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Clinical Trials/NCT00482066
NCT00482066
Terminated
Phase 2

A Pilot Study Examining the Effect of Abatacept in ANCA Associated Vasculitis

Imperial College London1 site in 1 country7 target enrollmentNovember 2007

Overview

Phase
Phase 2
Intervention
Abatacept (Orencia)
Conditions
ANCA-associated Vasculitis
Sponsor
Imperial College London
Enrollment
7
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Relapse rate over 24 months.
Status
Terminated
Last Updated
10 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to investigate whether abatacept can prevent relapse in patients with ANCA associated vasculitis(AAV). This is a randomised double blinded placebo controlled trial.

Detailed Description

The drugs that are normally used to treat patients with AAV are quite effective, but up to 20% of patients relapse within 18 months. The drugs used can also have significant side effects. Abatacept, also known as CTLA4Ig, acts by blocking vital costimulatory signals required for T lymphocytes to be activated. As ANCA associated vasculitis is believed to be an autoimmune condition and dependent on autoreactive T cells, there is some reason to believe this drug would be effective. Abatacept has already received a license by the FDA for use in Rheumatoid arthritis where it has proven to be effective even in patients unresponsive to Etanercept (TNF blockade). 120 patients with AAV will be invited to take part in this study, from hospitals in the UK and Europe. The patients will receive standard therapy with methotrexate and steroids as well as 12 months of abatacept or placebo. They will be followed for a further 12 months. The primary objective of this study is to assess the relapse rate over 24 months, in patients with acute AAV, presenting at first diagnosis or relapse, in the two arms of the study.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
November 2007
End Date
November 2008
Last Updated
10 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Acute AAV, presenting at first diagnosis or relapse, defined by clinical presentation
  • ANCA positivity (anti-MPO or anti-PR3 positive)
  • BVAS score of \> 8.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Severe life-threatening disease, i.e. lung haemorrhage at the time of presentation, renal impairment with SCr\>150 micromol/l, or severe CNS dysfunction thought to be due to vasculitis.
  • Current symptoms of severe, progressive, or uncontrolled renal, hepatic, hematological, gastrointestinal, pulmonary, cardiac, neurological or cerebral disease, or other medical conditions that might place the subject at unacceptable risk for participation in this study.
  • Any other non-vasculitic multisystem autoimmune disease
  • Serious acute or bacterial infection unless treated and completely resolved with antibiotics prior to enrolment
  • With any severe chronic or recurrent bacterial infection
  • With Hepatitis B or C or HIV
  • With Herpes zoster infection that resolved less than 2 months prior to enrolment
  • Subjects who have received any live vaccines within 3 months of the first dose of study medication or who will have need of a live vaccine at any time in the year following enrolment
  • Subjects with current clinical or laboratory evidence of active or latent tuberculosis (TB) and subjects with a history of active TB treated within the last 3 years
  • With any previous malignancy, with the exception of non-melanoma skin malignancies, adequately treated previously

Arms & Interventions

1

Abatacept (Orencia)

Intervention: Abatacept (Orencia)

2

saline placebo

Intervention: Abatacept (Orencia)

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Relapse rate over 24 months.

Time Frame: 2 years

Secondary Outcomes

  • Proportion of patients in sustained remission (i.e. remission at 3 months sustained for 6 months and remission at 6 months sustained for a further 12 months);(2 years)
  • Time to remission;(2 years)
  • The average steroid dosage at 6 months, 1 year, 18 months and 2 years in abatacept and placebo groups respectively;(2 years)
  • Proportion of patients defaulting to cyclophosphamide (MMF, azathioprine or other rescue) therapy.(2 years)
  • Degree of chronic disease activity(2 years)
  • Time to ANCA negativity by immunofluorescence or negative anti-PR3 or anti-MPO Ab test by ELISA.(2 years)
  • Proportion of patients unable to stick with trial protocol.(2 years)
  • Health related quality of life(2 years)

Study Sites (1)

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