Autoimmune Hepatitis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Quantitative Magnetic Resonance Imaging to Aid Clinical Decision Making in Autoimmune Hepatitis.
This will be a prospective, observational, cross-sectional study designed to assess how a
quantitative Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scan will aid in a physicians' clinical
decision making process in patients with suspected or confirmed Autoimmune Hepatitis (AIH).
Participants will be recruited from the specialist outpatient hepatology clinic at Kings
College Hospital NHS (National Health Service) Trust who are either being seen as a new or
follow-up patient. Participants will be treated and assessed in line with the normal clinical
care pathway.
Autoimmune hepatitis is relatively rare, with a prevalence of about 8,000 people in the
United Kingdom (UK) diagnosed. It is a non-resolving liver condition that is usually treated
with a combination of corticosteroid and immunosuppressant therapy. The current standard for
effective management requires close monitoring of disease activity to balance disease control
and unwanted side effects of treatment . The recommended management involves monthly blood
tests and annual liver biopsies to verify histological remission . However, blood tests lack
sensitivity and biopsy is very invasive and samples only a small portion of the liver .
Indeed, liver biopsy remains the gold standard for evaluating liver pathology, however it is
not appropriate for longitudinal monitoring due to pain, risk and invasiveness. Blood tests
can identify when the liver is inflamed, but are insensitive to small changes and are not
prognostic. There is a significant unmet need in this patient group relating to both disease
monitoring and identifying those needing higher immunosuppression or transplant.
Non-invasive, quantitative MRI can characterise liver tissue to aid in the diagnosis of liver
disorders. Using quantitative MRI in the management of AIH patients could be an invaluable
asset within the standard care pathway to ensure more appropriate and accurate dosing of
steroids is used in AIH patients, thus preventing over/under treating.
This will be a single centre quantitative study recruiting 60 participants from those
patients attending the hepatology outpatient clinic at Kings College Hospital NHS (National
Health Service) Trust. It will set out to determine the impact of quantitative Magnetic
Resonance Imaging (MRI) (using LiverMultiScan (LMS)) on intended patient management for
Autoimmune Hepatitis (AIH) patients in comparison with the current usual standard of care.
Participants will be made aware of the study by a member of clinical care team.
All participants will attend their planned outpatient hepatology appointment. The consultant
will document the intended treatment plan for each participant in line with their usual care
pathway. Following this, participants will be required to attend one dedicated study visit
with no continued follow-up. This will involve an Magnetic Resonance Image (MRI) scan. This
visit will be scheduled for the same day as their outpatient appointment, or within a 7-day
window around their appointment with the consultant.
The results of this scan will be analysed, and a report securely sent to the consultant who
will review participants original documented care plan alongside the LMS report. The
consultant will be asked to describe any changes he would have made based on the new
information that is provided by the scan. Consideration will also be taken for quantifying
the potential cost-effectiveness of adding LMS to the standard care pathway.
The study Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) will be conducted within a London based MRI
imaging centre where LMS is installed and compatible with the allocated scanner
(1.5Tesla/3Tesla).
Sample size: The primary endpoint of the study is to determine the proportion of patients for
whom a change in intended treatment would occur following clinical review of LMS data.
Based on the following assumptions, the investigators will aim to recruit 60 patients from
the autoimmune clinic at Kings College Hospital, London, and expect to observe at least a 24%
change in intended clinical management.
- In clinic, returning patients have their liver function tests reviewed to assess
response to therapy, new patients are referred for both labs and biopsy for initial
diagnosis.
- In an observational study of N=60 AIH participants, 19% were experiencing a biochemical
flare at baseline (raised Alanine aminotrasferase (ALT) with an associated rise in
Immunoglobulin G (IgG)). After removing these patients, in the remaining 50
stable/biochemical responders, 35 were considered low risk (normal liver function tests
(LFTs) and requiring <10mg prednisolone to maintain remission). In total 16 (32%) went
on to flare in the following 12 months, 8 of those were 'low risk'.
- The average Corrected T1 (cT1) for patients who had a flare was 35 ms higher at baseline
than the non-flaring patients and cT1 had an Area Under the Receiver Operating
Characteristic Curve (AUROC) of 0.72 for discriminating these patients (cT1 cut-off ≥
810ms, 81% sensitivity, 59% specificity and positive and negative predictive values of
48% and 87%, respectively).
- The proportion of patients who may have benefiting from a change in management using LMS
was 36%: 15 originally classified "low risk" who had cT1 ≥ 810 and 3 "high risk" with a
cT1 < 810 ms [(18/50)*100].
- With an estimated proportion of change using LMS of 36%, the lower-bound 95% confidence
interval is 24% which reflects a 5% chance the investigators would see a change smaller
than 24% in this sample, if the true population change was 36%.
For the secondary endpoint exploring correlations between multi-parametric MRI metrics with
other measurements of AIH, of the 60 patients the investigators expect biopsy-paired data
from ~30 patients - 10 new patients and 20 returning patients based on the following
assumptions:
- Biopsy is performed at the clinic for diagnosis of incidence patients, for clinical
indications in returning patients (abnormal transaminase or IgG levels, suspected
azathioprine hepatotoxicity is suspected), or every 2 years since diagnosis to confirm
histological remission (to prevent relapse of AIH and confirm no progression to liver
fibrosis). Stable patients' laboratory results are reviewed every 6 months.
- Given the reported rate of 30 returning and 2 incidence patients to the autoimmune
clinic at Kings College hospital a month the investigators would expect ~6% to be
treatment naive at baseline.
Recruitment: Participants will be identified by a secondary care clinic where those patients
with autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) or those awaiting confirmation of AIH diagnosis will be
identified by a member of their care team and sent an invitation letter and Participant
Information Sheet (PIS) 2-3 weeks before their appointment date. All potential participants
will receive the PIS for a minimum of 24 hours and will have an opportunity to discuss the
study with an investigator prior to the informed consent process during the first study
visit.
Prior to the date of patient clinic visit, the patient will be given a telephone call by a
member of their care team. Once a potential participant, identified by these means, and
expresses an interest in the study, they will have the opportunity to discuss their
eligibility and the details of the study, discuss the logistics around the MRI scan, and If
happy to participate, the participant will be introduced to a member of the research team
during their clinic visit.
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