Lupus Erythematosus Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Pilot Study of F-18FDG Positron Emission Tomography (PET) to Assess the Distribution of Activated Lymphocytes in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE)
This study will examine whether PET imaging can reveal what is happening in lymph nodes of
patients with systemic lupus erythematosus, or lupus, during periods of active disease.
Patients may have periods of active disease when they may feel sick with fever, fatigue, and
aching or swollen joints. Their blood tests are abnormal and their kidney, lungs or heart
may be affected. At other times, the disease is inactive, and patients feel well, their
blood is normal, and there is no evidence of organ disease.
In lupus, like other autoimmune diseases, the body's immune system attacks it own healthy
tissues. Activated lymphocytes (a type of immune cell) lead to the production of antibodies
and chemical signals that contribute to the disease process. In animals with lupus, these
cells are activated in the lymphoid organs, such as the lymph nodes or spleen. It is not
known exactly where these cells are activated in humans. Because some lymph nodes are
located deep inside the chest and abdomen; surgery is currently the only way to examining
them. PET imaging may provide an alternative, non-invasive, means of obtaining information
on lymph node activity in humans. This test uses a radioactive sugar molecule called F18-FDG
to find areas of increased cellular activity in the body. (Cells use sugar for fuel, so
active cells, such as active lymphocytes, uses more FDG than other body tissues.) This study
will determine whether PET can detect these areas of increased activity in lupus during
active disease.
Patients with active or inactive lupus may be eligible for this study. Candidates are
screened with a history, physical examination, and routine blood and urine tests. Women who
are pregnant or breastfeeding may not participate.
Participants will undergo PET scanning. On the day of the scan they have a brief medical
history and physical examination and a blood sample is drawn to check blood count and look
for markers of lymphocyte activation. Then, a small plastic tube (catheter) is placed into a
vein in the patient's arm, the FDG is injected through the catheter, and the patient rests
for an hour. For the scan, the patient lies flat in a cradle that is moved into the central
hole of the doughnut-shaped PET camera, and pictures are taken over the next 2 hours, with
the patient lies quietly, without moving the head or arms. After the scan is finished, the
patient empties the bladder approximately every hour for 6 hours to excrete the radioactive
sugar.
This pilot study aims to evaluate the value of Positron Emission Tomography (PET) in
assessing the distribution of activated lymphocytes in SLE patients. Systemic lupus
erythematosus (SLE), often defined as the prototypical autoimmune disease, is a chronic
occasionally life threatening, multisystem disorder. Determining disease activity in SLE is
essential for the selection of appropriate and effective therapeutic regimes. Lymphocyte
activation is the hallmark of SLE and correlates well with disease activity. 2-deoxy-2
[F-18] fluoro-2-D-Glucose positron emission scanning (FDG-PET) is a physiologically based
method of imaging that provides non-invasive information on uptake and metabolism of glucose
in various tissues. Actively metabolizing cells will preferentially take up the
radioactively labeled glucose analog and therefore demonstrate increased signal. Actively
proliferating lymphocytes take up FDG at a higher rate than resting lymphocytes and are
expected to accumulate in selected lymph nodes or spleen that are the anatomic sites of
lymphocyte activation. Lymphocyte activation will be confirmed by FACS analysis of
circulating lymphocytes.
This study is designed as a single center pilot study with two groups of patients divided
into active vs. non-active SLE and both groups will undergo FDG-PET scanning. The primary
objective will be to evaluate the feasibility of FDG-PET in assessing distribution of
activated lymphocytes in active and inactive SLE patients. The goal is to detect activated
lymphocytes at their homing sites and correlate the pattern of distribution with clinical
disease activity.
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