Skip to main content
Clinical Trials/NCT03983460
NCT03983460
Unknown
Not Applicable

Dupilumab Impact on Skin Resident Memory T Cells

Association pour la Recherche Clinique et Immunologique1 site in 1 country20 target enrollmentMarch 9, 2020

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Dupilumab
Conditions
Atopic Dermatitis
Sponsor
Association pour la Recherche Clinique et Immunologique
Enrollment
20
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
To assess the change of the number (per biopsy or per mL of blood) and/or frequency (among live hematopoietic cells CD45+) of immune cells that are present in the skin and the blood of AD patients after Dupilumab or TCS treatment.
Last Updated
6 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The main objective of the study consists in characterizing the immune cells that are present/persist in the skin and the blood of atopic dermatitis (AD) patients treated with Dupilumab, as well as with potent/very potent topical corticosteroids (TCS: betamethasone valerate cream 0.1% or clobetasol propionate cream 0.05%). A specific attention will be paid on the presence/persistence of skin Trm and ILCs.

The study population will consist of 20 adult patients suffering from moderate to severe Atopic Dermatitis and eligible for Dupilumab treatment. (Patients should have inadequate response, intolerance or contraindication to systemic anti-inflammatory treatments).

This is an exploratory, prospective, single-site, randomized, open labeled study. There is a treatment period of 168 days (24 weeks) and a post-treatment follow-up period of maximum 102 days.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
March 9, 2020
End Date
September 2021
Last Updated
6 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Sponsor
Association pour la Recherche Clinique et Immunologique
Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Subject over 18 years of age
  • Subject able to read, understand and give documented informed consent
  • Subject willing and able to comply with the protocol requirements for the duration of the study
  • Subject with health insurance coverage according to local regulations
  • For woman with childbearing potential :
  • Use of a highly effective method of birth control from at least 1 month prior to study enrollment until the last visit
  • Negative urine pregnancy test at inclusion visit A highly effective method of birth controlled is defined as one which results in a low failure rate (i.e. less than 1% per year) when used consistently and correctly, such as implants, combined oral contraceptives, intrauterine device, double barrier methods (e.g. condom with spermicide), sexual abstinence or vasectomized partner. Woman with no childbearing potential is defined as: woman with amenorrhea for at least 12 months (without an alternative medical cause); woman who had undergone a permanent sterilization method (eg bilateral tubal occlusion which includes tubal ligation procedures, hysterectomy, bilateral salpingectomy, bilateral oophorectomy); or otherwise be incapable of pregnancy.
  • Subject diagnosed with moderate-to-severe AD, defined as SCORAD≥20 and/or EASI≥7 (Eichenfield et al., 2014)
  • Subject with AD involvement of 10% (or more) Body Surface Area (BSA) according to component A of SCORAD
  • Subject with I, II, III or IV skin phototype (according to Fitzpatrick scale)

Exclusion Criteria

  • Pregnancy or breast-feeding women, or planning to become pregnant or breastfeed during the study
  • Women unwilling to use adequate birth control, if of reproductive potential and sexually active.
  • Subject currently experiencing or having a history of other concomitant skin conditions that would interfere with evaluation of AD
  • History of allergic reaction to local anesthetic product
  • History of wound healing disorders (e.g. hypertrophic scars, keloids)
  • Subject with known active infection to HBV, HCV or HIV
  • Subject with known helminth infection
  • Subject with known blood dyscrasia
  • Subject having an allergen immunotherapy within 3 months before study
  • Subject treated by antihistamine 5 days before study. Please note, antihistamine administered to treat allergic rhino conjunctivitis is allowed after V

Arms & Interventions

Dupimulab arm

At Day 0, patients will receive Dupilumab treatment. The recommended dose of Dupilumab for adult patients is an initial dose of 600mg followed by 300mg given every two weeks administered as subcutaneous injection. Dupilumab could be self-administered by subcutaneous injection into thigh or abdomen or injected in the upper arm in case of administration by the patient's caregiver. It is recommended to rotate the injection site with each injection. At the end of treatment period, patient with AD IGA \>1 will stop the study and patient with AD IGA≤1 will enter in a 3 months-follow-up period. During this period, they will stop treatment initiated at Day 0 and apply rescue TCS if appearance of AD lesion within 3 months. Patients will note in their diary the applications of rescue TCS. The relapse is defined as the necessity to apply TCS rescues.

