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| ID | Type | Description | Link |
|---|---|---|---|
| UAzuay | Other Grant/Funding Number | Universidad del Azuay, Cuenca, Ecuador |
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Hypothesis
a. There are patients with von Willebrand Disease in Cuenca.
Primary question
a. How many women referred with a history of bleeding may have von Willebrand disease?
Secondary
Ancillary
The incidence of hemophilia A is 1 in 10,000 and the one of hemophilia B is 1 in 30,000 live born males. As the most frequent coagulopathy in the world, von Willebrand disease (vWD) can affect 1 in 1000 children of both genders. The prevalence of vWD is 1-2% and it may be as high as 5-15% among women with menorrhagia. So vWD can be present in 1 of every 100 to 500 individuals.
A world survey published that Ecuador, with a population of 14,790,608 people, has 238 patients with hemophilia, 45 people with von Willebrand disease (vWD) and 13 patients with other bleeding disorders including rare factor deficiencies and platelet disorders.
The Ecuadorian census of 2010 indicates that Cuenca district (canton) has 505,585 inhabitants. According to a local reference, Cuenca has no reports of vWD and it has registered 20-40 patients with hemophilia A and B. However Cuenca may host approximately 10,000 people with vWD because it affects both males and females. One plausible explanation for this lag is that the diagnostic suspicions of vWD had not been proven because of the lack of a special coagulation laboratory in Cuenca that would allow professionals to make a positive diagnosis.
This is the first clinical, demographic and socio-economic study of patients registered with hemophilia and of Cuenca women with possible vWD who are referred from dentists and physicians from public and private health centers. The instruments will be validated surveys and screening coagulation studies.
As far as we know Ecuador has not published studies on coagulopathies. Our aim is to initiate a process to eventually reach the goal to offer adequate diagnostic and therapeutic interventions to human victims of these diseases, within a program of service, teaching and research.
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| von Willebrand women | Referred women who may have von Willebrand Disease |
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| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Bleeding Score (BS) | As an adequate bleeding history is fundamental, the Condensed MCMDM-1 Bleeding Questionnaire will be used. Its bleeding score (BS) has a sensitivity of 100%, specificity 87%, positive predictive value 0.2 and negative predictive value 1.0. There was a signifficant difference of BS between the subtypes of vWD: with type 3 >>type 2 >>type 1 vWD (Anova P <0.001). AS the BS is an index of ordinal values, medians and the Mann-Whitney non-parametric ranksum test will be used, to study the bleeding score (BS) differences among subgroups of enrolled women. | 1 week |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Associations among BS and female subgroup characteristics and initial laboratory tests. | As bleeding may tend to associate in subjects, i.e. epistaxis and menorrhagia, a logistic (log-linear) model will be used. As bleeding can also ocur independently, symptoms will be coded for an adjusted covariate analysis. To study the relationships among the BS and the quantitative laboratory results, the BS will be divided in quintiles, and an adjusted multiple regression model will be used. Likelihood ratios (LR) for values of BS, with a prevalence of 5% and ROC curves will be applied. According to Tosetto et.al. laboratory data will be expressed in categorical and quantitative scales. |
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Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
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Target population: all women from Cuenca district with a hemorrhage history.
Accessible population: Those women referred from professionals with an initial hemorrhage history, who comply with the inclusion criteria and who sign the informed consert form.
Sample population: First comers referred with a hemorrhage history until fulfilling the projected sample size. This non-probabilistic purposive sample will be used because it has been reported that it could represent the target population.
*2010 Ecuadorian census: 131.163 women ages 18 to 50 years, at Cuenca district.
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| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Jaime M. Moreno A., M.D., M.S. | Universidad del Azuay (UAzuay) | Principal Investigator |
| Jacinto Guillen G., Eng., M.S. | Universidad del Azuay (UAzuay) | Study Chair |
| Rodrigo Cueva M., Econ., M.S. | Universidad del Azuay (UAzuay) | Study Director |
| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UAzuay | Cuenca | Azuay | 0001 | Ecuador | ||
| Universidad del Azuay (UDA) |
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D014842 | von Willebrand Diseases |
| D006467 | Hemophilia A |
| D002836 | Hemophilia B |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D025861 | Blood Coagulation Disorders, Inherited |
| D001778 | Blood Coagulation Disorders |
| D006402 | Hematologic Diseases |
| D006425 | Hemic and Lymphatic Diseases |
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Blood samples
| 1 week |
| Cuenca |
| Azuay |
| 0001 |
| Ecuador |
| D020147 | Coagulation Protein Disorders |
| D001791 | Blood Platelet Disorders |
| D006474 | Hemorrhagic Disorders |
| D030342 | Genetic Diseases, Inborn |
| D009358 | Congenital, Hereditary, and Neonatal Diseases and Abnormalities |
| D040181 | Genetic Diseases, X-Linked |