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Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) is a serious condition where people in hospital care suddenly have trouble breathing because of infection, pneumonia, COVID-19 or other disease. People with ARDS may have to be put in an intensive care unit (ICU) and on a ventilator to help them breathe. This trial is to try to find out if injecting a product called LEAF-4L6715 makes the treatment better or worse than what is normally given. LEAF-4L6715 is a product that contains tiny bubbles to slowly release a substance named transcrocetin which scientific studies show may increase oxygen flow and reduce inflamed cells and protect tissues of the body.
Full description
Study Design: Prospective, international, multicenter, open label, randomized, controlled, two-arm study.
Study Objective(s): The primary objective of the study is to determine if the addition of LEAF-4L6715 to Standard of Care (SOC) treatment may improve clinical outcomes at 30-days, including survival and duration of mechanical ventilation (MV), in patients with Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) compared to SOC treatment alone.
The secondary objectives are to compare other relevant respiratory and clinical outcomes and safety between the two groups during Intensive Care Unit (ICU) stay, hospitalization, and follow-up, including percentage of patients alive at 60 days and 90 days from randomization.
Rationale: The scientific and clinical observations to date strongly suggest that transcrocetin (TC) may be a good candidate for the treatment of hypoxic conditions such as moderate to severe ARDS. Indeed, TC plays a major role in enhancing oxygen diffusion, but also in reducing inflammation and protecting tissues. However, TC's poor stability and solubility and its short in vivo half-life of ~30mins resulted in transient oxygenation effect. LEAF-4L6715 was designed to be a stable TC formulation with a 6-fold increase in half-life and a 12-fold increase in drug exposure compared to free TC, resulting in a more sustained oxygenation compared with free TC.
Developed as a liposomal formulation of TC, LEAF-4L6715 allows for a gradual release of the free drug and was evaluated at multiple levels (1) in vitro in Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells (HUVECs); (2) in vivo in healthy mice (n=40) as well as in a mouse model of sepsis (n=10) and (3) in a clinical trial evaluating Pharmacokinetics (PK) and safety. A phase 1/2 trial which included 37 patients defined the optimal dose regimen and intravenous infusion timing and confirmed the safety of LEAF-4L6715. It also showed promising trends in therapeutic efficacy.
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Patients will be included if all of the following criteria are met:
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310 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Solenne Paiva, Ph.D.; Ute Windhovel, Ph.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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