Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
Background:
Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA) is treated with steroids. But some people cannot take steroids, or steroids don t work. Other patients must get blood transfusions regularly which are time consuming and can have significant side effects. The drug eltrombopag can increase red blood cells. Researchers want to see if it can help people with DBA and, if so, for how long.
Objective:
To study the safety and efficacy of eltrombopag in people with DBA who have not responded to steroids or could not take them.
Eligibility:
People ages 2 and older with DBA who did not respond to steroids or could not take them, or their disease has returned despite taking them
Design:
Participants will be screened with:
Medical and medicine history
Physical exam
MRI: Participants will lie in a machine that takes pictures of the liver.
Blood and urine tests
Bone marrow biopsy: A thin needle will remove a marrow sample from the participant's hip bone.
Electrocardiogram
Participants will take eltrombopag pills once daily for 24 weeks. They will have blood taken every 2 weeks.
Participants will have visits 6 months. At 6 months, they will repeat all the screening tests and also have:
Quality-of-life questionnaire
Neurodevelopmental test (for participants younger than 18 years)
If participants blood cell counts improve, they may keep taking eltrombopag for up to 3 more years. If so, they will have blood taken every 4 weeks. They will visit NIH every 6 months and repeat the above tests.
Participants will be monitored for up to 3 years after they stop taking eltrombopag. They will visit NIH 6 months after treatment ends. If participants blood counts go down after treatment ends, they may restart the drug....
Full description
Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA) is a heritable bone marrow failure (BMF) syndrome characterized by selective erythroid defects typically presenting within the first year of life as a normochromic, macrocytic anemia with reticulocytopenia. More than half of all DBA cases are associated with either inherited or spontaneous mutations in ribosomal proteins, making DBA a prototypic ribosomopathy. Furthermore, although the primary presentation is isolated anemia, as life expectancy has improved, progressive defects in other lineages have now been identified, consistent with a long-term stem cell defect. Current standard of care for DBA is the use of systemic corticosteroids, the mechanism of which is unclear, although only half show an initial response. Even when a response to steroids is observed, long-term steroid therapy carries significant morbidity, especially in children or in combination with transfusion-associated iron overload, and thus most cannot tolerate high-dose steroids long-term. Responses are rare with second-line immunomodulatory agents. Yet other than allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation in those patients with healthy matched donors, there are no alternative therapies.
In one model for DBA pathogenesis, the defects lead to an overabundance of the iron-carrying moiety heme in primitive erythroid cells, unbound by protein. Free heme is toxic to cells, likely exacerbated over time by iron overload due to transfusions. Ongoing work with eltrombopag (EPAG) has shown that it is capable of acting as a potent iron chelator, including intracellular iron, with evidence that this effect of EPAG can reverse the impact of excess heme and elevated reactive oxygen species. Furthermore, in a recent trial of EPAG for moderate aplastic anemia or hypoproliferative unilineage cytopenias, we identified a robust response to EPAG in the one DBA patient enrolled in this clinical trial. This response has been durable over more than three years since study entry, but requires continuous EPAG to maintain transfusion independence. From these data, we hypothesize that EPAG may be able to improve production of red blood cells in DBA patients via chelation of iron and subsequent reduction in heme synthesis, resulting in decreased toxicity to bone marrow stem cells and developing erythroid cells.
We will conduct a single-arm, pilot trial in patients with steroid-refractory or steroid-intolerant DBA, treating with a fixed dose of EPAG for 6 months to assess safety and efficacy at improving hematological manifestations of DBA. Responders at 6 months will be able to continue EPAG on the extension part of this protocol for an additional 3 years. We will examine the hematologic, molecular, cytogenetic and clonal responses to EPAG in responders and non-responders alike. Translational studies will examine the mechanism of activity of EPAG in DBA through its effects on iron metabolism, erythroid differentiation, apoptosis, global transcriptome and TPO signaling pathways in patient's hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs).
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
In order to be participate in this study, individuals must meet all of the following criteria:
Diamond-Blackfan anemia defined as anemia presenting on or before the third year of life with reticulocytopenia and greatly reduced or absent bone marrow erythroid precursors, supported by, but not requiring either:
Patients with late-onset DBA (diagnosed after the third year of life) may also be included if gene mutation testing confirms a disease -causing mutation as above.
Clinically-significant anemia as defined as either:
Relapsed and/or steroid-refractory or intolerant of systemic corticosteroids
Age greater than or equal to 2 years
Weight greater than or equal to 12 kilograms
Residence within the United States of America or territories, or able to reside within the US or its territories while on drug during trial participation
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
Individuals meeting any of the following criteria will not be eligible for participation in this study. However, having met exclusion criteria in the past does not preclude study participation if the criteria are no longer met, unless otherwise specified (i.e. patients with modifiable factors such as laboratory abnormalities or acute health problems may be re-screened). For laboratory assessments, this requires no less than two weeks from the previous exclusionary finding. The intervals for health problems that must elapse prior to re-screening are specified below.
