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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02774239
Other study ID # ZS2013-01
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase Phase 3
First received
Last updated
Start date October 2014
Est. completion date October 21, 2022

Study information

Verified date February 2023
Source University of Alberta
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

This is a prospective open-label, uncontrolled, single-blind, pilot clinical trial. The primary objective is to assess the efficacy, safety, feasibility and tolerability of SCIG in patients with worsening MG. Participants with moderate worsening of MG symptoms (MGFA Class II and III) who are considered to be appropriate for immunoglobulin therapy will be screened for the study by the treating neurologist. Patients will be receive 2gm/kg (150gm for a 75kg patient) of 20% SCIG (Hizentra) infused over 4 weeks in a dose escalating manner. Additionally, this study will be assessing the feasibility of employing SCIG as an alternative therapy to IVIG in patients with MG exacerbation. The cost-effectiveness of SCIG versus IVIG will be evaluated, and the impact of SCIG therapy will be assessed from both a health-resource perspective and from a patient perspective.


Description:

This is a prospective open-label, uncontrolled, single-blind, pilot clinical trial. The primary objective is to assess the efficacy, safety, feasibility and tolerability of SCIG in patients with worsening MG. Study Rationale and Significance Subcutaneous immunoglobulin (SCIG) is a novel form of immune therapy for neuromuscular diseases and may offer several advantages over intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG). Although no large-scale studies have been in conducted in MG patients, pilot studies with SCIG in multifocal motor neuropathy indicate that it may be a feasible, effective and safe alternative to IVIG in a condition, which like MG, shows excellent response to IVIG infusion. Patients are able to tolerate it better and have improved quality of life due to added flexibility to the treatment schedule. SCIG is also potentially less expensive than IVIG since the costs associated with inpatient treatment as well as nursing support are saved. SCIG also has the potential to be more effective and durable since the serum levels of immunoglobulin show a more sustained increase compared to IVIG. A drawback associated with SCIG is the small amount of immunoglobulin that can be infused over a short period. As compared to IVIG where the usual dose (2gm/kg for neuromuscular diseases) can be infused over 2 - 5 days, the same dose of SCIG would require 3 - 4 weeks to be administered with the currently available formulations. This may mean a delayed onset of peak-dose effect and SCIG may not be feasible for MG patients who are rapidly worsening or in MG crisis. Nevertheless, SCIG may be an attractive option in a large subpopulation of MG patients who have mild to moderate disease exacerbations or who are on maintenance IVIG therapy provided its efficacy, tolerability and feasibility is determined in this patient population. Methodology Participants with moderate worsening of MG symptoms (MGFA Class II and III) who are considered to be appropriate for immunoglobulin therapy at the MG clinic at the University of Alberta will be screened for the study by the treating neurologist. Patients will be receive 2gm/kg (150gm for a 75kg patient) of 20% SCIG (Hizentra) infused over 4 weeks in a dose escalating manner. Participants will undergo infusions two to four times a week, depending on their tolerance, beginning with a dose of 10 ml per site at four injection sites, increasing by 5 ml per week for a total of 25 ml per site at four injection sites after four weeks. The dose is flexible and will vary based on the patient's tolerance to the medication and the total amount of medication the patient will be receiving based on their body weight. The initial (one or two) doses will be infused within the medical outpatient facility at the University of Alberta Hospital. This will allow for the observation of any infusion reactions and will also serve as nurse-provided self- infusion training sessions for patients. Participants will be assessed weekly for symptomatic change and reports of satisfaction and quality of life. The primary outcome variable is the change in the Quantitative Myasthenia Gravis (QMG) Score for Disease Severity from baseline to day 42 (6 weeks). A change of 3.5 points will be considered to be clinically significant. Safety and pharmacokinetic assessments of SCIG will be performed weekly throughout the study. Additionally, this study will be assessing the feasibility of employing SCIG as an alternative therapy to IVIG in patients with MG exacerbation. The cost-effectiveness of SCIG versus IVIG will be evaluated, and the impact of SCIG therapy will be assessed from both a health-resource perspective and from a patient perspective. The practicality of using SCIG in patients with MG will be determined by documenting the number of patients who are able to be trained for self- administration of SCIG, and by the patients' self-reported satisfaction with SCIG treatment. The speed of SCIG treatment onset will also be assessed and compared to IVIG treatment onset. All of these described measures will be used to determine the feasibility and practicality of using SCIG in patients with MG exacerbation and its impact on the healthcare system.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 26
Est. completion date October 21, 2022
Est. primary completion date October 21, 2022
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years to 80 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Patients between18 to 80 years of age, diagnosed with MG (see below) who have worsening myasthenic symptoms - (defined as increasing diplopia, ptosis, dysarthria, dysphagia, difficulty chewing, or limb weakness severe enough to warrant immunoglobulin therapy. - MG diagnosis will be based upon the clinical evaluation by a neuromuscular expert and meeting any two of the following supportive criteria: 1. Abnormal Tensilon test 2. Abnormal repetitive nerve stimulation studies 3. Abnormal single fiber electromyography (EMG) 4. Increased serum acetylcholine receptor or anti-MuSK antibodies 5. Prior response to immunotherapy Exclusion Criteria: 1. Respiratory distress requiring ICU admission or a vital capacity <1 L 2. Severe swallowing difficulties with a high risk of aspiration 3. Change in corticosteroid dosage in the 4 weeks prior to screening 4. Known immunoglobulin A (IgA) deficiency 5. Pregnant or breast feeding women 6. Active renal or hepatic insufficiency, clinically significant cardiac disease 7. Patients with worsening weakness associated with an infectious process 8. Previous lack of responsiveness to IVIG 9. History of previous MG crises

