Lung Diseases, Interstitial Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Double Blind Randomized Control Trial of Tadalafil in Interstitial Lung Disease of Scleroderma
Systemic sclerosis (SSc, scleroderma) is a multisystem autoimmune rheumatic disease that
causes inflammation, vascular damage and fibrosis. Besides involvement of skin, fibrosis also
affects lung and heart. Although advances in understanding in pathophysiology and use of
immunosuppressive therapy has brought significant improvement in outcome of other autoimmune
diseases, scleroderma still remains as a disease with high mortality and 10 yr survival rate
has improved only from 54% to 66% during last 25 years1. The frequency of deaths due to
renal crisis significantly decreased (mainly due to effectiveness of ACE Inhibitors), from
42% to 6% of scleroderma-related deaths (p 0.001), whereas the proportion of patients with
scleroderma who died of pulmonary fibrosis increased (due to lack of significant treatment)
from 6% to 33% (p 0.001). However, presently, trials with immunosuppressive drugs including
cyclophosphamide and other targeted molecules like Bosentan and Imatinib mesylate have shown
very modest results at the best and given the risk of toxicity. The investigators have
conducted three clinical trials with PDE5 inhibitor Tadalafil in the refractory Raynaud's
phenomenon (RP) in SSc over last 3 years and had found good response in RP, healing of
digital ulcers, prevention of new digital ulcers and also observed improvement in skin
tightening, endothelial dysfunction and improvement of quality of life. The investigators
therefore hypothesize that tadalafil may have an efficacy in improving the ILD of SSc.
The investigators therefore design this double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial
of oral Tadalafil (20 mg alternate day) in patients with SSc having ILD. Patients will be
randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to receive either Tadalafil or matched placebo and will be
followed up for 6 months. Prednisolone (if required for indications other than ILD) will be
allowed up to 10 mg/d in all patients. Patient/s requiring more than 10 mg/d of prednisolone
or equivalent dose of steroid will be excluded from the study. Patients who will fail on
therapy during the study will be excluded from the study and will be asked to choose any
therapeutic option from the rescue protocol.
Patients with FVC ≤ 70% predicted or DLCO ≤ 70 % of predicted, Evidence of ILD on HRCT will
be enrolled. The primary objective of the study will be the change in FVC (expressed as a
percentage of the predicted value) from baseline values at the end of 6-months of treatment.
The secondary objectives will be improvement in dyspnea, improvement in 6 min walk distance,
change in DLCO, change in total lung capacity, change in the disability index of the Health
Assessment Questionnaire (S HAQ), and change quality of life (SF-36), levels of NT pro-BNP
and fibrosis markers.
Systemic sclerosis (SSc, scleroderma) is a multisystem autoimmune rheumatic disease that
causes inflammation, vascular damage and fibrosis. Besides involvement of skin, fibrosis also
affects many internal organ involving blood vessel, lungs, heart, kidney etc. Although
advances in understanding in pathophysiology and use of immunosuppressive therapy has
brought significant improvement in outcome of other autoimmune diseases, scleroderma still
remains as a disease with high mortality and 10 yr survival rate has improved only from 54%
to 66% during last 25 years1. But there is a significant change in pattern of cause of
mortality over these years. The frequency of deaths due to renal crisis significantly
decreased (mainly due to effectiveness of ACE Inhibitors), from 42% to 6% of
scleroderma-related deaths (p 0.001), whereas the proportion of patients with scleroderma
who died of pulmonary fibrosis increased (due to lack of significant treatment) from 6% to
33% (p 0.001). The frequency of pulmonary hypertension, independent of PF, also
significantly increased during this time period (p<0.05)1. Presently PAH and interstitial
lung disease accounts for majority of scleroderma related deaths. This emphasizes the need
of novel therapies for interstitial lung disease in scleroderma, in order to improve the
mortality and morbidity outcome of these patients.
