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Current Federal Grants
Howard-Children's National Medical Center Sickle Cell Disease Clinical Center
Principal Investigator: Victor R. Gordeuk, MD
The purpose of this federal grant is to establish a Sickle Cell Disease Clinical Center at Howard University and
Children’s National Medical Center in Washington, DC that will also collaborate with the sickle cell
disease program at the Clinical Center of the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, MD. The
institutions participating in this Clinical Center follow over 1,000 patients with sickle cell disease (SCD)
and enroll more than 100 new patients per year. The objectives of the Howard-CNMC Sickle Cell Clinic
Center are as follows.
Objectives:
- To develop the local research infrastructure required for designing and implementing
clinical protocols, primarily clinical trials, as part of a multi-center Network of clinics currently treating a
large number of sickle cell patients. The Network's main objective is to advance the management of
sickle cell disease (SCD) and other hemoglobinopathies by testing the safety, efficacy and
effectiveness of new therapeutic and preventive interventions.
- To propose two multi-center clinical trials as candidate protocols for the Sickle Cell
Network. Both trials will focus on lowering sickle cell complications by improving vascular function. The
first trial will determine whether atorvastatin administration prevents vaso-occlusive events (crises,
ACS). The second study will examine whether the combination of the NO donors, hydralazine and
isosorbide dinitrate, prevent the development of pulmonary hypertension and progression of
renal/CNS/systemic vasculopathy in SCD patients who have a relative elevation in systemic systolic
blood pressure.
- To help provide comprehensive, state of the art care to children and adults with sickle cell
disease (SCD) enrolled in Network clinical protocols. For several decades both, the Howard University
Center for Sickle Cell Disease and its proposed collaborating institution, Children’s' National Medical
Center (CNMC), have been providing this type of care to a large population of Washington, DC area
sickle cell patients. A major feature of both sickle cell programs has always been continuity of care and
participation in collaborative research.
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