Atherosclerosis Clinical Trial
— WALKOfficial title:
A Phase 2, Randomized, Double-blind, Placebo-controlled, Parallel-group, Multicenter, Dose-Selection Study of Ad2/Hypoxia Inducible Factor (HIF)-1α/VP16 in Patients With Intermittent Claudication
The purpose of this Phase 2 clinical research study is to examine the safety of an
experimental gene transfer agent, Ad2/HIF-1α/VP16, and its ability to stimulate the growth
of new blood vessels from existing blood vessels (a process called angiogenesis) in an
attempt to improve the flow of blood in the legs of patients with peripheral arterial
disease (PAD).
Specifically, this study will enroll patients with severe intermittent claudication (IC)
which is the stage of PAD in which a patient's walking ability is severely limited, causing
pain in the legs upon exercise due to inadequate blood flow to the muscles of the lower
limbs.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 289 |
Est. completion date | March 2010 |
Est. primary completion date | September 2008 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 40 Years to 80 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Males and females 40 to 80 years of age, inclusive. - Clinical diagnosis of PAD, secondary to atherosclerosis, in both lower limbs, confirmed by objective evidence: An ankle-brachial index (ABI) of = 0.90 at rest in at least 1 lower limb (Note: The index limb must be = 0.90 at rest.); The ABI after exercise must be reduced by = 20% from the ABI at rest in the index leg (the most symptomatic leg during the treadmill testing). The post-exercise ABI will also be performed on the other leg if the resting ABI > 0.90. A patient may be eligible for the study with a resting ABI in the non-index limb > 0.90 if: a. The post-exercise ABI in the non-index leg is also reduced by greater than or equal to 20% OR; b. A medically significant stenosis (defined as = 50%) of a femoropopliteal or infrapopliteal artery is present, as documented via an imaging study (such as MR, conventional angiography, duplex ultrasound, or CT); If the ABI cannot be measured in either leg (due to non-compressible arteries), then a toe-brachial index (TBI) of = 0.70 may be used in its place to confirm PAD. - Symptoms of severe intermittent claudication (IC) in at least 1 lower limb persisting for = 6 months - Patients with a peak walking time (PWT) of 1 to 12 minutes (inclusive) using the standardized exercise treadmill test at each of the 2 consecutive treadmill tests performed at least a week apart during the Screening period. - During Screening, patients must demonstrate consistency of PWTs between 2 standardized exercise treadmill tests (Walk 1 and Walk 2) performed at least 1 week apart. - Consistency of the PWT between the 2 visits is achieved if the difference between PWT at Walk 1 and Walk 2 is = 25% of the higher of the 2 PWTs ([higher PWT - lower PWT]/higher PWT). - If the difference between PWT at Walk 1 and Walk 2 is > 25% of the higher of the 2 PWTs, a third treadmill test (Walk 3) may be performed at the discretion of the Principal Investigator between 7 and 14 days following Walk 2. The variability in PWT warranting the performance of Walk 3 must be secondary to circumstances that may contribute to the observed variation (e.g., prior exertion, inconsistent timing, ingestion of a meal within 4 hours, etc). To qualify for the study, the difference between PWT of either Walk 1 or Walk 2 as compared with Walk 3 must be = 25% of the higher of the 2 PWTs ([higher PWT - lower PWT]/higher PWT). The decision whether Walk 1 or Walk 2 will be used for comparison with Walk 3 will be made prospectively and reviewed with the Sponsor. - An acceptable mean PWT must be achieved within 4 weeks of treatment administration. - Patients have been considered for other potential treatment options including exercise rehabilitation, smoking cessation, and pharmacological therapy prior to Enrollment. - Claudication severity, concomitant medications for the treatment of CAD, PAD, and IC, smoking status and exercise habits should be clinically stable for 3 months prior to Enrollment. - Patients who are committed to following the protocol requirements as evidenced by written informed consent. Exclusion Criteria: - Patients with either current or any history of Critical Limb Ischemia (CLI; that is, patients classified as Rutherford Category 4 [ischemic rest pain], Rutherford Category 5 [non-healing ischemic ulcers and minor tissue loss], or Rutherford Category 6 [non-healing ischemic ulcers and major tissue loss]). - Patients in whom arterial insufficiency in the lower extremity is the result of acute limb ischemia or an immunological or inflammatory non-atherosclerotic disorder (eg, thromboangiitis obliterans [Buerger's Disease]) and systemic sclerosis [both limited and diffuse forms]). - A PAD-specific surgical revascularization procedure within 6 months of enrollment or a PAD-specific percutaneous procedure within 3 months of