Arginine Therapy for Pain in Sickle Cell Disease: A Phase-2 Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Trial

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Abstract

We present a prospective randomized, placebo-controlled trial of intravenous arginine in patients 3–21 years hospitalized with sickle cell disease vaso-occlusive pain episodes (SCD-VOE) at two tertiary-care children's hospitals. Participants were randomized into 1 of 3 arms: Standard-dose (SD; 100 mg/kg/dose) every 8 h, Loading-dose (200 mg/kg followed by SD), or Placebo. The primary outcome was total parenteral opioid use (TPO). Secondary outcomes included time-to-crisis-resolution, pain scores, patient-reported outcomes (PROs), arginine bioavailability, and biomarkers of oxidative stress/mitochondrial function. Of 1548 patients screened, 108 were randomized (36 per study-arm; mean 12.6 ± 3.8 years, 52% female, and 65% hemoglobin-SS). This study did not meet its primary endpoint. TPO, time-to-crisis-resolution, pain scores, and PROs at discharge were similar across arms. Post hoc sensitivity analyses of children 5–16 years old demonstrated nearly double TPO utilization in those receiving placebo versus arginine (n = 87, p = 0.056), achieving significance in patients with plasma arginine < 60 μM. Arginine was low at presentation in 79% of patients (mean 50 ± 28 μM), and increased with arginine therapy (p < 0.001). Arginine bioavailability at VOE presentation inversely correlated with time-to-crisis-resolution (r = −0.39, p = 0.01) after placebo, an association eliminated by arginine supplementation (r = −0.04, p = 0.70). A dose-dependent increase in platelet-mitochondrial activity occurred after arginine versus no change after placebo (p < 0.001); plasma protein-carbonyl levels, a measure of oxidative stress, decreased after arginine therapy (p < 0.001) but increased in the placebo group (p = 0.02). SCD-VOE is associated with an acquired arginine deficiency that correlates with worse clinical outcomes. Arginine improved mitochondrial function and decreased oxidative stress compared to placebo, with clinically relevant opioid-sparing becoming significant in children with the lowest arginine concentration. Trial Registration: Registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02536170) in August 2015.

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APA

Morris, C. R., Hatabah, D., Korman, R., Gillespie, S., Bakshi, N., Brown, L. A., … Dampier, C. D. (2025). Arginine Therapy for Pain in Sickle Cell Disease: A Phase-2 Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Trial. American Journal of Hematology, 100(7), 1119–1131. https://doi.org/10.1002/ajh.27692

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