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Treatment for Osler-Weber-Rendu Syndrome (BVMC6203 Trial)

N/A
Recruiting
Led By Marie Faughnan, MD MSc FRCPC
Research Sponsored by Unity Health Toronto
Eligibility Criteria Checklist
Specific guidelines that determine who can or cannot participate in a clinical trial
Must have
Timeline
Screening 3 weeks
Treatment Varies
Follow Up through study completion, an average of 5 years
Awards & highlights
No Placebo-Only Group

Summary

This study is one of the three projects of an NIH Rare Disease Clinical Research Consortium. A "consortium" is a group of centres sharing information and resources to perform research. The consortium research focuses on brain blood vessel malformations in three different rare diseases. The focus of this specific study is on Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia (HHT). HHT is a condition characterized by blood vessel malformations, called telangiectasia and arteriovenous malformations (AVMs), occurring in the brain, nose, lungs, stomach, bowels and liver. Brain AVMs (BAVMs) in HHT are difficult to study because they are rare, affecting approximately 10% of people with HHT. While other types of BAVMs have been studied in depth, studies in the HHT population have been very small. Here, we propose the first large-scale collaboration by joining with 12 HHT Centers of Excellence in North America to perform a large study of risk factors for bleeding from BAVMs, called intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) in HHT patients. The current standard of clinical practice across North America, is to screen all HHT patients for BAVMs with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). If BAVMs are detected, patients are referred to a multidisciplinary neurovascular team for consideration for treatment. Treatment decisions are made on a case by case basis, balancing risks of complications from the BAVM with risks of therapy, but are limited by the few studies available in HHT. We hope that the knowledge we obtain about the risk factors for intracranial bleeding in these patients from this larger study will help us to improve the care of HHT patients. We plan to study risk factors for rupture of BAVMs, including primarily genetics and imaging characteristics of the BAVMs. Knowledge about risk factors will help in the care and management of HHT patients. This will be achieved through the collection of health information to construct a HHT database, blood sampling and banking (through the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke \[NINDS\]), and through genetic analysis at the University of California San Francisco.

Eligible Conditions
  • Osler-Weber-Rendu Syndrome

Timeline

Screening ~ 3 weeks
Treatment ~ Varies
Follow Up ~through study completion, an average of 5 years
This trial's timeline: 3 weeks for screening, Varies for treatment, and through study completion, an average of 5 years for reporting.

Treatment Details

Study Objectives

Study objectives can provide a clearer picture of what you can expect from a treatment.
Primary study objectives
Aim 1: The identification of predictors of brain outcomes in HHT patients
Secondary study objectives
Aim 2: A severe bleeding phenotype in HHT will be defined for clinical trial readiness
Aim 3: The genetic predictors and circulating biomarkers of severe bleeding and brain outcomes in HHT will be characterized

Awards & Highlights

No Placebo-Only Group
All patients enrolled in this study will receive some form of active treatment.

Find a Location

Who is running the clinical trial?

Unity Health TorontoLead Sponsor
556 Previous Clinical Trials
452,606 Total Patients Enrolled
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)NIH
1,371 Previous Clinical Trials
649,073 Total Patients Enrolled
Marie Faughnan, MD MSc FRCPCPrincipal InvestigatorUnity Health Toronto
1 Previous Clinical Trials
9 Total Patients Enrolled
~10 spots leftby Dec 2024