Crohn Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Single Arm Study of Extracorporeal Photoimmune Therapy With Uvadex For Corticosteroid Sparing in Patients With Corticosteroid-Dependent Crohn's Disease Who May Also Be Refractory or Intolerant to Immunosuppressants and/or Anti-Tumor Necrosis Factor Agen
This study will examine the safety and effectiveness of extracorporeal photopheresis (ECP)
in controlling Crohn's disease symptoms as patients taper their corticosteroid dose. Crohn's
disease is a chronic inflammatory bowel disease. Patients commonly have chronic diarrhea
with abdominal pain, loss of appetite and weight loss. Acute disease flares are treated with
large doses of corticosteroids, but long-term use of these drugs can have harmful side
effects. ECP (described below), is approved to treat skin symptoms associated with a type of
cancer called cutaneous T-cell lymphoma and has been used experimentally in conditions
involving abnormal inflammation.
Patients 18 years of age and older who have had Crohn's disease for at least 6 months, who
are corticosteroid-dependent, and whose symptoms are controlled well enough so that their
Crohn's Disease Activity Index (CDAI) is less than 220, may be eligible for this study.
Candidates will be screened with a medical history and review of medical records, physical
examination, electrocardiogram, blood tests, urine pregnancy test for women of childbearing
potential, and a questionnaire about how Crohn's disease affects their life and activities.
Patients with a CDAI score of less than 150 will begin ECP treatments as soon as possible.
Those with scores from 150 to 219 will have their corticosteroid dose increased enough to
bring their CDAI score to below 150 before beginning ECP. Patients who do not achieve a CDAI
of less than 150 after 4 to 6 weeks of increased corticosteroids will be excluded from the
study.
Participants will have ECP treatments for 2 consecutive days every 2 weeks for 24 weeks, for
a total of 26 treatments. For ECP, patients undergo leukapheresis, a method of collecting
large numbers of white blood cells, or leukocytes-cells that may be responsible for many of
the medical problems in Crohn's disease. Whole blood is collected through a needle in an arm
vein, similar to donating a unit of blood. The blood flows through a machine that separates
it into its components by spinning. The white cells are removed and collected in a plastic
bag, and the red blood cells and plasma are returned to the patient's bloodstream through
the same needle. The collected white cells are mixed with a drug called UVADEX® (Registered
Trademark), exposed to ultraviolet (UVA) light, and then returned to the patients'
bloodstream. (The UVADEX allows the blood cells to absorb more UVA.) The UVA changes the
cells in a way that, once they are back in the body, they cause changes in other cells like
them. Each ECP treatment takes 3 to 4 hours. On the first day of each 2-day treatment,
patients will undergo a review of symptoms, check of vital signs, and blood draw. They will
complete a CDAI diary for 7 days before the first of the two ECP treatments and a
questionnaire about their life and activities at 4-week intervals. During the ECP treatment
period, corticosteroids will be slowly reduced as long as disease symptoms do not worsen.
Patients whose disease remains under control with cessation of all steroids may begin
maintenance ECP, 2 days in a row every 4 weeks for an additional 20 weeks (another 10
treatments), with the same follow-up as described above, and a full physical examination 4
weeks after the final treatment. Patients who were able to reduce, but not stop, steroid
treatment may be considered for maintenance therapy if it is thought that continuing
treatment may enable further reduction of steroids. Patients whose disease symptoms worsen
with ECP or who have not been able to decrease their steroid dose will not be eligible for
maintenance therapy and their participation in the study will end.
This protocol aims to measure the safety and effectiveness of extracorporeal photopheresis
(ECP) therapy for maintaining remission of symptoms during withdrawal of corticosteroids
from patients with steroid-dependent Crohn's disease. Potential subjects will be
asymptomatic or have a low level of symptoms that respond to an increase in their steroid
dose; furthermore potential subjects will be dependent on steroids to control their symptoms
and have a history of failing other immunosuppressive drugs to control their symptoms.
