Crohn's Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
MultiCTR Randomized Double-Blind Double-Dummy Study to Evaluate Clinical Efficacy/Safety of DR 6MP for Targeted Ileal Delivery vs Purinethol in Patients w/Moderately Active Crohn's Disease
The study is designed to evaluate the clinical efficacy and safety of daily treatment for 12 weeks of oral administration of a delayed release, locally delivered 6MP (mercaptopurine) drug (80 mg), as compared to standard Purinethol (at a dose of 1-1.5 mg/kg/body weight), in alleviating the clinical, immunological and mucosal signs and symptoms of moderately active Crohn's Disease
Crohn's Disease (CD) therapy is aimed at reducing inflammation via induction of remission
after a flare-up and maintenance of the remission for as long as possible. Therapies
commonly used for inducing remission are steroids and anti-TNF-a. Standard 6MP, on the other
hand, has a slow onset of action and requires several months of administration before its
therapeutic effects become apparent. Therefore, 6MP is typically used as maintenance
therapy, rather than for remission. Furthermore, serious AE's associated wtih 6MP include
leucopenia, hepatoxicity, pancreatitis and bone marrow suppression, requiring lowering of
dose or treatment discontinuation.
The Teva DR-6MP project was designed to evaluate a new oral 6MP formulation that would
address these limitations. The slow action of standard 6MP, precluding its use as a
treatment for induction of remission, would be offset by a faster-disintegrating, more
soluble formulation with an enteric coating for targeted ileal delivery. This new
formulation designed to open at the terminal ileum, the most commonly affected area of CD
bowel involvement, could deliver higher effective local concentrations of drug to the site
most affected by CD, stimulating an effective local immunological response, resulting in a
cascade of widespread immunological activity, evoking an induction of remission. The safety
of standard 6MP would be improved upon by the fact that negligible levels of the DR-6MP
formulation have been observed in the plasma, obviating the toxicities associated with
systemic 6MP. Moreover, since the DR-6MP dose is fixed and not subject to patient weight,
nor potentially, side-effects, the dose adjustments required for up-titration to optimal
dose, or down-titration due to toxicity, could be avoided.
Previous small, pilot proof-of-concept clinical efficacy and pharmacokinetic studies of the
DR-6MP formulation demonstrated the potential for induction of remission, mucosal healing,
systemic immunological improvement and lower systemic side-effects.
The current study is designed to repeat the earlier studies under larger, more rigorous
conditions in a randomized, double-blind fashion at multiple sites to ascertain if the
initial encouraging results could be repeated. Moreover, a higher dose of 6MP (80 mg) will
be tested to ascertain if presumably higher local concentrations at the disease site can
evince a more robust clinical effect.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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