Cholinergic Urticaria Clinical Trial
Official title:
Multicenter Randomized, Double-blind, Placebo-controlled Parallel Clinical Trial to Assess Efficacy and Safety of Omalizumab (Xolair®) in a New Indication: Cholinergic Urticarial
To demonstrate the efficacy and safety of Omalizumab in a new indication, that is cholinergic urticaria.
Physical urticarias, such as delayed pressure, cholinergic, dermatographism and cold
urticaria, are highly disabling conditions[1]. Cholinergic urticaria occurs due to an active
(e.g. exercise) or passive (e.g. hot bath) increase in core body temperature, causing itching
and small hives with flare reaction on the trunk and limps that fade away upon cooling of the
body[2].
As it is the case of chronic urticaria, physical urticarias have a great impact on patients'
quality of life[3, 4]. However, these types of urticarias cause even more alteration on
quality of life because of the limitations they cause in daily life activities, sports
practicing[5] or work performance.
In spite of the high morbidity of this disease and the impact on quality of life, there is no
available treatment. Antihistamines that usually control other types of urticaria could only
partially alleviate cholinergic urticaria. There is only one paper[6] that shows efficacy
doubling the dose of cetirizine above the recommended dosage on the Summary of Product
Characteristics (off-label dosage). The poor response to antihistamine is justified by the
minimal role of histamine in its physiopathology and only after employing very high doses[7].
The etiology and pathogenesis of hive formation remains unknown, though it is recognized that
mast cells are clearly involved[8]. On the other hand, it seems that desensitization or
tolerance could be induced in cholinergic urticaria[9]. Thus as it is the case of drug
desensitization, Immunoglobulin E (IgE) receptor must also play a role in the development of
this physical urticaria[10].
In the past years, the monoclonal humanized anti-IgE antibody (Omalizumab) was shown to be
effective in control cholinergic urticaria[11] not respondent to conventional therapies at
maximum or off-label doses. A negative response was also reported for cholinergic
urticaria[12].
Our rationale for this approach in this type of urticaria is that Omalizumab exerts an
inhibitory action on mast cell activation, as is the case of desensitization.
For that purpose, we will perform a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled
parallel clinical trial. We will include 24 patients including both female and male patients
(age 14 years or older), non-respondent to antihistamines.
Efficacy will be evaluated through the negativization of the European Academy of Allergy and
Clinical Immunology (EAACI), European Dermatology Forum (EDF) and urticaria network e.V
(UNEV) standardized exercise challenge test, Visual Analog Scale (VAS), Chronic Urticaria
Quality of Life validated questionnaire[13], patients' card of symptoms and use of rescue
medication. Additional measures of efficacy will also be: the number of dropouts in each
treatment group; the leave days due of urticaria and Emergency Department visits. Finally,
safety will be assessed by means of recording and evaluation of adverse reactions during
treatment.
As we previously stated, Omalizumab is not indicated for physical or other types of
urticaria. The only indication is for treatment of moderate-to-severe allergic asthma. The
hypothesis we are working on is that the monoclonal anti-IgE antibody Omalizumab could be as
well effective in controlling physical urticaria symptoms in patients non-respondent to
conventional therapy. We hypothesize that Omalizumab is able to revert the basophil or mast
cell activation present in those urticaria types.
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