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Synergetic B-cell Immunomodulation in SLE - 2nd Study.

Phase 3
Active, not recruiting
Conditions
Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic
Interventions
Registration Number
NCT03747159
Lead Sponsor
Leiden University Medical Center
Brief Summary

In follow-up of the previous SynBioSe Study the present study is a randomized controlled trial designed to further investigate the long-term clinical and imunological efficacy of combination B-cell targeting by starting treatment with belimumab (anti-BAFF) followed by rituximab(anti-CD20) in lupus nephritis patients.

Detailed Description

Rationale:

The SynBioSe-1 study is the first study to comprehensively describe the clinical and immunological effects of combining rituximab (RTX) and belimumab (BLM) in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). From the pioneering SynBioSe-1 study, we have learned that combining RTX+BLM was safe and well-tolerated with important clinical responses. Immunologically, we unexpectedly observed that long-term B-cell depletion was not achieved due to migration of mature B-cells triggered by depletion of BAFF serum levels. The latter observation was in contrast to the study's null-hypothesis that combination therapy would lead to long-term B-cell depletion. The contrary was demonstrated, namely the relative early recirculation of mature B-cells. As such, the immunological and clinical lessons from the SynBioSe-1 study in conjunction with accumulating data from several large studies on combination B-cell targeted treatment have led to the postulation that starting treatment with RTX+BLM would result in an improved B-cell targeting strategy, notably on tissue-resident autoreactive B-cells, associated with improved long-term clinical disease amelioration. Therefore, the present SynBioSe-2 study is designed to further investigate the long-term clinical and imunological efficacy of combination B-cell targeting by starting treatment with belimumab followed by rituximab.

Objectives:

The primary objective is to assess whether combination treatment BLM+RTX will lead to reduced treatment failure and the improvement of pivotal, SLE-specific autoimmune phenomena compared to SLE patients treated with standard of care.

Study design:

a multi-center, randomized, controlled, open-label study

Study population:

SLE patients with a severe flare with major organ involvement or persistent high disease activity despite conventional treatment

Intervention:

In addition to standard therapy, SLE patients will receive self-administered, subcutaneous injections of belimumab every week for the entire study period and 2 infusions of rituximab 1000 mg on day 28 (week 4) and day 42 (week 6).

Main study parameters:

The primary clinical efficacy parameter is the treatment failure rate during the 2 years study period. Secondary endpoints are clinical and non-biased immunological effects of the treatment summarized as follows: reduction of disease relevant autoantibodies, in particular anti-dsDNA autoantibody production at 28 weeks, total renal response rate at 28 weeks, regression of immune complex-mediated excessive neutrophil extracellular traps (NET) formation at 28 weeks; sustained, long-term B-cell depletion during 104 weeks; sustained reduction of relevant anti-nuclear autoantibodies, including seroconversion during 104 weeks; and sustained regression of immune complex-mediated excessive neutrophil extracellular traps (NET) formation during 104 weeks. Additionally, the study will perform safety and toxicity monitoring according to Common toxicity Criteria (CTC) developed by the National Cancer Institute (NCI) with the use of Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) and evaluate the reduction of concomitant immunosuppression and the number of moderate and severe flares during study follow-up.

Study duration: 104 weeks.

Nature and extent of the burden and risks associated with participation and potential benefits:

The study will include SLE patients with a severe flare necessitating remission induction treatment with intensive immunosuppression. The use of belimumab followed by rituximab can ameliorate disease activity even more than conventional treatment in the short-term and contribute to the successful tapering of concomitant immunosuppressive treatment. The latter will possibly lead to the reduction of infectious complication as compared to conventional treatment. The risks are predominantly related to the side effect profile of rituximab and belimumab and infectious complications of long-term B-cell depletion.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
70
Inclusion Criteria
  1. Have a clinical diagnosis of SLE according to the SLICC criteria 2012

  2. Severe, active SLE disease defined as a situation in which 1 or more of the following criteria are met:

    1. SLEDAI-2K (SLE Disease Activity Index) with 12 or more points
    2. New or worse SLE-related activity of major organs, i.e.: CNS-SLE (includes NPSLE), vasculitis, nephritis, pericarditis and/or myocarditis, myositis, thrombocytopenia < 60, hemolytic anemia < 4.4mmol/L (=7.0g/dL)
    3. high disease activity that requires or warrants induction treatment by switching to or increasing dosage of oral mycophenolate
  3. New, persisting or progressive disease activity despite the use of conventional maintenance immunosuppressive treatment (e.g. mycophenolate or azathioprine)

  4. Positive for relevant SLE-specific autoantibodies defined as a situation in which 1 or more of the following criteria are met:

    1. ANA seropositivity, as defined by a positive ANA-titer ≥ 1:80, before and at screening :

      • Positive test results from 2 independent time points within the study screening period; OR
      • One positive historical test result and 1 positive result during the screening period. Historical documentation of a positive test of ANA (eg, ANA by HEp-2 titer, ANA by ELISA) must include the date of the test.
    2. Anti-DNA seropositivity, as defined by a positive anti-dsDNA serum antibody ≥ 30 IU/mL, before and at screening:

      • Positive test results from 2 independent time points within the study screening period.
      • One positive historical test result and 1 positive result during the screening period. Historical documentation of a positive test of anti-dsDNA (eg, anti-dsDNA by Farr assay or ELISA) must include the date of the test.
  5. Female subjects are eligible to enter the study if she is:

    • Not pregnant or nursing
    • Of non-child-bearing potential (i.e. after hysterectomy, postmenopausal, bilateral ovariectomy or documented bilateral tubal ligation or other permanent female sterilization procedure)
    • in agreement to not become pregnant (if female subjects of childbearing potential) and therefore must be sexually inactive by abstinence or use contraceptive methods with a failure rate of < 1%.
Exclusion Criteria
  1. Active pregnancy, as proven by a positive urine beta-HCG test or a positive serum beta-HCG