Intervention: Dupilumab

Dupimulab arm

At Day 0, patients will receive Dupilumab treatment. The recommended dose of Dupilumab for adult patients is an initial dose of 600mg followed by 300mg given every two weeks administered as subcutaneous injection. Dupilumab could be self-administered by subcutaneous injection into thigh or abdomen or injected in the upper arm in case of administration by the patient's caregiver. It is recommended to rotate the injection site with each injection. At the end of treatment period, patient with AD IGA \>1 will stop the study and patient with AD IGA≤1 will enter in a 3 months-follow-up period. During this period, they will stop treatment initiated at Day 0 and apply rescue TCS if appearance of AD lesion within 3 months. Patients will note in their diary the applications of rescue TCS. The relapse is defined as the necessity to apply TCS rescues.

Intervention: Biopsies

Dupimulab arm

At Day 0, patients will receive Dupilumab treatment. The recommended dose of Dupilumab for adult patients is an initial dose of 600mg followed by 300mg given every two weeks administered as subcutaneous injection. Dupilumab could be self-administered by subcutaneous injection into thigh or abdomen or injected in the upper arm in case of administration by the patient's caregiver. It is recommended to rotate the injection site with each injection. At the end of treatment period, patient with AD IGA \>1 will stop the study and patient with AD IGA≤1 will enter in a 3 months-follow-up period. During this period, they will stop treatment initiated at Day 0 and apply rescue TCS if appearance of AD lesion within 3 months. Patients will note in their diary the applications of rescue TCS. The relapse is defined as the necessity to apply TCS rescues.

Intervention: Skin prick-test

Dupimulab arm

At Day 0, patients will receive Dupilumab treatment. The recommended dose of Dupilumab for adult patients is an initial dose of 600mg followed by 300mg given every two weeks administered as subcutaneous injection. Dupilumab could be self-administered by subcutaneous injection into thigh or abdomen or injected in the upper arm in case of administration by the patient's caregiver. It is recommended to rotate the injection site with each injection. At the end of treatment period, patient with AD IGA \>1 will stop the study and patient with AD IGA≤1 will enter in a 3 months-follow-up period. During this period, they will stop treatment initiated at Day 0 and apply rescue TCS if appearance of AD lesion within 3 months. Patients will note in their diary the applications of rescue TCS. The relapse is defined as the necessity to apply TCS rescues.

Intervention: Blood sample collection

Optimized TCS treatment arm

At Day 0, patients will receive topical corticosteroid treatment (TCS) adapted to the AD severity (potent and very potent TCS) with a personal therapeutic education for treatment optimization. It will be asked to perform, every day, an application of topical corticosteroid (TCS) (betamethasone valerate cream 0.1%, and if not active, clobetasol propionate cream 0.05%) on active lesions. Once the AD lesion is cleared, the patients will continue to apply TCS on healed lesions, twice a week until the end of the treatment period to prevent relapse. At the end of treatment period, patient with AD IGA \>1 will stop the study and patient with AD IGA≤1 will enter in a 3 months-follow-up period. During this period, they will stop treatment initiated at Day 0 and apply rescue TCS if appearance of AD lesion within 3 months. Patients will note in their diary the applications of rescue TCS. The relapse is defined as the necessity to apply TCS rescues.

