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Extracorporeal Photopheresis in Early Diffuse Cutaneous Systemic Sclerosis

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London Health Sciences Centre Research Institute OR Lawson Research Institute of St. Joseph's

Status and phase

Begins enrollment this month
Phase 2

Conditions

Diffuse Cutaneous Systemic Sclerosis

Treatments

Drug: UVADEX
Device: Extracorporeal Photopheresis (ECP)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT04986605
ECR-CAN-011068

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to assess feasibility, safety and preliminary efficacy of Extracorporeal Photopheresis in the treatment of active diffuse cutaneous systemic sclerosis (dcSSc). This pilot study will help to determine if further study (a RCT) is justified.

Full description

Systemic sclerosis (SSc, Scleroderma) is a multisystem autoimmune disease characterized by widespread vascular injury and progressive fibrosis of the skin and internal organs. There is no effective treatment for the majority of patients with diffuse scleroderma (diffuse cutaneous systemic sclerosis; dcSSc). Only few therapies have shown modest benefits in regard to some specific organ pathologies. In the early stage of dcSSc, it may be possible to reverse inflammation and reduce the probability of irreversible fibrosis via significant immune modulation as later, often the fibrosis doesn't improve with treatment.

This is a pilot study that will treat 15 participants with dcSSc who meet the eligibility criteria. The objective of the study is to determine if the benefit of Extracorporeal photopheresis (ECP) and safety are favorable in order to consider and help in the design of a randomized controlled trial (RCT). This is a Phase II study that is uncontrolled and patients will remain on their background immunosuppressive treatment unless if contraindicated for safety or drug interactions. The trial is powered to show a mean change in skin thickness measured with modified Rodnan skin score (mRSS) of ≥5 over one year, in an uncontrolled, unblinded study. The Health Assessment Questionnaire Disability Index (HAQ-DI), patient and physician global scores, inflammatory markers, and combined response index in SSc (CRISS) will all be exploratory outcomes. Other outcomes such as changes in cells on skin biopsies from baseline to end of the trial will be explored if the study is positive.

Enrollment

15 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Patients with SSc, aged 18 years or older, and:
  2. Subjects must meet the ACR/EULAR classification criteria for SSc (2013).
  3. Early dcSSc (within 5 years of first non-Raynaud's phenomenon symptom) or any other dcSSc patients who have at least one of the signs of disease activity: mRSS of 15 or more, presence of tendon friction rubs, elevated inflammatory markers thought to be due to active dcSSc and not related to other issues such as infection or ILD with FVC% predicted <80% or HRCT showing ILD thought to be from SSc.
  4. Able to give informed consent.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Poor pulmonary function (FVC<40% and/or DLCO<30%).
  2. Class IV PAH or PH.
  3. Clinically significant cardiac disease.
  4. Significant concurrent, uncontrolled medical condition including, but not limited to, renal, cardiac, hepatic, pancreatic, hematological, gastrointestinal, endocrine, pulmonary, neurological, cerebral or psychiatric disease; and cancer (i.e. co-existing melanoma, basal cell, or squamous cell skin carcinoma).
  5. Chronic or ongoing active infectious disease requiring systemic treatment, including active tuberculosis (TB) infection.
  6. Seropositivity for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) at study entry.
  7. Active viral infection with viral replication of hepatitis B or C virus at study entry.
  8. Thrombophilia.
  9. Contraindications to heparin including history of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) or heparin-induced thrombocytopenia and thrombosis (HITTS), history of thrombocytopenia with pentosan polysulfate, known hypersensitivity to heparin or pork products.
  10. Low Platelet count (less than 100,000 per mm3).
  11. Aphakia (absence or loss of the eye's lens and has not been replaced with an artificial lens), because of the significantly increased risk of retinal damage due to the absence of lenses.
  12. Severe anemia (hemoglobin <70g/L).
  13. High white blood cell count (greater than 25000 mm3).
  14. A history of surgical spleen removal.
  15. A history of a light sensitive disease state, i.e. lupus erythematosus, porphyria cutanea tarda, erythropoietic protoporphyria, variegate porphyria, xeroderma pigmentosum and albinism.
  16. Previous idiosyncratic reactions to psoralen compounds.
  17. Patients who are using photosensitizing drugs such as anthralin, coal tar or coal tar derivatives, griseofulvin, phenothiazines, nalidixic acid, halogenated salicylanilides (bacteriostatic soaps), sulfonamides, tetracyclines, thiazides, and certain organic staining dyes such as methylene blue, toluidine blue, rose bengal and methyl orange.
  18. Treatment with more than 2 immunosuppressants (including mofetil mycophenolate, methotrexate, cyclophosphamide, biologics) at study entry.
  19. Pregnancy, breast feeding or child bearing potential without practicing highly effective contraception (and partners for men in the study).
  20. Patients known or suspected of not being able to comply with a study protocol (e.g. due to alcoholism, drug dependency or psychological disorder).
  21. Participation in another clinical trial within six weeks before randomization in this study.
  22. Previous use of Extracorporeal photopheresis.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

15 participants in 1 patient group

Administration of Extracorporeal Photopheresis Treatment
Experimental group
Description:
Duration of treatment: 48 weeks. Treatments occur on 2 consecutive days every 4 weeks. Dose of UVADEX: Treatment Volume x 0.017 = mL of UVADEX for each treatment Treatment Volume (TV) is defined as: The total volume of Buffy Coat plus prime solution that will undergo photoactivation. Route of administration: Extracorporeal
Treatment:
Device: Extracorporeal Photopheresis (ECP)
Drug: UVADEX

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Dr. Janet E Pope, MD PhD; Amanda Philip

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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