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The overall objective is to evaluate the tolerability/safety and preliminary efficacy of CINRYZE® (C1 esterase inhibitor [human]) as add-on therapy for treatment of acute optic neuritis and/or transverse myelitis in NMO and NMOSD.
Primary Objective: To evaluate the safety and tolerability of 3-5 doses of 1000 - 2000 Units intravenous CINRYZE in NMO/NMOSD patients during an acute exacerbation.
Secondary Objectives:
Full description
The rationale for using C1-esterase inhibitor (CINRYZE) in NMO is based on pathology showing a role for complement in active NMO lesions. NMO is not unique in involving complement, which may have a pathogenic role in other demyelinating diseases including multiple sclerosis. However, NMO is characterized by its complement involvement depositing in a rim or rosette pattern in all/most active lesions. In vitro, complement mediates damage initiated by anti-AQP4 antibody binding to astrocytes. The effector of antibody triggered cell damage is the complement cascade and blocking the complement cascade with C1-inhibitor prevents damage ex vivo. Based on mounting evidence, the consensus in the field is that prevention of the complement cascade in the CNS would ameliorate the damage caused in NMO inflammatory attacks. In contrast to a prevention trial, this study would provide for complement inhibition only during an active NMO attack. This approach is designed to administer the inhibitory drug when complement damage is at its peak which minimizes adverse effects from prolonged complement inhibition.
Patients with NMO do not lack natural C1-esterase inhibitor, but artificially tipping the balance to suppress the complement pathways using purified human C1-esterase inhibitor in patients with hyperactive complement activation has been shown to be beneficial in myocardial infarction and sepsis. Similarly, the rationale for adding human C1-esterase inhibitor to the treatment for NMO acute exacerbations is to tip the balance toward complement suppression in an effort to reduce complement-mediated neurologic damage.
This is a phase 1b open-label, interventional proof-of-concept study in which all subjects will receive 3 daily infusions of 2000 Units of intravenous CINRYZE at the onset of an NMO exacerbation, plus an additional 2 infusions of 1000 Units of intravenous CINRYZE during a second treatment phase with plasma exchange, if necessary.
Enrollment
Sex
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Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Able and willing to provide written informed consent.
18-65 years of age.
New acute optic neuritis and/or transverse myelitis. A clinical event is defined as an episode of inflammation in the spinal cord and/or optic nerve leading to neurologic symptoms not ascribed to another disease process.
Diagnosis of NMO according to the 2006 revisions of the Wingerchuk diagnostic criteria for NMO (Wingerchuk, 2006), or AQP4 positive NMOSD per the EFNS Guidelines. For NMO, subjects must have two absolute criteria:
A female subject is eligible to enter the study if she is:
A. Not pregnant or nursing; B. Of non-childbearing potential (i.e. women who have had a hysterectomy, are post-menopausal, which is defined as >2 years without menses or, in female subjects who have been post-menopausal for <2 years, must be confirmed with Follicle Stimulating Hormone (FSH) and estradiol levels), have both ovaries surgically removed or have current documented tubal ligation) OR Of child-bearing potential (i.e. women with functional ovaries and no documented impairment of oviductal or uterine function that would cause sterility). This category includes women with oligomenorrhoea (even severe), women who are perimenopausal or have just begun to menstruate.
C. Subject has a negative serum pregnancy test at screening and agrees to one of the following:
i. Oral contraceptives (either combined or progesterone only) ii. Injectable progesterone iii. Levonorgestrel implants iv. Estrogenic vaginal ring v. Percutaneous contraceptive patches vi. Intrauterine device (IUD) or intrauterine system (IUS) with a documented failurerate of <1% per year vii. Male partner sterilization (vasectomy with documentation of azoospermia) prior to the female subject's entry into the study; this male must be the sole partner for the subject viii. Double barrier method: condom and an occlusive cap (diaphragm or cervical/vault caps) with a vaginal spermicidal agent (foam/gel/film/cream/suppository).
Exclusion criteria
Current evidence or known history of clinically significant infection including:
History of clinically significant CNS trauma (e.g. traumatic brain injury, cerebral contusion, spinal cord compression).
History or presence of myelopathy due to spinal cord compression by disc or vertebral disease.
Past or current history of medically significant adverse effects (including allergic reactions) from:
a. Corticosteroids
Past or current malignancy, except for
Significant concurrent, uncontrolled medical condition including, but not limited to, cardiac, renal, hepatic, hematological, gastrointestinal, endocrine, immunodeficiency syndrome, pulmonary, cerebral, psychiatric, or neurological disease which could affect the subject's safety, impair the subject's reliable participation in the trial, impair the evaluation of endpoints, or necessitate the use of medication not allowed by the protocol, as determined by the PI of the study.
Use of an investigational drug or other experimental therapy for a condition other than NMO within 4 weeks, 5 pharmacokinetic half lives or duration of biological effect (whichever is longer) prior to screening.
Current participation in any other interventional clinical trial. Participation in non-interventional trial requires approval of the protocol by investigator.
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10 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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