Intervention: Optimized TCS treatment

Optimized TCS treatment arm

At Day 0, patients will receive topical corticosteroid treatment (TCS) adapted to the AD severity (potent and very potent TCS) with a personal therapeutic education for treatment optimization. It will be asked to perform, every day, an application of topical corticosteroid (TCS) (betamethasone valerate cream 0.1%, and if not active, clobetasol propionate cream 0.05%) on active lesions. Once the AD lesion is cleared, the patients will continue to apply TCS on healed lesions, twice a week until the end of the treatment period to prevent relapse. At the end of treatment period, patient with AD IGA \>1 will stop the study and patient with AD IGA≤1 will enter in a 3 months-follow-up period. During this period, they will stop treatment initiated at Day 0 and apply rescue TCS if appearance of AD lesion within 3 months. Patients will note in their diary the applications of rescue TCS. The relapse is defined as the necessity to apply TCS rescues.

Intervention: Biopsies

Optimized TCS treatment arm

At Day 0, patients will receive topical corticosteroid treatment (TCS) adapted to the AD severity (potent and very potent TCS) with a personal therapeutic education for treatment optimization. It will be asked to perform, every day, an application of topical corticosteroid (TCS) (betamethasone valerate cream 0.1%, and if not active, clobetasol propionate cream 0.05%) on active lesions. Once the AD lesion is cleared, the patients will continue to apply TCS on healed lesions, twice a week until the end of the treatment period to prevent relapse. At the end of treatment period, patient with AD IGA \>1 will stop the study and patient with AD IGA≤1 will enter in a 3 months-follow-up period. During this period, they will stop treatment initiated at Day 0 and apply rescue TCS if appearance of AD lesion within 3 months. Patients will note in their diary the applications of rescue TCS. The relapse is defined as the necessity to apply TCS rescues.

Intervention: Skin prick-test

Optimized TCS treatment arm

At Day 0, patients will receive topical corticosteroid treatment (TCS) adapted to the AD severity (potent and very potent TCS) with a personal therapeutic education for treatment optimization. It will be asked to perform, every day, an application of topical corticosteroid (TCS) (betamethasone valerate cream 0.1%, and if not active, clobetasol propionate cream 0.05%) on active lesions. Once the AD lesion is cleared, the patients will continue to apply TCS on healed lesions, twice a week until the end of the treatment period to prevent relapse. At the end of treatment period, patient with AD IGA \>1 will stop the study and patient with AD IGA≤1 will enter in a 3 months-follow-up period. During this period, they will stop treatment initiated at Day 0 and apply rescue TCS if appearance of AD lesion within 3 months. Patients will note in their diary the applications of rescue TCS. The relapse is defined as the necessity to apply TCS rescues.

Intervention: Blood sample collection

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

To assess the change of the number (per biopsy or per mL of blood) and/or frequency (among live hematopoietic cells CD45+) of immune cells that are present in the skin and the blood of AD patients after Dupilumab or TCS treatment.

Time Frame: At Day 0, Day 28 and Day 168.

In this exploratory study, comprehensive immunophenotyping investigations will be conducted on the immune cells extracted from blood, and from the lesional, healed and non lesional skin biopsies of each patient. Capitalizing on the use of mass cytometry technology, which allows comprehensive analysis of 35-40 different markers on the same cell, we will establish a precise mapping of immune cells that circulate or infiltrate/persist the different lesions. A specific focus will determine the frequency/number of Trms and ILCs inside the skin, notably type-2 Trms (such as IL-4/IL-13 producing TH2) and ILC2.

Secondary Outcomes

  • To investigate correlations between each immunological parameter and each clinical score as a continuous quantitative variable, as well as each immunological parameter and quality of life index as a continuous quantitative variable.(At Day 0, Day 28 and Day 168)
  • To investigate correlations between each immunological parameter and change in clinical score as a qualitative variable with 2 modalities as well as each immunological parameter and quality of life index, as a qualitative variable with 2 modalities.(At Day 28 and Day 168.)
  • To investigate correlations between each immunological parameter and the development of new AD lesions in the 3 following months, as well as each immunological parameter and the interval of time between the end of treatment and AD relapse.(At Day 0, Day 28,Day 168 and during the 3 months follow-up period.)

Study Sites (1)

Loading locations...

Similar Trials