Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00424970

Treatment of High Altitude Polycythemia by Acetazolamide

Hypoventilation and High Altitude Chronic Polycythemia: Acetazolamide as a Possible Treatment

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
55 (estimated)
Sponsor
Association pour la Recherche en Physiologie de l'Environnement · Academic / Other
Sex
Male
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The prevalence of High Altitude Polycythemia (or Chronic Mountain Sickness) is between 8 and 15% in the high altitude regions of South America. There is no pharmacological treatment available. After a first preliminary study in 2003 demonstrating the beneficial effects of acetazolamide in reducing hematocrit in these patients, after 3 weeks of treatment, we want to confirm this effect and implement a treatment protocol of 3 month-duration.

Detailed description

Chronic mountain sickness (CMS) is characterized by an excessive number of red cells in the blood of persons living permanently above the altitude of 2,500m. The symptoms of this very incapacitating disease are : headaches, chronic asthenia, digestive troubles, sleep disturbances. The hemoglobin concentration is higher than 21 g/dl of blood. In addition, patients show a pulmonary hypertension of variable degree, as well as a systemic hypertension. This disease affects essentially males, but women are also concerned after menopause. The evolution of the disease is always very dramatic, towards a cardiac failure and cerebral vascular stroke. The prevalence is between 8% and 15% on the Andean Altiplano . No pharmacological treatment is available. A preliminary study was performed (Richalet et al. AJRCCM, 2005) that demonstrated the efficiency of acetazolamide (a carbonic anhydrase inhibitor) in reducing the hematocrit and the erythropoetin concentration,and increasing nocturnal oxygen saturation in patients suffering from CMS, after 3 weeks of treatment. We plan to perform a double-blinded placebo-controlled study to evaluate the efficiency of a 3-month treatment with daily 250 mg acetazolamide to reduce the hematocrit and hemoglobin concentrations and ameliorate the clinical symptoms of 55 patients suffering from CMS and living at high altitude (Cerro de Pasco, Peru).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGacetazolamide

Timeline

Start date
2007-01-01
Completion
2007-11-01
First posted
2007-01-22
Last updated
2013-01-24

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Peru

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00424970. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.