Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
TRIAL DESIGN
Full description
Early arthritis is frequently undifferentiated. It is well recognised that a substantial proportion of patients with an undifferentiated inflammatory arthritis will go on to develop persistent synovitis, with the strongest predictor of persistence being disease duration > 12 weeks (1-4). Studies have shown that patients with early oligoarthritis who fail to respond within 2 weeks to corticosteroid injections have a high likelihood of persistent disease (2). It is therefore clear that these patients with early inflammatory arthritis need definitive treatment, but the optimal therapeutic strategy is yet to be determined.
Tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF) is a naturally occurring cytokine that is involved in normal inflammatory and immune responses. It plays an important role in the inflammatory process of rheumatoid and other arthritis, and the resulting joint pathology. Elevated levels of TNF are found in the synovial fluid of patients with RA. Two distinct receptors for TNF exist naturally as monomeric molecules on the cell surfaces and in soluble forms. Biological activity of TNF is dependent upon binding to either cell surface TNF receptors (TNFR). Etanercept (ETN) is a dimeric fusion protein consisting of the p75 TNFR linked to the Fc portion of human IgG1, and is capable of binding two TNF molecules. Etanercept inhibits binding of both TNF-alpha and TNF-beta to cell surface TNFRs, rendering TNF biologically inactive. Agents that block TNF are effective in all types of arthritis (with the exclusion of connective tissue diseases).
It is generally agreed that there is a window of opportunity in active early inflammatory arthritis in which definitive treatment may give a disproportionate improvement compared to treatment at a later time, and may well be able to induce remission in a subgroup of patients.
Studies in early rheumatoid arthritis (< 12 months) have shown that remission-induction with the TNF-antagonist infliximab provides a significant reduction in MRI-evidence of synovitis and erosions at 12 months with evidence of sustained functional and quality of life benefits at 2 years, despite withdrawal of infliximab at 12 months (5). Results from the TEMPO study show that treatment of established rheumatoid arthritis with ETN+MTX achieves remission in about 40% patients (6). TNF antagonists also have the therapeutic benefit of rapid and sustained suppression of inflammation.
Treatment of patients with early undifferentiated arthritis with ETN+MTX is hypothesised to prevent progression of persistent disabling disease in a significant number of patients. Induction of remission at this time in the disease course may result in sustained remission, reduce the need for further treatment, and be most cost effective therapeutic strategy.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
112 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal