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About
Hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) is an immune-mediated disorder characterized by hyperactivation of the immune system, leading to a cytokine storm responsible for organ failures. Consequently, patients with HLH often require intensive care management, where their short-term prognosis is compromised (1-month mortality: 30 to 40%).
Therapeutic management is urgent and consists in treating associated pathologies and employing immunomodulatory therapy. Currently, there are no clear and consistent recommendations for guiding immunomodulatory treatment in HLH due to the lack of high-level evidence studies. Experts recommend corticosteroid therapy for mild forms, whereas etoposide is proposed for severe cases, especially those with organ failures. However, in clinical practice, its use in patients with multi-organ failure is not systematic due to concerns about potential severe side effects and uncertainty regarding the contribution of severe sepsis to the clinical and biological presentation. Consequently, initiation of etoposide is sometimes delayed.
Our hypothesis is that early treatment of severe HLH associated with organ failure using etoposide could reduce organ failures associated with this syndrome. Therefore, we aim to compare two strategies for initiating etoposide in severe HLH in intensive care: an early strategy where etoposide is prescribed at the onset of HLH-related organ failure, and a delayed strategy where etoposide is prescribed only if there is unfavorable progression (or lack of improvement) after treating associated pathologies, associated with corticosteroid therapy.
Full description
Objectives
Primary Objective: To compare the effect on the evolution of organ failures of two initiation strategies of etoposide in severe HLH in intensive care:
The occurrence of an event defined as the onset or worsening of organ failures, evaluated using the modified Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score (excluding the hematologic component, from 0 to 20 points), calculated every 12 hours from Day 1 to Day 5 (Day 0 = inclusion), and then every 24 hours from Day 6 to Day 14. An event will be defined as an increase of at least 1 point for at least two organ systems compared to Day 0. In the delayed arm, the use of rescue etoposide treatment or in case of secondary aggravation during follow-up will also be considered an event.
Secondary objectives:
Evaluate the effect of these 2 strategies on:
Identify risk factors for mortality in severe HLH in intensive care.
Identify and describe comorbidities associated with severe HLH in intensive care, and their prognostic impact.
Investigational treatment
Etoposide is used at a dose of 100 mg/m², administered via slow intravenous infusion over 30 to 60 minutes on Day 0 or Day 2 depending on the arm (early strategy or delayed strategy).
Patients in the "early strategy" arm will receive etoposide treatment within 12 hours of inclusion.
In the "delayed strategy" arm, patients will be reassessed 48 hours after inclusion. If there is persistence or deterioration of organ failures (similar or higher modified SOFA score), patients will receive etoposide treatment within 12 hours of this reassessment in the absence of formal contraindications. In cases of rapidly deteriorating clinical status with short-term life-threatening prognosis (defined as an increase of 6 or more points in modified SOFA score), patients may receive rescue treatment (before 48 hours) with etoposide at the discretion of the medical team managing the patient; in such cases, the Day-2 infusion will not be administered. This practice will be exceptional and documented, following consultation with the hotline if possible.
In the unlikely event of subsequent clinical deterioration from Day 2 to Day 14, etoposide infusion may be considered for patients who did not receive etoposide previously in the "delayed strategy" group. This situation will also be documented.
Patients in both arms will routinely receive systemic corticosteroid therapy with dexamethasone 10 mg/m² in a daily injection for the duration of the study, unless contraindicated (adjuvant investigational drug).
Standard treatment
In case of persistence of HLH signs, a first (for patients in the "delayed strategy" arm) or subsequent (for patients in both arms) injections of etoposide may be performed during follow-up at the discretion of the patient's care team.
Other treatments will be:
Practical procedure Recruitment will take place in the investigational ICUs. Inclusion and exclusion criteria will be verified for all patients admitted to the intensive care unit with suspected secondary HLH. Patients meeting all inclusion criteria and having no exclusion criteria will be invited to participate in the study. Patient information and consent will be handled by the intensivist.
Inclusion and randomization will be conducted through a computer server accessible to all study investigators. This will be a 1:1 randomization into two groups, with stratification based on the SOFA score (<9 or ≥9), prior administration of corticosteroid therapy, and the centers.
The 2 groups will be:
Data will be collected as part of routine care for HLH management (clinical and biological characteristics, dates of HLH onset and diagnosis, underlying immunosuppression, HLH-associated pathologies, HScore and Henter criteria, immunomodulatory treatments [date, duration], daily assessment of organ support, occurrence of infectious or hemorrhagic events) by the investigator, and recorded in an e-CRF. Data collection will continue up to 14 days post-randomization. SOFA score and modified SOFA score (excluding hematological component) will be calculated and recorded by the investigator every 12 hours from Day 1 to Day 5, then daily from Day 6 to Day 14. Adverse events will be reported from inclusion to Day 14. Vital status will be collected on Day 14 and Day 60, with a maximum follow-up duration of 60 days. A systematic minimal assessment for HLH-associated pathologies will be proposed to each team.
The protocol also includes the establishment of a biobank (serotheca and DNAtheca) at the PRB of Avicenne Hospital.
Enrollment
Sex
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Inclusion criteria
Adult patient
Confirmed diagnosis of HLH:
First episode of HLH
Admission to intensive care unit
Presence of one or more organ failures:
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
176 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Julien SCHMIDT, MD; Stéphane Gaudry, MD, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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