Status and phase
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About
Background:
Kohlmeier-Degos (K-D) is a rare disease that leads to the inflammation and/or blockage of small blood vessels in many organs; these can include the skin, eyes (rare), small bowels, lungs, heart, and the brain and spinal cord (central nervous system, or CNS). There are no known effective treatments for K-D that affects the CNS.
Objective:
To test a drug (ruxolitinib) in a person with K-D affecting the CNS.
Eligibility:
This study is designed to treat 1 adult participant with K-D affecting the CNS.
Design:
The participant will be screened:
They will have a physical exam and blood tests.
They will have skin biopsies: Small samples of skin will be removed.
They will have a lumbar puncture: A needle will be inserted in his back to draw fluid from the space around the spinal cord.
They will have a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan: they will lie on a table that slides into a tube to take pictures of their brain and spinal cord.
They will see a doctor who specializes in nerves.
Ruxolitinib is a tablet taken by mouth. The participant will take the drug twice a day for up to 26 weeks. The dosage may change over time.
The participant will have up to 7 clinic visits in 28 weeks. Each visit will be 1 to 3 days. MRI scans, biopsies, lumbar punctures, and other blood tests will be repeated on different visits. The participant may receive follow-up phone calls between visits. The participant will report any adverse effects. Unscheduled visits may be needed if new symptoms develop.
The last follow-up will be 4 weeks after the last dose of the study drug.
Full description
Study Description:
This single patient protocol will provide off-label treatment with a JAK/STAT ( Janus kinases/ Signal transducer and Activator of Transcription proteins) inhibitor to a patient with Kohlmeier Degos disease (K-D) with neurologic involvement. We hypothesize that ruxolitinib, which targets type I IFN (Interferons ) and IFN-gamma signaling, will attenuate various neurological manifestations of K-D that are observed clinically, radiologically or in abnormal laboratory findings in our K-D patient. This will help reduce IFN signaling in a manner that may slow or halt the disease progression as measured by the endpoints established below.
Objectives:
Primary Objective:
To test the hypothesis that JAK/STAT inhibition by ruxolitinib will delay progression of neuroradiological manifestations of our one patient with neurological involvement of K-D disease.
Exploratory Objectives:
Endpoints:
Primary Endpoint:
The primary endpoint is stability or regression of existing enhancing lesions or no development of new enhancing lesions in the brain and spine observed in MRI evaluation after 13 weeks and up to 73 weeks of ruloxitinib (10 mg BID) compared to pre-treatment MRI images.
Exploratory endpoints of this study are clinical and potential surrogate biomarker efficacy data, including:
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
The study design was constructed to treat one participant with CNS Kohlmeier Degos Disease. Therefore, there are no specific inclusion criteria.
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
1 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Cornelia D Cudrici, M.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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