Peripheral Arterial Tonometry and Neurocognition in Sickle Cell Disease
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
Summary
This study will examine sleep disordered breathing and sleep quality in participants (ages 12-25) diagnosed with sickle cell disease of any genotype. We will utilize remote peripheral arterial tonometry (PAT) and questionnaires to evaluate difficulties with sleep. PAT assessments will occur remotely in the homes of participants. Neurocognitive, behavioral, and neuroimaging evaluations will occur on the same day as a routine clinic visit. Primary Objective: Evaluate the relationship between nocturnal oxyhemoglobin saturation (SpO2) and neurocognitive functioning (working memory and verbal comprehension) in individuals (ages 12-25) diagnosed with sickle cell disease controlling for age, genotype, and social vulnerability. Secondary Objective: Assess differences in white matter integrity, silent cerebral infarcts, neuroinflammation, and functional connectivity among individuals (ages 12-25) diagnosed with sickle cell disease with and without sleep disordered breathing after controlling for age. Assess differences in self- and caregiver-reported mood and pain severity among individuals (ages 12-25) diagnosed with sickle cell disease with and without sleep disordered breathing after controlling for age. Exploratory Objectives: Explore the relationship between nocturnal oxyhemoglobin saturation (SpO2) and neurocognitive functioning (attention, processing speed, verbal memory, visual memory, motor dexterity) in individuals (ages 12-25) diagnosed with sickle cell disease controlling for age, genotype, and social vulnerability. Assess the feasibility of an optical imaging tool (Speckle Contrast Optical Spectroscopy - Open-Motion 3.0) to measure cerebral blood flow and blood volume in patients diagnosed with sickle cell disease (ages 12-25). Assess the concordance between measurement of cerebral blood flow and volume using speckle contrast optical spectroscopy and arterial spin labeling brain MRI.
Description
Interested participants will be consented in-person or virtually. Consented participants will be mailed the equipment (WatchPAT) to conduct the remote assessment. Additional questionnaires will also be sent via mail or email for the participant to complete prior to collecting data on sleep behaviors. After receiving the questionnaires and equipment, a virtual session will be conducted with the participant to provide education on how to use the equipment and complete the included questionnaires. Participants will wear the WatchPAT overnight for three days and data will be captured remotely. Aft…