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Drug:
Human normal immunoglobulin G (IgG)
Study medication is available in the following forms: 5 mL (1 g IgG) in a 5 mL infusion bottle, 10 mL (2 g IgG) in a 10 mL infusion bottle, 20 mL (4 g IgG) in a 20 mL infusion bottle, 50 mL (10 g IgG) in a 50 mL infusion bottle. Patients will be receiving 2gm/kg (150gm for a 75kg patient) of 20% SCIG (Hizentra) infused over four weeks in a dose escalating manner.

Locations

Country Name City State
Canada University of Alberta Edmonton Alberta
Canada Vancouver General Hospital - Gordon & Leslie Diamond Health Care Centre Vancouver British Columbia

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Alberta CSL Behring

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Canada, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Other Cost effectiveness of SCIG therapy will be calculated in comparison to standard IVIG therapy. This will indicate health economics. Baseline - Day 42
Other Change in QOL 36 score from Baseline to day 42) Change in Quality of Life (QOL) score from Baseline to day 42. Baseline - Day 42
Other Time required for the treatments. Average time in minutes required for each infusion session during study. Determined for each participant. Baseline - Day 42
Other Preference for treatments (Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire for Medication (TSQM). 11 item scale measuring treatment satisfaction for medication over 3 domains (Effectiveness, Side effects, Convenience, Global Satisfaction). Score from 10 to 43 Day 42
Other Intent to continue using SCIG if necessary (Via pt. interview) Yes= will continue SCIG therapy, No= will not continue SCIG therapy. Day 42
Other Proportion of participants successfully trained in self-administration of SCIG. Proportion of participants who successfully trained in self-administration of SCIG expressed as a percentage (completed training/underwent training x 100). Day 2, Day 3.
Other Proportion of participants completing the study. Proportion of patients who completed the study expressed as a percentage (finished study/started study x 100). Day 42
Other Infusion nurse's assessment of this participant population's ability to use this treatment modality (Written impression) Qualitative measure. Narrative reflecting the infusion nurse's overall impression of target population's ability to employ SCIG within the parameters defined by the study. (data is a written narrative. By definition, this has no units nor is it collected by any instrument (questionnaire, scale parameter ect.) ie. QUALITATIVE data) Day 42
Other Speed of treatment onset of SCIG. The number of days between prescription of SCIG treatment and infusion of first dose. Day 1
Other Speed of treatment onset of IVIG. The number of days between prescription of IVIG treatment and infusion of first dose, for any study participant who has received IVIG treatments in the past. This interval will be determined for all available previous IVIG infusions for each patient. Day 1
Primary Change in Quantitative Myasthenia Gravis Score (QMGS) from baseline to day 42 after treatment. QMGS is a validated clinical measure of myasthenia gravis ranging from 0 points (no myasthenic weakness) to a maximum of 39 points, with a defined change of 3.4 units required for clinical significance. Baseline - Day 42
Secondary Quality of life will be assessed through the Quality of Life (QOL) score, a qualitative questionnaire. Baseline - Day 42
Secondary Change in Manual Muscle Testing (MMT) score from baseline to day 42 after treatment. MMT is a validated clinical measure of myasthenia gravis ranging from 0 points (no myasthenic weakness) to a maximum of 128 points, with a defined change of 25% from baseline required for clinical significance. Baseline - Day 42
Secondary Adverse events related to SCIG infusions will be recorded if/when they occur. Baseline - Day 42
Secondary Patient satisfaction with the treatment modality will be assessed using a questionnaire. TQSM: Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire for Medication. An 11 question ordinal scale measuring responses from "Extremely satisfied" to "Extremely dissatisfied" over a 7 item option list. Questions cover four domains, corresponding to distinct aspects related to the satisfaction of patients with their treatment (Effectiveness; Side effects; Convenience and Global satisfaction). A score can be obtained for each domain by summing of the corresponding items transformed on a 0-100 scale; higher values indicate higher satisfaction, better perceived effectiveness, lower burden associated to side-effects, better convenience Day 42
Secondary Serious Adverse Events related to SCIG infusions will be recorded if/when they occur. Baseline - Day 42
Secondary Proportion of participants successfully trained will be recorded indicating feasibility based on patient compliance. Baseline - Week 2
Secondary Proportion of participants completing will be recorded indicating feasibility based on patient compliance. Baseline - Day 42
Secondary Myasthenia Gravis (MG) Composite scores will be used to evaluate disease severity through a number of functional assessments, including muscle strength and ability to complete activities of daily living. Baseline - Day 42
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