NCT00390988

Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to compare capillary blood count parameters with the corresponding venous samples to verify the hypothesis that capillary and venous blood count parameters are equivalent.

Trial Health

100
On Track

Trial Health Score

Automated assessment based on enrollment pace, timeline, and geographic reach

Enrollment
250

participants targeted

Target at P75+ for all trials

Status
completed

Health score is calculated from publicly available data and should be used for screening purposes only.

Trial Relationships

Click on a node to explore related trials.

Study Timeline

Key milestones and dates

First Submitted

Initial submission to the registry

October 20, 2006

Completed
3 days until next milestone

First Posted

Study publicly available on registry

October 23, 2006

Completed
Last Updated

February 20, 2009

Status Verified

February 1, 2009

First QC Date

October 20, 2006

Last Update Submit

February 19, 2009

Conditions

Keywords

blood countcapillaryvenousAdultreference values

Interventions

Eligibility Criteria

Age18 Years+
Sexall
Healthy VolunteersYes
Age GroupsAdult (18-64), Older Adult (65+)

You may qualify if:

  • Patients with haematological diseases ≥18 years
  • Healthy volunteers ≥18 years
  • Informed consent
  • No participation in another study 3 month before and during the study

You may not qualify if:

  • Subjects \<18 years
  • Healthy subjects with acute or chronic infections and autoimmune or malignant diseases

Contact the study team to confirm eligibility.

Sponsors & Collaborators

Related Publications (2)

  • Schalk E, Heim MU, Koenigsmann M, Jentsch-Ullrich K. Use of capillary blood count parameters in adults. Vox Sang. 2007 Nov;93(4):348-53. doi: 10.1111/j.1423-0410.2007.00978.x.

  • Schalk E, Scheinpflug K, Mohren M. Correlation of capillary and venous absolute neutrophil counts in adult hematological patients and normal controls. Am J Hematol. 2008 Jul;83(7):605. doi: 10.1002/ajh.21163. No abstract available.

MeSH Terms

Conditions

Hematologic Diseases

Interventions

Blood Specimen Collection

Condition Hierarchy (Ancestors)

Hemic and Lymphatic Diseases

Intervention Hierarchy (Ancestors)

Specimen HandlingClinical Laboratory TechniquesDiagnostic Techniques and ProceduresDiagnosisPuncturesSurgical Procedures, OperativeInvestigative Techniques

Study Officials

  • Kathleen Jentsch-Ullrich, Dr.

    University Hospial Magdeburg, Division of Haematoloy/Oncology, Leipziger Str. 44, D-39120 Magdeburg, Germany

    PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR

Study Design

Study Type
observational
Time Perspective
PROSPECTIVE
Sponsor Type
OTHER

Study Record Dates

First Submitted

October 20, 2006

First Posted

October 23, 2006

Last Updated

February 20, 2009

Record last verified: 2009-02