enrollment, or patients likely to require a PAD-specific revascularization procedure within 6 months after Enrollment. - Patients with aortoiliac disease that limits inflow in either leg: a. Patients with concomitant aortoiliac disease (i.e., patients with a significant component of inflow disease in the distal aorta, common or external iliac, or proximal common femoral artery) as assessed by an imaging modality (e.g., segmental limb pressures and waveform analysis, duplex ultrasound scanning, magnetic resonance angiography, or radio-contrast arteriogram) performed within 1 year prior to Enrollment. If subject has had a bypass after the imaging study, then documentation of graft patency is required within 6 months prior to Enrollment; b. If it is suspected at Screening that a patient has aortoiliac disease based on vascular examination, an imaging modality (e.g., segmental limb pressures and waveform analysis, duplex ultrasound scanning, magnetic resonance angiography, or radio-contrast arteriogram) must be performed to rule it out if there is not one available within the times specified above. If there is no suspicion of aortoiliac disease in the Principal Investigator's judgment, an imaging test at Screening is not required for study purposes. - Patients in whom walking impairment due to pain in the index leg is the result of these nonatherosclerotic comorbid conditions: venous claudication, chronic compartment syndrome, peripheral nerve pain (e.g., severe peripheral neuropathy), pseudoclaudication caused by spinal cord compression, or acute limb ischemia which, in the Principal Investigator's judgment are severe enough to confound the assessment of the patient's IC. - Conditions other than IC of significant severity that could confound PWT on the standardized exercise treadmill test causing premature or inconsistent termination of exercise (e.g., angina pectoris, heart failure [New York Heart Association {NYHA} Classes III and IV], respiratory disease [e.g., chronic obstructive pulmonary disease], orthopedic disease, neurological disorders, rheumatologic disorders [e.g., severe degenerative joint diseases], dyspnea, fatigue, prior lower limb amputation, including amputations proximal to the metatarsal or phalangeal joints). - Presence or history of cancer within 5 years of enrollment or not current with recommended screening guidelines for colorectal, lung, prostate, breast, cervical, and uterine cancers, with the exception of low grade and fully resolved non-melanoma skin malignancy. - Patients with a well-defined clinical or genetic disorder predisposing to malignancy should be excluded (e.g., von Hippel Lindau, familial polyposis coli, BRCA1, BRCA2, etc). - Patients with baseline funduscopic evidence of active proliferative diabetic retinopathy, preproliferative diabetic retinopathy, or wet AMD AND/OR Patients with a history of treatment for active proliferative diabetic retinopathy or wet AMD within 5 years of enrollment. - Diabetes type 1 (juvenile onset) - Poorly controlled type 2 diabetes (ie, HbA1C >10%) at Screening - Active hepatitis defined as clinically significant increase in liver enzymes (ie, 3 times the ULN) or other current infectious disease - Patients with symptoms of respiratory infection at time of Screening and/or randomization period and/or patients who have been on systemic or oral antibiotics for active infection within 2 weeks of study drug administration. - Patients with clinically significant abnormal hematology (eg, hematocrit < 30%, white blood cell count > 14,000), blood chemistry, renal, hepatic, or other laboratory parameters that could be the result of an underlying malignancy or systemic infection (e.g., serum creatinine = 2.5 mg/dL), as judged by the investigator. - Patients with the following comorbidities who may not be healthy enough to successfully complete all protocol requirements or in whom results may be particularly difficult to assess: Concurrent severe congestive heart failure (NYHA Classes III and IV); Life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias, unstable angina (characterized by increasingly frequent episodes with modest exertion or at rest, worsening severity, and prolonged duration), and/or myocardial infarction within 4 weeks before enrollment; Coronary artery bypass grafting or percutaneous coronary intervention within 3 months before enrollment; A renal and/or carotid revascularization procedure within 1 month of enrollment; Transient ischemic attack within 3 months before enrollment; Deep vein thrombosis within 3 months before enrollment; Severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (room air arterial PO2 < 60 mmHg or PCO2 > 50 mmHg, or abnormal pulmonary function tests (FEV1 < 1.2 L/sec); Thrombocytopenia (defined as platelet count < 100,000/mm3); Undergoing hemodialysis; Patients with immunocompromised conditions, organ transplant recipients and/or need for immunosuppressive therapy; Neurological dementia (i.e., Alzheimer's