Giant Cell Arteritis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Randomized, Controlled, Double-blind Study of Anakinra Against Placebo in Addition to Steroids in Giant Cell Arteritis
SYNOPSIS The giant cell arteritis (GCA) is the most frequent vasculitis in people over 50
years. Despite recent progress and physiopathogenic, corticosteroids remains the standard
treatment for decades with a very good initial clinical efficacy but a high relapse rate
(nearly 40% to 6,5 months) during its decay. This sensible population is particularly exposed
to the side effects of corticosteroids, leading to think about savings strategies. But the
association of immunosuppressive therapy and/or anti- TNFα has not demonstrated benefits in
terms of efficiency or long-term tolerance to cumulative doses of prednisone. The
responsibility of proinflammatory cytokines such as TNFα, IL- 6 and IL-1 has been studied in
the pathogenesis of GCA in temporal artery walls and in mouse models. The primary pathogenic
role of IL- 1 is based on the increase in serum or nuclear protein itself or that of its
mRNA. The study of temporal artery biopsies has shown increased local production of IL- 1β
mRNA, IL- 6 and TGFβ (indicative of macrophage activation ) and those of INFɣ and IL 2
(indicative of T lymphocyte activation). Recently, Ly et al (Ly KH JBS 2014) reported the
efficacy of anakinra, a recombinant molecule of IL- 1RA specifically blocking the IL- 1 α/β,
in three cases GCA refractory to conventional treatments.
Here investigators propose a randomized, multicenter, controlled, double-blind study of
anakinra against placebo in addition to corticosteroids in the treatment of GCA.
This study will include 70 patients randomized equally in both arms: reference treatment
(prednisone plus placebo) or the experimental treatment (prednisone + anakinra). Treatment
with prednisone will be identical in the two arms, namely a dose of 0.7 mg/kg/day orally on
day 1, followed by a progressive decrease in the dose pattern depending on the weight. In the
experimental arm, dose of anakinra is the one usually used, ie 100 mg/day by subcutaneous
injection from day 1 until the end of week 16 (S16). In the reference arm of the treatment, a
placebo anakinra is associated with corticosteroid in the same packaging, duration and
respecting the double-blind.
Investigators thus hypothesized that the addition of anakinra to corticosteroid compared to
placebo added to the latter, will show a significant decrease in GAC relapse rate. Indeed,
the challenge of corticosteroid therapy in this disease is not so much a problem of initial
effectiveness, than the adverse events related to relapses and steroid dependence.
Side assumptions investigators made are that the patients receiving anakinra in add-on
therapy will have: a time and a complete remission rate respectively shorter and higher,
fewer relapses and a decrease of the total consumption of prednisone over a 12- month
follow-up.
This controlled study is the first to assess the inhibition of the IL- 1 pathway in the GCA
with anakinra in add-on therapy with corticosteroids in patients newly diagnosed or on
relapse. The purpose of this work is to support the following proof of concept of the
addition of anakinra to corticosteroid therapy in the treatment of GCA: potential synergies
of this association and intrinsic therapeutic action of anakinra in patient newly diagnosed,
and this without loss of opportunity for patients that will benefit all of the reference
treatment. The other originality of this study is to demonstrate the steroid-sparing effect
of targeting interleukin -1, which is per se a therapeutic and nosologic innovation for this
disease. Finally, ancillary biological studies will clarify the mode of action of the
anti-cytokine therapy and identify markers of response to this biotherapy.
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