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Clinical Trial Summary

This is a Phase IV, single-site study that will examine blood cells or tissue obtained from CIU ( chronic idiopathic Urticaria) patients receiving open-label treatment with omalizumab at the current FDA-approved dose of 300 mg/month for 12 weeks in addition to standard therapy with anti-histamines. Results from the 3 Phase III studies in CIU patients provide evidence that a meaningful change in symptoms is apparent at 1-2 wks. The Minimal Important Difference (MID) is achieved by 70% of patients by 2 wks on multiple background drugs for hives. The goal is to identity the IgE bearing cell type associated with clinical symptom change.


Clinical Trial Description

Primary Objective This will be a study of the kinetics of clinical symptom relief during treatment of patients with CIU. The purpose is to determine if the rate of clinical remission is concordant with the rate that IgE-dependent functions of basophil change or mast cell changes during treatment. Secondary Objectives 1. Basophil surface IgE, Fc epsilon Receptor I alpha (FcεRI) and Syk by flow cytometry 2. Dendritic cell surface IgE, FcεRI, functions 3. Basophil anti-IgE, anti FcεRI, C5a, N-Formylmethionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (FMLP) mediated histamine along with sensitivity measures 4. Serum free IgE measures 5. Characterization of presence of serum autoantibody presence ± Syk inhibitors 6. Basophil enumeration 7. Basophil Messenger RNA (mRNA) profiling baseline at 3 timepoints (baseline, meaningful clinical changes, and 30 days) 8. To assess the rate of IgE and FcεRI change in skin mast cells at day 0, 6, 90, via a small punch biopsy as well as the Mas-Related gpr Family Member X2 (MrgX2) receptor expression Study Design This is a Phase IV, single-site study that will examine blood cells or tissue obtained from CIU patients receiving open-label treatment with omalizumab at the current FDA-approved dose of 300 mg/month for 12 weeks in addition to standard therapy with anti-histamines. Results from the 3 Phase III studies in CIU patients provide evidence that a meaningful change in symptoms is apparent at 1-2 wks. The MID (Minimal Important Difference) is achieved by 70% of patients by 2 wks on multiple background drugs for hives. The goal is to identity the IgE bearing cell type associated with clinical symptom change. The study will enroll 30 patients and will consist of three phases. Screening Visit (Week -3 to Week-2)-establish compliance with diary and review safety labs. Standard therapy Run-in (Week -2 to Day 0) Open-label Treatment Period (Day 0 to Week 12) To be eligible at the screening visit (Week -1), subjects must: 1. Be > 18 years old 2. Have a diagnosis of moderate to severe CIU, as defined by pruritus and hives for > 3 days in a 7-day period for > 6 consecutive weeks despite treatment with H1 antihistamine: Must have a non-diary based daily urticaria activity score (UAS) score ≥ 2 established in the outpatient setting based on the patient's condition over 12 hours prior to the visit; the UAS is a composite score of pruritus (0-3) and number of hives (0-3) with a maximum value of 6. This requirement may be met either at screening visit, run-in visit (Week -2), or beginning of treatment (Day 0). Must have been on an approved dose of an H1 antihistamine for CIU such as loratadine 10 mg once a day or equivalent, for at least 7 days prior to the screening visit. Approved agents include loratadine 10 qd, desloratadine 5 mg qd, fexofenadine 180 mg qd, cetirizine 10 mg qd or levocetirizine 5 mg qd as once daily medications at the current FDA-approved dose. Must be willing to fill out a twice-daily patient-diary to establish the patient's Urticaria Activity Score 7 (UAS7) score. The UAS is a composite diary- recorded score with numeric severity intensity ratings (0 = none to 3 = intense) for 1) the number of wheals (hives); and 2) the intensity of the pruritus (itch). The UAS7 is the sum of the daily average UAS scores (average of a.m. and p.m.) for 7 days. The maximum UAS7 value is 42. To be eligible to begin the run-in period (Week -2 to Day 0), the patients: Must remain on stable dose of a single H1 antihistamine at approved dose (not including antihistamine rescue medication) as established at the screening visit. At the end of the 12-week treatment period , subjects will have last visit a final visit to collect diary, blood work, non-lesional skin biopsy and safety data. All patients will be provided diphenhydramine (25 mg po TID) as rescue medication for pruritus relief on an as-needed basis (to a maximum of three doses in 24 hours). Patients who require treatments other than diphenhydramine (e.g., prednisone) to treat persistent/worsening disease will be discontinued from the study. Patients will also be provided an epipen and trained in its use as per American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology (AAAAI) guidelines for omalizumab. Primary Endpoint The time to meaningful change in diary-based clinical symptoms as measured by the Urticaria Activity Score from baseline (Wk -7 to Day -1) to the date at which an MID (5 point change in weekly UAS 7) or achievement of > 50% reduction in daily symptom score for 3 days if in the first week. The UAS score, which is the sum of pruritus and hives, will be used to calculate the UAS7. The UAS7 score obtained 1 week prior to randomization will be used as the baseline. Secondary Endpoints Change in the weekly pruritus score from baseline to the 12th week in the treatment period. The pruritus score will be measured twice daily (a.m. and p.m.), on a scale of 0 (none) to 3 (intense). The weekly pruritus score is the sum of average daily pruritus scores over the previous 7 days. Change in the weekly score for number of hives from baseline to the 12th week in the treatment period. The number of hives is measured twice daily (a.m. and p.m.), on a scale of 0 (none) to 3 (> 12 hives, see below). The weekly score of number of hives is the sum of the average daily scores over the previous 7 days. Change in the amount of rescue medication (diphenhydramine 25 mg) from baseline to the 12th week in the treatment period using the question on the rescue medication use in the patient diary. Change in SKINDEX29 (quality of life survey instrument with 29 questions) on a 5-point Likert scale. It will be given at baseline and again at 90 days. Exploratory Endpoints 1. Basophil surface IgE, FcεRI and Syk by flow cytometry- Day 0, 1, 3, 6, 10, 20, 30 and 90 days 2. Dendritic cell surface IgE, FcεRI -Day 0, 1, 3, 6, 10, 20, 30 and 90 days 3. Basophil anti-IgE, anti FcεRI, C5a, FMLP mediated histamine release along with sensitivity measures- Day 0, 1, 3, 6, 10, 20, 30 and 90 days 4. Serum free IgE measures (stored serum) Day 0, 1, 3, 6, 10, 20, 30 and 90 days 5. Characterization of presence of serum autoantibody presence ± Syk inhibitors -Day 0, 1, 3, 6, 10, 20, 30 and 90 days 6. Basophil enumeration by manual counting and blood histamine content - Day 0, 1, 3, 6, 10, 20, 30 and 90 days. This will determine the presence or absence of basopenia and identify subjects for mRNA profiling studies. 7. Basophil mRNA profiling baseline at 3 timepoints (baseline, meaningful clinical changes, and 30 days) in select subjects with sufficient basophil numbers ( >1.5x 106/100 cc blood) 8. Numbers of IgE +, FcεRI + cells in non-lesional skin biopsies at day 0, 6, 90 to monitor skin mast cells well as the MrgX2 receptor expression 9. Change in circulating leukocyte population numbers that are targeted by omalizumab such as blood basophils, eosinophil and lymphocyte counts by automated analysis (week -3 to week 12). ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03111628
Study type Interventional
Source Johns Hopkins University
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 4
Start date October 6, 2017
Completion date May 1, 2020

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