Disease); Hemorrhagic stroke - Patients with a known allergy to the vehicle, placebo control, or any other medications or imaging agents required for participation in this study. - Fertile women who are pregnant (as confirmed by a serum pregnancy test at the Screening Visit and a urine pregnancy test at Day 0 prior to study drug administration), nursing, or using either no or an inadequate form of contraception. - Fertile men and women who are not willing to use barrier-type contraception for at least 90 days post-treatment. - Patients with a recent history of alcoholism or drug abuse, or severe emotional, behavioral or psychiatric problems, who may not be able to adequately comply with the requirements of the study. - Patients receiving experimental medications or participating in another study using an experimental drug or experimental procedure within 30 days of enrollment into this study. - Patients previously enrolled in a prior angiogenic gene therapy clinical study, unless patient was a known placebo patient. |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Germany | Charité Campus Benjamin Franklin | Berlin | |
Germany | Ev. Krankenhaus Königin Elisabeth | Berlin | |
Germany | Klinikum Karlsbad Langensteinbach gGmbH | Karlsbad | |
Germany | Universitätsklinikum Schleswig Holstein/Campus Luebeck | Luebeck | |
Germany | Klinikum Grosshadern | Munich | |
Germany | Universitätsklinikum Munster | Munster | |
United Kingdom | Belfast City Hospital | Belfast | |
United Kingdom | Selly Oak Hospital | Birmingham | |
United Kingdom | Ninewells Hospital & Medical School | Dundee | |
United Kingdom | Hull Royal Infirmary | Hull | |
United Kingdom | St. George's Hospital and Medical School | London | |
United Kingdom | Ealing Hospital | Southall, Middlesex | |
United States | Saint Joseph's Research Institute | Atlanta | Georgia |
United States | Palm Beach Heart Institute | Atlantis | Florida |
United States | The Johns Hopkins Hospital | Baltimore | Maryland |
United States | Baptist Medical Center Princeton | Birmingham | Alabama |
United States | Boston Medical Center | Boston | Massachusetts |
United States | Caritas St. Elizabeth's Medical Center, CCP4C | Boston | Massachusetts |
United States | Massachusetts General Hospital | Boston | Massachusetts |
United States | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill | Chapel Hill | North Carolina |
United States | Rush University Medical Center | Chicago | Illinois |
United States | Cleveland Clinic Foundation | Cleveland | Ohio |
United States | Baylor University Medical Center | Dallas | Texas |
United States | University of Colorado Health Sciences Center | Denver | Colorado |
United States | Henry Ford Hospital | Detroit | Michigan |
United States | Duke University Medical Center | Durham | North Carolina |
United States | Baylor College of Medicine | Houston | Texas |
United States | The Care Group at the Heart Center | Indianapolis | Indiana |
United States | Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center | Lebanon | New Hampshire |
United States | Ochsner Clinic Foundation | Metairie | Louisiana |
United States | Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation | Minneapolis | Minnesota |
United States | Mount Sinai School of Medicine | New York | New York |
United States | New York University School of Medicine | New York | New York |
United States | University of Oklahoma, Health Sciences Center | Oklahoma City | Oklahoma |
United States | VA Palo Alto Health Care System | Palo Alto | California |
United States | Baptist Health Care | Pensacola | Florida |
United States | Oregon Health & Science University | Portland | Oregon |
United States | University of Rochester Medical Center | Rochester | New York |
United States | University of California at Davis | Sacramento | California |
United States | Peripheral Vascular Associates | San Antonio | Texas |
United States | Prairie Cardiovascular Consultants, Ltd. | Springfield | Illinois |
United States | Saint Louis University Hospital | St. Louis | Missouri |
United States | Stanford University School of Medicine | Stanford | California |
United States | University of South Florida | Tampa | Florida |
United States | Jobst Vascular Center | Toledo | Ohio |
United States | Medical University of Ohio | Toledo | Ohio |
United States | The Washington Hospital Center | Washington | District of Columbia |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Genzyme, a Sanofi Company |
United States, Germany, United Kingdom,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Peak Walking Time | at 6 months | No | |
Secondary | Peak walking time | at 3 months and at 1 year | No | |
Secondary | Claudication onset time | at 3 months, 6 months, and at 1 year | No | |
Secondary | Quality of life questionnaires | at 3 months, 6 months, 1 year | No | |
Secondary | Resting ankle brachial index | at 3 months, 6 months, 1 year | No |
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