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Throughout the past twenty years, numerous specific pharmacologic agents targeting the endothelial dysfunction associated with PAH have emerged. Short term placebo-controlled randomized trials assessing PAH-specific monotherapy with these molecules have reported improvements in pulmonary hemodynamics and exercise capacity. A recent meta-analysis also documented a reduction in short-term mortality of about ≈40% with such therapies. Several randomized clinical trials evaluating PAH-specific combination therapy have been conducted. Our recent meta-analysis showed that combination therapy was associated with a 35% risk reduction for the occurrence of clinical worsening compared to monotherapy. Nonetheless, the investigators also showed 17% of PAH patients receiving combination therapy still experienced clinical worsening over a median exposure of 16 weeks. Moreover, long-term survival on PAH-specific also therapy remains poor in the modern era, with a yearly mortality rate of 15 % in incident idiopathic PAH. The identification of innovative therapeutic targets and validation of these complementary therapeutic interventions are thus urgently needed in PAH.
The investigators and others (K. Stenmark, University of Colorado and H. Bogaard, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, personal communications), have published strong evidence that BRD4 plays a key role in the pathological phenotype in PAH accounting for disease progression and showed that BRD4 inhibition can reverse PAH in several animal models. Intriguingly, coronary artery disease (CAD) and metabolic syndrome are more prevalent in PAH compared with the global population, suggesting a link between these diseases. Interestingly, BRD4 is also a trigger for calcification and remodeling processes and regulates transcription of lipoprotein and inflammatory factors, all of which are important in PAH and CAD. Apabetalone, an orally available BRD4 inhibitor, is now in a clinical development stage with a good safety profile.
The overall objective of the study is to explore the efficacy and safety of apabetalone as an add-on therapy for adult PAH patients and to inform the conduct and the design of a Phase 3 trial.
The primary objective of the study is to assess the efficacy of apabetalone as evaluated by the change in PVR over a period of 24 weeks compared to placebo in adult subjects with PAH on stable background therapy.
Secondary objectives include changes at week 24 in 6MWD, plasma NT-proBNP concentration, WHO functional class, ESC/ERS risk stratification score, health-related quality of life and additional hemodynamic data from right heart.
Exploratory objectives are to evaluate the effects of apabetalone compared to placebo in adult subjects with PAH on mortality and clinically relevant morbidity events, and on circulating levels and transcription changes in whole blood markers of metabolism, vascular calcification, inflammation, DNA damage and leucocyte expression of BMPR2.
Full description
This is a standard-design, double-blind, parallel-group, placebo-controlled trial.
Overall, 72 well-characterized PAH patients, 36 subjects in each treatment group (apabetalone 100 mg BID or matching placebo), that have been stable for >4 months on standard PAH-therapies, as per guidelines (Galie, Humbert et al. 2015) will be recruited in 8-15 participating centres (site selection currently ongoing). The participating centres will be recruited if they have the same approach to PAH patients in terms of choice and timing of treatments, and have expertise in performing trials in PAH. The initial Health Canada approval will be obtained. Apabetalone will be provided by Resverlogix Corp. Canada, but Resverlogix had no input into the trial design and will not be involved in the conduct of the trial, analysis, interpretation of the results or the final manuscript.
A 4-week pre-treatment phase will allow ensuring that patients are on stable doses of PAH medication. Patients will be given apabetalone 100mg BID or placebo.
Patients will be regularly followed to assess whether side effects. At baseline and week 24, a cardiac catheterization will assess changes in pulmonary hemodynamics and RV function.
An end-of-study visit is planned at week 28.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
PAH related to HIV infection, portal hypertension;
Other types of pulmonary hypertension (Simonneau, Montani et al. 2019), including pulmonary related to left heart diseases, lung diseases, chronic thromboembolic disease or multifactorial mechanisms (PH groups 2-5, respectively);
Suspected pulmonary veno-occlusive disease;
A ventilation-perfusion lung scan or pulmonary angiography indicative of thromboembolic disease.
Significant restrictive (total lung capacity <70% predicted) or obstructive (FEV1/FVC<60% after a bronchodilator) lung disease;
DLCO <40%
Systolic blood pressure <90 mmHg;
Resting heart rate in the awake patient at rest <50 BPM or >110 BPM;
Acute RV failure or hospitalization within 30 days;
Received any investigational drug within 30 days;
Cardiopulmonary rehabilitation program planned or started ≤12 weeks prior to day 1;
Presence of ≥3 risk factors for heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, including:
Recent cancer (<1yr, except for low grade and fully resolved non-melanoma skin cancer)
Recent bacterial infection (<30 days);
Anticipated survival less than 1 year due to concomitant disease.
Initiation of treatment with bosentan within 6 months (bosentan has been associated with a 5-10% risk or reversible raised in LFTs. This most commonly occurs within the first 6 months of treatment. Although there is no evidence of increased risk of apabetalone-related increases in LFTs amongst bosentan users, patients initiated on bosentan for <6 months will be excluded to minimize the risk of elevated LFTs falsely attributed to the study drug).
Concomitant use of known strong CYP3A inhibitors (e.g. itraconazole, telithromycin, clarithromycin, protease inhibitors boosted with ritonavir or cobicistat, indinavir, saquinavir, nelfinavir, boceprevir, telaprevir). The required washout period prior to starting apabetalone is 2 weeks.*
Major surgery within 2 weeks of starting study treatment and patients must have recovered from any effects of any major surgery.
Whole blood transfusions in the last 120 days prior to entry to the study (packed red blood cells and platelet transfusions are acceptable, for timing refer to inclusion criteria no.7).
Participation in another clinical study with an investigational product administered in the last 3 months
Patients with a known hypersensitivity to apabetalone or any of the excipients of their formulations.
Inability to consent
Judgment by the investigator that the patient should not participate in the study if the patient is unlikely to comply with study procedures, restrictions and requirements.
Breast feeding women.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
72 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
Pascale Blais-Lecours, PhD; Steeve Provencher, MD, MSc
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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