Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
The main objective of this studies therapeutic : to determine the effect of Adalimumab (HumiraR) on clinical inflammatory manifestations of patients with Netherton syndrome after 3 months of treatment , with a post treatment period follow-up of 3 months.
Second objectives are To evaluate the safety of Adalimumab in the context of NS To evaluate the improvement of the quality of life at 3 months To evaluate the improvement of pruritus and pain in the patients To study markers of inflammatory and allergy in NS prior and after treatment Benefit of the study An improvement by at least 20% of the cutaneous signs in these patients who suffer from a genetic incurable, chronic, painful and very afflicting disease would be of a great help for these patients. NS is a major source of social exclusion.
Risks They are inherent to the risks of biotherapies, especially for an anti-TNF therapy, they comprise a risk of infection. Cutaneous infections occur mainly during infancy, and we have therefore chosen to treat patients over 4 years of age in this study.
A close clinical surveillance will be set up (initially every week during the first month of treatment, then every month). This will represents a large number of visits but will provide a high level of security.
Benefits/risks ratio In the absence of curative treatment for these patients with a severe genetic skin disease, the benefits/risks ration clearly appears to be in favour of an expected benefit.
Full description
Netherton syndrome (NS) is a rare (incidence is estimated at 1 in 100 000) but severe genetic skin disease characterized by scaly erythroderma at birth, abnormal hair and severe psoriasiform /atopic dermatitis-like lesions with high IgE levels and allergic manifestations. It has considerable impact on the quality of life of patients, as a result of inflammatory and painful flares, the chronicity of the lesions, severe growth retardation with definitive short stature.
NS is caused by loss of function SPINK5 mutations which lead to unregulated epidermal protease activity : kallikrein 5, kallikrein 7 and elastase proteases are found overactive following loss of inhibition. Secondly, KLK5 activates PAR-2 receptors at the keratinocyte surface leading to the activation of the NF-KB pathway and the release of different pro-inflammatory cytokines such TNF-alpha .
There is no specific treatment for NS. The different therapeutic attempts by Soriatane (acitretin) have worsen the skin inflammation and dryness. The use of topical calcineurin inhibitors (Tacrolimus) has sometimes improved skin inflammation but with an important systemic diffusion. The use of immune suppressive drugs in severe patients with NS followed in our labelized Centre (Cyclosporine, methotrexate, mycophenolate mofetil) have not brought a significant and durable improvement. So NS is a very distressing genodermatosis.
For these clinical and biological considerations, a benefit with anti TNF treatment could be expected and the evaluation of such treatment is justified in NS. The clinical case of an adult patient with severe NS, improved by anti-Tnf treatment has recently been published in the literature
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
11 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal