Adrenal Insufficiency Clinical Trial
Official title:
Vaginal Prednisone Administration for Prevention of Adrenal Crisis - a Bioequivalence Study
Patients with chronic adrenal insufficiency need to adapt their glucocorticoid replacement dose in conditions of physical or psychological stress to prevent life threatening adrenal crisis. In cases of more severe impairment or unsecure gastrointestinal absorption (e.g. gastroenteritis, severe infectious disease), rapid and highly dosed administration of glucocorticoids is crucial. The study is conducted to offer female patients the possibility to perform efficient prednisone self-administration in emergency situations in a way of administration, which is easy to perform and accepted by the patients. Therefore, pharmacokinetics and safety of vaginal prednisone administration will be studied and compared to rectal administration.
As patients with adrenal insufficiency still die from adrenal crisis, improvement of both
prevention and also emergency management is needed. It is clear that perfect equipment and
education of patients is key for further crisis prevention and management. Vaginal
administration of prednisone-suppositories is easy to perform and independent of the
gastro-intestinal system. Thus, this study aims at the efficacy, feasibility and safety of
vaginal administration of prednisone-suppositories.
Recruitment:
Patients with primary adrenal insufficiency will be recruited. The adrenal insufficiency
registry of Würzburg comprises more than 150 patients with primary adrenal insufficiency.
Several patients have already indicated their interest to participate in the study.
According to the European Medicines Agency (EMA) notes for guidance on the investigation of
bioavailability and bioequivalence the number of 12 participants is regarded as the minimum
required number.
Trial flow:
Pharmacokinetic studies will be performed at two different study visits. Patients will
receive a 100mg prednisone suppository (Rectodelt® 100 mg) vaginal and rectal on two
different study visits (interval longer then one week). Blood samples for determination of
prednisone and adrenocorticotropic Hormone (ACTH) levels will be collected over a time
period of 6 hours. Patients receive a diary to document eventual local or systemic adverse
events during the following 7 days.
Stopping rules:
Participation of patients is fully voluntarily. Patients are able to stop participation in
the study at any point in time. In addition, patients might claim the elimination of all
data material at any point in time. Furthermore, study participation will be stopped for the
individual patient, if new safety issues occur (e. g. new diagnosis of Diabetes mellitus,
pregnancy or acute infectious disease) during the study. Relevant risks to the patients are
highly unlikely. However, if 2 or more patients experience serious adverse events associated
with the vaginal administration of prednisone with high likelihood, the study will be
stopped.
Written informed consent:
A consent document including patient information upon the nature, scope and possible
consequence of the trial must have been approved by the Institutional Review Board. Patients
amenable for inclusion in the trial will be given sufficient time to study the written
information, as well as possibility to ask questions before signing the consent document.
Analysis:
Documentation and analysis will be performed at the Department of Medicine I, Endocrine and
Diabetes Unit, University of Würzburg, Germany. Data will be documented after
pseudonymisation in a data base. Data analysis is mainly descriptive (bioequivalence of
vaginal prednisone administration compared to rectal application, estimation of the patients
regarding convenience and tolerability of different modes of drug administration, safety
aspects).
Safety:
In the course of the trial, changes in physical findings as well as clinical signs and
symptoms that may reflect adverse effects will be documented. Furthermore, all adverse
events will be documented on the appropriate report form. When an adverse event occurs it
will be graded according to the National cancer Institute - common toxicity criteria
(NCI-CTC) (version 4.0). Patients receive a diary to document any local or systemic adverse
event during the following 7 days after intervention. In addition, patients will be
contacted by phone 3(±1) and 7(±1) days after vaginal administration of prednisone. If
patients report any adverse events that are possibly related to the vaginal administration
route, they will be called-in for further physical examination and detailed documentation.
To further enhance individual patient's safety during the study, a safety assessment will be
performed prior to the subsequent intervention. In addition, a safety assessment will be
performed after 4 and 8 subsequent vaginal administrations of prednisone with evaluation of
events during the 7 day follow up period after administration.
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