This is an unblinded, single-arm study of ECP in Crohn's disease. This trial will use ECP
twice a week every two weeks over 24 weeks during which time the dose of corticosteroids
will be tapered. If the corticosteroids are able to be withdrawn without an increase in
symptoms, then subjects may be eligible for further ECP (twice a week every four weeks over
24 weeks) as a maintenance regimen.
Outcome parameters include the rates of complete and partial steroid tapering while
maintaining remission, the rates of adverse events, and secondary clinical outcomes such as
duration of response, rate of and time to relapse, and changes in symptom index scores. In
addition, the NIH will perform a substudy that includes serial colonoscopy to measure
cytokine and cell population changes in mononuclear cells extracted from biopsies.
The long-term goals of this study are to test the safety and efficacy of ECP as a
steroid-sparing and remittive therapy in Crohn's disease, to determine the immune response
it effects in the gut mucosa, and identify factors associated with responders versus
non-responders to ECP.
;
Endpoint Classification: Safety Study, Primary Purpose: Treatment
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Active, not recruiting |
NCT04046913 -
The ADDapt Diet in Reducing Crohn's Disease Inflammation
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05169593 -
Prevention of Postoperative Endoscopic Recurrence With Endoscopy-driven Versus Systematic Biological Therapy
|
Phase 4 | |
Recruiting |
NCT06116604 -
Early Bowel Resection for Terminal Ileal Crohn's Disease
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT05316584 -
A Novel Remote Patient and Medication Monitoring Solution to Improve Adherence and PerSiStence With IBD Therapy
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05294107 -
Intestinal Organoids
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05627128 -
A Culturally Tailored Dietary Intervention to Treat Crohn's Disease
|
N/A | |
Withdrawn |
NCT04349449 -
ENTYVIO in Bio-naive Patients With Moderate/Severe Crohn's Disease (CD) in Daily Practice
|
||
Completed |
NCT05051943 -
A Study of the Real-world Use of an Adalimumab Biosimilar and Evaluation of Nutritional Status on the Therapeutic Response
|
||
Completed |
NCT03058679 -
Trial of Specific Carbohydrate and Mediterranean Diets to Induce Remission of Crohn's Disease
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT02871635 -
BI 695501 Versus Humira in Patients With Active Crohn's Disease: a Trial Comparing Efficacy, Endoscopic Improvement, Safety, and Immunogenicity
|
Phase 3 | |
Recruiting |
NCT04539665 -
Extended Mesenteric Excision in Ileocolic Resections for Crohn's Disease.
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT04266600 -
Extended Mesenteric Excision in Ileocolic Resections for Crohn's Disease
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT03913572 -
Treatment of Perianal Disease Using Adipose-derived Stem Cells
|
||
Completed |
NCT03606499 -
Real-world Effectiveness of Ustekinumab in Participants Suffering From Inflammatory Bowel Disease (Crohn's Disease or Ulcerative Colitis) With Extra-intestinal Manifestations or Immune-mediated Inflammatory Diseases
|
||
Completed |
NCT03668249 -
A Study to Characterize Multidimensional Model to Predict the Course of Crohn's Disease (CD)
|
||
Terminated |
NCT04102111 -
A Study Evaluating Participants With Moderately to Severely Active Crohn's Disease
|
Phase 2 | |
Recruiting |
NCT04997733 -
Fecal Microbiota Transplantation in Crohn's Disease as Relay After Anti-TNF Withdrawal
|
Phase 3 | |
Recruiting |
NCT05906576 -
Post-marketing Registry Study of Infliximab for Injection in Chinese Pediatric Crohn's Disease Patients
|
Phase 4 | |
Not yet recruiting |
NCT04502303 -
18F-FDG and 68Ga-FAPI PET/CT in Crohn's Disease
|
Phase 2 | |
Not yet recruiting |
NCT04398836 -
Preoperative Nutrition for Crohn's Disease Patients
|
Phase 3 |