Platelet count > 400,000 / microliter
Stage 4 or greater kidney disease as defined by creatinine > 2.5 mg/ dL or GFR < 30 mL/min/1.73 m(2)
--For pediatric patients 17-years-old or younger, GFR shall be used. This can be estimated using the bedside Schwartz equation, the Counahan-Barratt method, or a similar methodology. Direct measurement including, but not limited to, 24-hour urine creatinine clearance or radiographic methods is recommended for patients with stage 3 disease (GFR less than or equal to 45 mL/min/1.73 m(2)).
Direct bilirubin > 2.0 mg/ dL, including congenital abnormalities in the bilirubin level
SGOT (AST) or SGPT (ALT) > 5 times the upper limit of normal
Treatment with androgens (danazol or oxymetholone) or corticosteroids less than 4 weeks prior to initiating eltrombopag.
--Physiologic steroid replacement for adrenal insufficiency or other similar conditions is not exclusive of trial participation
Treatment with any medications that may interfere with the metabolism of eltrombopag (e.g., CYP1A2 and CYP2C8 modulators) or whose own altered metabolism by eltrombopag cannot be adjusted for
Hypersensitivity to eltrombopag or its components
Moribund status or concurrent hepatic, renal, cardiac, neurologic, pulmonary, infectious, or metabolic disease of such severity that it would preclude the patient s ability to tolerate protocol therapy, or that death within 7-10 days is likely
Life expectancy of less than 3 months for any cause
Subjects with known liver cirrhosis in severity that would preclude tolerability of eltrombopag as evidenced by albumin < 3.5g/dL
History or current diagnosis of cardiac disease indicating significant risk of safety for patients participating in the study such as uncontrolled or significant cardiac disease, including any of the following:
Known active or uncontrolled infections not adequately responding to appropriate therapy.
--HIV infection is not exclusive of trial participation if the infection is effectively controlled with medications not known to interfere with eltrombopag metabolism or be metabolized by pathways known to be altered by eltrombopag. HIV RNA viral load must be undetectable at the time of enrollment, and CD4 cell count must be greater than or equal to 200/microliter. Patients must remain on antiretroviral therapy throughout study participation and must be periodically monitored for suppression of viral load and CD4 cell count. If drug-drug interactions between antiretroviral medications and eltrombopag are suspected, these must be addressed by a qualified clinical pharmacist or pharmacologist, and any changes to antiretroviral therapy need to be approved in consultation with an Infectious Disease and/or HIV specialist prior to enrollment.
Active malignancy or likelihood of recurrence of malignancies within 12 months
Evidence for MDS or AML as defined by WHO criteria.
Patients who have received chemotherapeutic treatment or other specific antineoplastic drugs or radiation therapy within 6 months of study entry
Female subjects who are nursing or pregnant (positive serum or urine beta-human chorionic gonadotrophin (b-hCG) pregnancy test) at screening or pre-dose on Day 1.
Women of child-bearing potential, defined as all women physiologically capable of becoming pregnant, unless they are using highly effective methods of contraception during dosing and for 30 days after the last dose of eltrombopag. Highly effective contraception methods include:
Total abstinence (when this is in line with the preferred and usual lifestyle of the patient. Periodic abstinence (e.g., calendar, ovulation, symptothermal, post-ovulation methods) and withdrawal are not acceptable methods of contraception
Female sterilization (have had surgical bilateral oophorectomy with or without hysterectomy), total hysterectomy or tubal ligation at least six weeks before taking study treatment. In case of oophorectomy alone, only when the reproductive status of the woman has been confirmed by follow up hormone level assessment
Male sterilization (at least 6 months prior to screening). For female patients on the study the vasectomized male partner should be the sole partner for that patient.
Use of oral, injected or implanted hormonal methods of contraception or placement of an intrauterine device (IUD) or intrauterine system (IUS), or other forms of hormonal contraception that have comparable efficacy (failure rate <1%), for example hormone vaginal ring or transdermal hormone contraception.
In case of use of oral contraception women should have been stable on the same pill for a minimum of 3 months before taking study treatment.
Women are considered post-menopausal and not of child bearing potential if they have had over 12 months of natural (spontaneous) amenorrhea with an appropriate clinical profile age appropriate (e.g. generally 40-59 years), history of vasomotor symptoms (e.g. hot flushes) in the absence of other medical justification or have had surgical bilateral oophorectomy (with or without hysterectomy), total hysterectomy or tubal ligation at least six weeks ago. In the case of oophorectomy alone, only when the reproductive status of the woman has been confirmed by follow up hormone level assessment should she be considered not of child bearing potential.
History of thromboembolic events other than catheter-related thromboses
Active alcohol/drug abuse
Unable to understand the investigational nature of the study or give informed consent and does not have a legally authorized representative or surrogate that can provide informed consent
Unable to take investigational drug
Concurrent participation in an investigational study within 30 days prior to enrollment or within 5-half-lives of the investigational product, whichever is longer. Note: parallel enrollment in a disease registry is permitted.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
15 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal