimmunization.
Participants randomized to the control group will be followed per SOC. SOC management for pregnant women with SCD includes but is not limited to * Clinic appointments with an SCD provider every 2 months * Lab draws - complete blood count, reticulocyte count, hemoglobin fractionation, complete metabolic profile with LDH and ferritin.
Grady Health System
Atlanta, Georgia, United States
RECRUITINGHospital admissions rate
Number of participants who require hospital admission during study participation divided by the total number of participants. Collected from medical records
Time frame: Baseline (enrollment) up to 8 weeks post-partum
Number of maternal emergency department (ED)/Acute care visits
Collected from medical records
Time frame: Baseline (enrollment) up to 8 weeks post-partum
Number of SCD-related complications per group
Sickle cell complications (vaso-occlusive crisis (VOC) / acute chest syndrome (ACS) / cerebral stroke) collected from medical records
Time frame: Baseline (enrollment) up to 8 weeks post-partum
Number of participants with pregnancy related complications
Number of participants who will develop pregnancy-related complications (pre-eclampsia, venous thromboembolism, infection). Collected from medical records
Time frame: Baseline (enrollment) up to 8 weeks post-partum
Maternal death
Number of women who die at any gestational age during pregnancy or within 8 weeks after delivery from any cause arising from the pregnancy or its management, but not from incidental or accidental causes, divided by the total number of participants.
Time frame: From randomization up to 8 weeks post-partum
Adult Sickle Cell Quality of Life Measurement System (ASCQ-Me)
The Adult Sickle Cell Quality of Life Measurement System (ASCQ-Me) is a validated patient-reported outcome measure of physical, mental, and social health in adults with SCD. Patient-reported outcome measure of pain level in the past 7 days. The ASCQ-Me pain scale ranges from 0-100, with a standardized sickle cell disease population mean of 50 (standard deviation=10), where lower scores signify worse disease impact. A modified version of the validated ASCQ-Me will be used.
Time frame: 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 months post randomization.
Patient reported outcomes measurement information system (PROMIS)
The patient-reported outcomes will be assessed using a health-related quality of life questionnaire, a modified version of the validated sickle-cell specific quality of life instruments, PROMIS The PROMIS Short-Form scale is a generic measure of health-related quality of life (HRQL) that assesses physical, mental, and social health. It has a recall period of 7 days and yields separate Physical Health and Mental Health subscale scores, which range from 0 to 100 and are standardized to a US population mean of 50 and standard deviation (SD) of 10. Each question usually has five response options ranging in value from one to five. To find the total raw score for a short form with all questions answered, sum up the values of the responses to each question. For example, for the adult 8-item form, the lowest possible raw score is 8; the highest possible raw score is 40. For each subscale, a higher score connotes better functioning.
Time frame: 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 months post randomization.
Infant birth weight
Infant's birth weight from medical records.
Time frame: At delivery up to 42 weeks of pregnancy
Preterm delivery
Number of women delivered before 37 weeks gestational age divided by the total number of participants randomized.
Time frame: Up to delivery (36 weeks of pregnancy)
APGAR Scores
The Apgar score is a scoring system doctors and nurses use to assess newborns after delivery. At most, a child will receive an overall score of 10. A score of 7 to 10 five minutes after birth is reassuring, 4 to 7 is moderately abnormal, and 0 to 3 is concerning. The Apgar scoring system is divided into five categories. Each category receives a score of 0 to 2 points. A: Activity/muscle tone P: Pulse/heart rate G: Grimace (response to stimulation, such as suctioning the baby's nose) A: Appearance (color) R: Respiration/breathing
Time frame: 1 and 5 minutes after neonate's delivery
Number of neonatal intensive care unit/critical care admissions
The neonate's admission to the intensive care unit/critical care admission will be documented from medical records.
Time frame: After neonate's delivery up to 1 week post-partum
Perinatal death
Number of babies who died from 28 weeks gestational age up to seven days post-delivery (comprising all still births and early neonatal deaths divided by total births.
Time frame: From 28 weeks of pregnancy up to 1 week post-partum
Fetal demise/stillbirth
Fetal demise refers to the spontaneous intrauterine death of a fetus at any time during pregnancy.
Time frame: From enrollment up to 42 weeks of pregnancy
Number of participants with new RBC alloantibodies
Participants who have been assigned to receive chronic simple blood transfusions will have monthly labs prior to their scheduled transfusion as per SOC to assess for new alloantibodies.
Time frame: From enrollment up to 8 weeks post-partum
Number of participants with transfusion reactions
Participants will be carefully monitored for transfusion-related adverse events throughout the intervention phase of the study.
Time frame: From enrollment up to 8 weeks post-partum
Number of participants with an increase in iron overload (serum ferritin)
Transfusion iron burden will be monitored with monthly serum ferritin levels during the study, which is standard of care monitoring for patients undergoing chronic transfusion therapy.
Time frame: From enrollment up to 8 weeks post-partum
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