Title

Hydroxyurea to Prevent Organ Damage in Children With Sickle Cell Anemia
Pediatric Hydroxyurea Phase III Clinical Trial (BABY HUG)
  • Phase

    Phase 3
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Intervention/Treatment

    hydroxyurea ...
  • Study Participants

    193
The purpose of this study is to determine if hydroxyurea therapy is effective in the prevention of chronic end organ damage in pediatric patients with sickle cell anemia.
BACKGROUND:

In 1995, the Multicenter Study of Hydroxyurea (MSH) demonstrated that hydroxyurea is effective in decreasing the frequency of painful crises, hospitalizations for crises, acute chest syndrome, and blood transfusions by 50%. The recently completed phase II study of hydroxyurea in children (PED HUG) demonstrated that children have a response to hydroxyurea similar to that seen in adults in terms of increasing fetal hemoglobin levels and total hemoglobin, and decreasing complications associated with sickle cell anemia. In addition, this study demonstrated that the drug does not adversely affect growth and development between the ages of 5 and 15. A recently completed pilot study of hydroxyurea given to children between the ages of 6 months and 24 months demonstrated that the drug is tolerated well by small infant, and that the fetal hemoglobin switch can be forced to remain in the "on position" by hydroxyurea administration.

A Special Emphasis Panel (SEP) met on April 12, 1996 to review the results of the MSH trial and the progress to date of the PED HUG study. The SEP recommended that NHLBI undertake the BABY HUG trial.

DESIGN NARRATIVE:

BABY HUG is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study to determine if hydroxyurea can prevent the onset of chronic end organ damage in young children with sickle cell anemia. Approximately 200 children with sickle cell disease will be recruited to receive either hydroxyurea or placebo. The children will be screened at study entry for signs of abnormal brain, kidney, pulmonary, and splenic function, and developmental milestones. They will then be randomly assigned to receive either hydroxyurea or placebo and followed yearly to assess chronic end organ damage of the major organ systems. The primary endpoint will be a 50% reduction in rates of damage to the major organs with surrogate markers of organ function during follow-up in Phase II of the trial.
Study Started
Aug 31
2000
Primary Completion
Sep 30
2009
Study Completion
Sep 30
2009
Results Posted
Aug 19
2020
Last Update
Aug 19
2020

Drug Hydroxyurea

Participants will receive hydroxyurea.

Drug Placebo

Participants will receive placebo.

Hydroxyurea Active Comparator

Participants will receive hydroxyurea.

Placebo Placebo Comparator

Participants will receive placebo.

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Majority fetal and sickle (FS or SF) hemoglobin pattern confirmed centrally by electrophoresis (screening may begin at 7 months of age)

Exclusion Criteria:

Chronic transfusion therapy
Cancer
Less than 5th percentile (10th percentile for the pilot study) height, weight, or head circumference for age
Severe developmental delay (e.g., cerebral palsy or other mental retardation, Grade III/IV intraventricular hemorrhage)
Stroke with neurological deficit
Surgical splenectomy
Participating in other clinical intervention trials
Probable or known diagnosis of Hemoglobin S-Hereditary Persistence of Fetal Hemoglobin
Known hemoglobin S-beta plus thalassemia (hemoglobin A present)
Any condition or chronic illness, which in the opinion of the principal investigator, makes participation unadvised or unsafe
Inability or unwillingness to complete baseline (pre-enrollment) studies, including blood or urine specimen collection, liver-spleen scan, abdominal sonogram, neurological examination, neuropsychological testing, or transcranial Doppler ultrasound (interpretable study not required, but confirmed velocity greater than 200 cm/sec results in ineligibility)
Previous or current treatment with hydroxyurea (HU) or another anti-sickling drug

The following exclusion criteria are transient; patients can be re-evaluated for eligibility:

Hemoglobin less than 6.0 gm/dL
Reticulocyte count less than 80,000/cu mm if hemoglobin is less than 9 gm/dL
Neutrophil count less than 2,000/cu mm
Platelet count less than 130,000/cu mm
Blood transfusion in the 2 months prior to study entry unless HbA is less than 10%
ALT greater than twice the upper limit of normal
Ferritin less than 10 ng/ml
Serum creatinine greater than twice the upper limit of normal for age
Bayley standardized mental score below 70

Summary

Hydroxyurea

Placebo

All Events

Event Type Organ System Event Term Hydroxyurea Placebo

Treatment Differences of the Change in Qualitative Splenic Function From Baseline

Primary Endpoint: Spleen function was assessed by uptake of 99mTc sulfur colloid on liver-spleen scan before initiation of treatment (baseline) and 2 years later (exit). The results of each of the two scans were categorized as normal, functional but abnormal, or not functional by a panel of nuclear medicine specialists blinded to treatment assignment. The proportion of patients whose paired scans demonstrated a decline in splenic function was compared in the hydroxyurea versus placebo groups. The change in splenic function from baseline to 2 years was defined as worse if it changed from normal to decreased or absent, or decreased to absent; and not worse if it changed from decreased to decreased, normal to normal, or decreased to normal.

Hydroxyurea

Placebo

Change From Baseline in the Renal Function That Was Measured by Diethylenetriaminepentaacetic Acid (DTPA) Glomerular Filtration Rate (GFR)

DTPA GFR was originally a co-primary efficacy outcome for the study. Later in May 29, 2009, this measurement was discontinued because of statistical futility (an extremely small chance that the difference between treatment groups would be statistically significant for this outcome) and the small risk posed by the radiation exposure involved with performing the DTPA GFR test. Subjects who had missing data at baseline or 2 years measurement were excluded from the analysis (29 subjects from the hydroxurea, and 31 subjects from the placebo group excluded).

Hydroxyurea

22.56
mL/min/1.73m^2 (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 54.67

Placebo

20.74
mL/min/1.73m^2 (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 51.07

Change From Baseline in the Renal Function That Was Measured by Glomerular Filtration Rate (GFR) (Calculated Using Schwartz Formula)

Schwartz formula used to calculate GFR is: 0.55× height (cm)/serum creatinine (mg/dL). Where height is in cm and serum creatinine is in mg/dL. Children with missing baseline or 2 years GFR were excluded from the analysis.

Hydroxyurea

28.65
mL/min/1.73m^2 (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 76.46

Placebo

33.36
mL/min/1.73m^2 (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 95.85

Change From Baseline in the Renal Function That Was Measured by GFR (Calculated Using New Schwartz Formula)

GFR was calculated using new Schwartz formula: 39.1× [height (cm)/serum creatinine (mg/dL)]0.516 × [1.8/cystatin C]0.294 × [30/blood urea nitrogen]0.169 × [1.099]if male × [height(m)/1.4]0.188. Children with missing baseline or 2 years GFR were excluded from the analysis.

Hydroxyurea

10.57
mL/min/1.73m^2 (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 20.78

Placebo

14.33
mL/min/1.73m^2 (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 24.01

Total

193
Participants

Age, Continuous

13.56
Months (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 2.66

Age, Categorical

Race (NIH/OMB)

Region of Enrollment

Sex: Female, Male

Overall Study

Hydroxyurea

Placebo