The fibrosis of the skin and internal organs in SSc is believed to be caused by the
transition of quiescent fibroblasts to activated myofibroblasts, which characteristically
overproduce dermal fibrillar collagen (type I, III, V), collagen-modifying enzymes and other
extracellular matrix (ECM) components2. One of the major cytokines involved in this process
is transforming growth factor TGF β1 3. TGF-β is normally secreted as a latent complex,
which is required to be activated in extracellular regions before binding its receptors and
exerting its biological effects. In dermal fibroblasts, several membrane proteins, including
integrin αVβ5 and thrombospondin 1(TSP1), catalyze the activation of latent TGF-β in the
local microenvironment4,5. Binding of TGF-β to type II receptors (TRII) recruits type I
receptors (TRI) and activates a series of signaling transduction pathways including the core
Smad pathway (canonical pathway) and the non-Smad pathways (mitogen-activated protein kinase
[MAPK], Rho, etc). TRI phosphorylates Smad3 at the S423/S425 within the C-terminal MH2. The
activated pSmad3 binds with Smad4 to form the activated heteromeric Smad complex. The
pSmad3/Smad4complexes enter the nucleus and associate with other transcription factors to
regulate transcriptions of target genes required for collagen synthesis, myofibroblasts
transformation and synthesis of matrix metalloproteinases6.
Studies of cyclophosphamide have shown inconsistent result on pulmonary function and
survival. In the Scleroderma Lung Study (oral cyclophosphomide), there was only modest
improvement in dyspnoea score, stabilization (no improvement) of FVC and no effect on DLCO
at 1 year 7. At 2 years, there is no significant difference between any of these parameters
between placebo and treatment group8. In a decision analysis using the Markov model to
assess quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), authors conclude that there is no survival or
quality of life benefit with oral cyclophosphamide9. Subsequent, Fibrosing Alveolitis in
Scleroderma Trial (FAST) [intravenous cyclophosphamide followed by azathioprine] did not
demonstrate significant improvement in the primary or secondary end points in the active
treatment group versus the group receiving placebo10. A recent meta-analysis concluded that
although previous trials with cyclophosphamide show a statistically significant improvement
in lung function, they do not show a clinically significant improvement (>10% change in lung
function)10. Considering the risk of infection and other serious adverse effects of oral
cyclophosphamide, the risk benefit ratio may not be favorable for long term use of this
drug. The experience with other immunosuppressive agents like mycophenolate moeftil11,
azathioprine (as single agent)12,rituximab13 are limited to case studies or open label
studies and lack double blind randomized control studies. Nonetheless, the potential adverse
effects associated with these agents raise concern regarding their long term administration
in a chronic disease like SSc -ILD.
Therefore, the focus of treatment of SSc associated ILD gradually shifting from non-
specific immunosuppressive drugs to specific targeted therapy. Many attempts have been made
to use drugs which target the molecular pathways responsible for causing fibrosis. Imatinib
mesylate is a small molecule that blocks specific tyrosine kinases, including c-Abl and
platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR) kinase. Incubation of cultured fibroblasts
from patients with SSc and healthy volunteers with imatinib strongly inhibited the synthesis
of col 1a1, col 1a2 and fibronectin-1 on the mRNA as well as protein level by up to 90% at
concentrations of 1.0 mg/ml14. Treatment with imatinib completely prevented the development
of fibrosis in the mouse model of Bleomycin-induced dermal fibrosis and tight-skin-1 (tsk-1)
mouse model of SSc15. But clinical trials in patients failed to reproduce this effect. In a
randomized, placebo-controlled trial of patients with mild to moderate Idiopathic pulmonary
fibrosis followed for 96 weeks, imatinib did not affect survival or lung function16. The
major adverse events include edema, muscle cramps and creatine kinase elevations,
uncontrollable diarrhea and bone marrow toxicity, congestive heart failure17. These adverse
effects need particular attention in clinical trials with patients with SSc because these
patients often present with cardiac involvement, diarrhea and coexisting myositis with
creatine kinase elevations. In addition, mild to moderate edema might be less well tolerated
by patients with SSc with existing skin diseases than by patients with cancers 18.
Recently, endothelin1 (ET-1), is implicated in the pathophysiology of lung fibrosis.
Endothelin 1(ET-1) is known to induce fibroblast chemotaxis and proliferation19, promote
deposition of collagen20, decrease collagenase activity, and increase levels of
fibronectin21. But Bosentan, a nonselective Endothelin receptor antagonist, in randomized
placebo controlled trial failed to have any significant impact on 6-min walk distance or in
lung function parameters 22.