  2. Significant hypogammaglobulinemia (IgG < 4.0 g/L) or an IgA deficiency (IgA < 0.1 g/L)

  3. Immunization with a live vaccine 1 month before screening

  4. Active infection at time of screening, as follows:

    • Hospitalization for treatment of infection within previous 60 days of day 0 of the study
    • Use of parenteral (intravenous of intramuscular) antibiotics (including anti-bacterials, anti-virals, anti-fungals or anti-parasitic agents) within previous 60 days of day 0 of the study
    • Serological evidence of viral hepatitis defined as: patients positive for HbsAg test or HBcAb or a positive hepatitis C antibody not treated with antiviral medication
  5. Have a historically positive HIV test or test positive at screening for HIV

  6. Have a history of a primary immunodeficiency

  7. Have a neutrophil count of < 1.5x10E9/L

  8. Have a significant infection history that in the opinion of the investigator would make the candidate unsuitable for the study

  9. Have a history of an anaphylactic reaction to parenteral administration of contrast agents, human or murine proteins or monoclonal antibodies

  10. Have any other clinically significant abnormal laboratory value in the opinion of the investigator

  11. Have current drugs or alcohol abuse or dependence within 365 days prior to Day 0 of the study

  12. Have an active malignant neoplasm or one in the history of the last 5 years, except basal cell or squamous cell carcinoma of the skin treated with local resection only or carcinoma in situ of the uterine cervix treated locally and with no evidence of metastatic disease for 3 years

  13. Have evidence of serious suicide risk including any history of suicidal behavior in the last 6 months and/or any suicidal ideation in the last 2 months or who, in the investigator's opinion, poses a significant suicide risk

  14. Have any other clinically significant abnormal laboratory value, any intercurrent significant medical or psychiatric illness that in the opinion of the investigator would make the candidate unsuitable for the study

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
BLM+RTX treatment armBelimumab InjectionIntervention 1 Belimumab injection: subcutaneous weekly injections with 200mg belimumab (BML) for the duration of the entire study period of two years. Intervention 2 Rituximab infusion: Two intravenously infusions of 1000mg rituximab (RTX) at week 4 and week 6 after the start of belimumab. Intervention 3: Standard of care: induction therapy with three intravenously infusions methylprednisolone of 1000mg (or 500mg if weight is below 60kg), oral prednisolone 60mg with a quick tapering scheme to reach 5mg in 10 weeks and mycofenolate mofetil start dosis 500mg twice daily with maximum dosis of 2000mg twice daily depending on tolerance and area under curve (AUC) aimed at 60mg\*hour/L.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Treatment failure rate2 years

The treatment failure rate will be measured at 104 weeks in both treatment arms with the hypothesis that lower treatment failure rates will be obtained in the RTX+BLM arm.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change of immune complex-mediated excessive neutrophil extracellular traps (NET) formation28 weeks

The quantification of ex vivo NET induction with a 3-dimensional, confocal microscopy technique

Evaluation of the clinical response by SLICC2 years

SLICC damage score (System Lupus International Collaborating Clinics/American College of Rheumatology Damage Index for Systemic Lupus Erythematosus) will be assesed at baseline, one year and two years, with a minimum score of 0 and a maximum score of 47, with a higher score indicating more damage

Evaluation of the clinical response by the amount of moderate and severe flares.2 years

Patients will be monitored at frequent timepoints

Change of memory B-cell numbers28 weeks

The detection of (autoreactive) memory B-cells by standardized flowcytometry and in B-cell culture assays

Evaluation of the clinical response by QoL questionnaires2 years

QoL questionnaires will be assessed at multiple time points by the SF-36 (ShortForm-36) questionnaire, with a minimum score of 0 and a maximum score of 100, with a higher score indicating a higher quality of life

Evaluation of the renal response2 years

The number of partial and complete renal responders in case of lupus nephritis

Incidence of Treatment-Emergent Adverse Events [Safety and Tolerability]2 years

Patients will be monitored at frequent timepoints

Sustained change of autoantibody production2 years

The sustained reduction of pathogenic autoantibodies, in particular anti-dsDNA autoantibodies

Change of disease relevant auto-antibodies present at baseline, in particular anti-dsDNA28 weeks

All disease relevant auto-antibodies will be measured at 28 weeks and compared to baseline with the hypothesis that a better reduction will be obtained in the RTX+BLM arm.

Seroconversion of disease relevant auto-antibodies2 years

Seroconversion of pathogenic autoantibodies, in particular anti-dsDNA autoantibodies

Sustained change of memory B-cell numbers2 years

The detection of (autoreactive) memory B-cells by standardized flowcytometry and in B-cell culture assays

Sustained change of immune complex-mediated excessive neutrophil extracellular traps (NET) formation2 years

The quantification of ex vivo NET induction with a 3-dimensional, confocal microscopy technique

Evaluation of the clinical response by SLEDAI2 years

Patients will be monitored at frequent timepoints by the The Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Disease Activity Index 2000 (SLEDAI-2K), with a minimum score of 0 and a maximum score of 105, with a higher score indicating a higher disease activity

Evaluation of the clinical response by the ability to reduce concomitant immunosuppression without flares2 years

Patients will be monitored at frequent timepoints

Trial Locations

Locations (4)

University Medical Center Groningen

🇳🇱

Groningen, Netherlands

Leiden University Medical Center

🇳🇱

Leiden, Netherlands

Radboud University Medical Center

🇳🇱

Nijmegen, Netherlands

HagaZiekenhuis

🇳🇱

The Hague, Netherlands

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