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About
Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension (PAH) is a rare condition in which a narrowing of blood vessels carrying blood through the lungs puts an increased work load on the heart; it has to work harder to pump blood through the lungs. While current treatments relieve some of the symptoms, they do not stop or reverse the disease in the affected blood vessels. Imatinib is a medicine licensed for some types of cancers. A published study has shown that imatinib can have beneficial effects on blood flow through the lungs and exercise capacity in patients with PAH, even when added to existing treatments. However, there have been concerns about its safety and tolerability. Imatinib continues to be prescribed occasionally on compassionate grounds, usually when other treatment options have been exhausted, and some patients feel better on the drug. To improve the investigator's understanding, the investigators of this study re-visits the use of Imatinib as a potential treatment for patients with PAH.
Full description
What does the study involve?
The study involves treatment of PAH patients with imatinib (study drug) for up to 24 weeks, and clinical assessments and tests to assess the drug's safety and tolerability.
PAH patients will be seen at their local hospital by the PAH clinical research team. Before someone can start study, the study doctor (or clinical study team) will describe the clinical trial in detail. If a potential subject decides to participate, he/she will be asked to sign the informed consent form before any study procedures are done.
Participants will be asked to come to their local hospital for clinical appointments. This includes a screening visit, a baseline visit, three clinical assessments and an end-of-study visit. In between, and at the very end of these, there will be six tele-visits (assessments over the phone). Each clinical appointment will be on a weekday morning or afternoon. No major lifestyle restrictions are required for these appointments.
Participants will undergo clinical examinations and tests to monitor the severity of PAH and the response to the study drug. Clinical procedures include:
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Unable to provide informed consent and/or are non-fluent speakers of the English language
Hypersensitivity to Imatinib or to any of the excipients
Clinically-significant renal disease (confirmed by creatinine clearance <30 ml/min per 1.73m2)
Clinically-significant liver disease (confirmed by serum transaminases >3 times than upper normal limit)
Patients receiving oral and/or parenteral anticoagulants (this does not apply to single antiplatelet therapy)
Anaemia confirmed by haemoglobin concentration <10 g/dl
History of thrombocytopenia
Individuals known to have haemoglobinopathy sickle cell disease, thalassaemia
Hospital admission related to PAH or change in PAH therapy within 3 months prior to screening
History of left-sided heart disease and/or clinically significant cardiac disease, including but not limited to any of the following:
Evidence of significant lung disease on high-resolution CT (if available) or recent (performed within 12 months) lung function, where FEV1 < 50% predicted and FVC < 70% predicted, and DLCO (or TLCO) < 50% predicted if any CT abnormalities; judged by the Site Physician
Patients with a history of uncontrolled systemic hypertension
Acute infection (including eye, dental, and skin infections)
Chronic inflammatory disease including HIV, and Hepatitis B
Women of childbearing potential who are pregnant or breastfeeding (if applicable)
Previous intracerebral haemorrhage
Patients who have received an Investigational Medicinal Product (IMP) within 5 half-lives of the last dose of the IMP or 1 month (whichever is greater) before the baseline visit
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
17 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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