PDE5 enzyme degrades cyclic guanosine monophosphate (c-GMP), a molecule responsible for
nitric oxide-mediated vasodilatation. Recently PDE 5 inhibitors have shown to have novel
antifibrotic effect by increasing level of CGMP. Cyclic GMP in turn activates the
cGMP-dependent protein kinase G (PKG). Phosphorylation of Smad3 at S309 and T368 within MH2
by PKG prevents its heterodimerization with Smad4 and thus disrupts their nuclear
translocation, resulting in repression of transcriptional activation23. TSP1 (thrombospondin
-1) is a molecule catalyzing latent TGF-b activation and is expressed at high levels in
cultured SSc fibroblasts (in vitro) and in activated fibroblasts in lesional skin of SSc (in
vivo). Blockade of TSP1 by cyclic GMP partially abolishes the autocrine TGF-b signaling in
SSc fibroblasts24. Increase in level of cGMP blocks ca2+ pump and thereby improves
endothelial disruption which is the initiating event in pathogenesis of fibrosis. Increase
in NO level also helps in mopping up reactive oxygen species which are implicated in
pathogenesis of fibrosis. In a Bleomycin induced pulmonary fibrosis model, PDE5 inhibition
alters pulmonary and right ventricular (RV) response to intratracheal Bleomycin and that
this inhibition acts through suppression of tissue free radicals and the Rho kinase
pathway25. Dunkern et al showed that predominant PDE activities in lung fibroblasts are
attributed to PDE5, PDE1 and to a smaller extent to PDE4 and PDE inhibitors prevent the
formation of myofibroblasts from fibroblast 26.
The evidence that PDE 5 inhibitors are antifibrotic have mainly came from its effectiveness
in prevention and treatment of Peyronie's disease (PD). In a rat model of TGF-β1-induced PD,
Valente and associates, demonstrated that both oral sildenafil, a PDE5 inhibitor that
protects cGMP from breakdown, and oral pentoxifylline, a predominantly PDE4 inhibitor that
increases cAMP synthesis, counteract the development of the PD-like plaque27. In the case of
pentoxifylline, it was proposed that the well-known cAMP-cGmP signaling crosstalk may be
responsible for its antifibrotic effects. In a subsequent study in the same rat model, it
was shown that another PDe5 inhibitor, vardenafil, given orally and in different dosing
regimens, not only prevented but partially reversed the formation of the PD-like plaque.
Preventive treatment at the higher dose reduced the overall collagen content, collagen iii/i
ratio and the number of myofibroblasts and tGF-β1-positive cells, and selectively increased
the apoptotic index of cells (presumably including myofibroblasts), in the PD-like plaque28.
The antifibrotic effect although initially demonstrated in penile tissue, now proved in
other tissues like heat, kidney and lungs. These antifibrotic effects of PDE5 inhibitors
were also seen in rat models of diabetic nephropathy29, experimental glomerulonephritis24,
myocardial infarction and hypertrophy30, and pulmonary fibrosis. So as scleroderma patients
have fibrosis in multiple organs, the beneficial effect of PDE5 inhibitor may become
manifold. It has also found to be very effective in treating other clinical manifestation of
systemic sclerosis like PAH and digital ulcer. In a double-blind, randomized,
placebo-controlled trial of sildenafil in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, there were
significant differences in arterial oxygenation, carbon monoxide diffusion capacity, degree
of dyspnea, and quality of life in patients treated with sildenafil in comparison to placebo
group31. Tadalafil is a PDE5 inhibitor which is longer acting than sildenafil. It is safe
and not associated with any serious life threatening side effect in the recently concluded
study of effect of tadalafil in digital ulcer of scleroderma patients from our center32. In
the same trial, Patients reported improvement of skin tightening and they can move their
limb and joint more freely. Those patients with ILD had improvement or at least
stabilization of lung function (Unpublished). Besides, FMD (flow mediated vasodilation as
marker of endothelial dysfunction) significantly improved in these patients so providing
another basis for using this drug for treatment of pulmonary fibrosis.
Hypothesis:
Tadalafil, a PDE5 inhibitor, by virtue of its stabilizing effect on endothelial dysfunction
and anti-fibrotic effect, may have efficacy in reducing symptoms due to interstitial lung
disease in scleroderma.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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