Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Active, not recruiting
Administrative data
| NCT number |
NCT02413801 |
| Other study ID # |
RSRB 53131 |
| Secondary ID |
|
| Status |
Active, not recruiting |
| Phase |
|
| First received |
|
| Last updated |
|
| Start date |
March 19, 2015 |
| Est. completion date |
December 2023 |
Study information
| Verified date |
April 2023 |
| Source |
University of Rochester |
| Contact |
n/a |
| Is FDA regulated |
No |
| Health authority |
|
| Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The events that underlie the conversion from Psoriasis to Psoriatic Arthritis (PsA) are not
well understood. This conversion occurs 30% of the time within the first 10 years of
psoriasis diagnosis. PsA patients have about a 50% chance of developing joint damage within
the first 2 years of disease. A biomarker that identifies subclinical joint inflammation in
psoriasis patients would allow for a diagnostic tool to allow for earlier intervention in
psoriasis patients and provide a better understanding of the underlying molecular
pathogenesis that may lead to development of new therapeutic targets in PsA.
Description:
Our long-term goals are to: 1) develop arthritis biomarkers in psoriasis patients that will
facilitate early treatment interventions; and, 2) identify new therapeutic targets in PsA
through better understanding of the underlying molecular pathogenesis. PsA, an inflammatory
arthritis associated with psoriasis, affects approximately 650,000 adults in the United
States and is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Joint inflammation and
damage arise within the first 2 years of disease in 50% of patients who manifest bone
erosions and joint space narrowing on plain x-rays. The advent of Tumor Necrosis Factor
antagonists (TNFi) for treatment of PsA has dramatically improved clinical response and
slowed bone and cartilage degradation. Nevertheless, up to 45% of patients do not meet
primary endpoints in clinical trials, which underscores the need for new therapeutic options.
Another approach to improve treatment response is early PsA diagnosis, and recent data
indicate that treatment soon after disease onset can improve outcomes. Relevant to the
potential for early intervention and prevention, psoriatic skin plaques typically precede PsA
by 10 years. Moreover, a significant percentage of these psoriasis patients have subclinical
musculoskeletal imaging findings. These findings provide an unparalleled opportunity for
early intervention that could potentially limit or halt joint inflammation and damage.
Regrettably, despite the obvious advantages of early diagnosis and treatment, this goal
remains elusive because the clinical significance of imaging abnormalities in psoriasis
remains unknown. Furthermore, investigators have limited understanding of the mechanisms that
underlie the transition from psoriasis to PsA, and investigators lack the disease specific
biomarkers necessary to identify psoriasis patients with new onset arthritis or sub-clinical
disease. Lastly, up to a third of psoriasis patients with moderate to severe skin disease
report they are undertreated and many are on topical agents unlikely to have a significant
effect on subclinical or clinically apparent joint inflammation.
Up to 150 subjects will be consented and studied in this cross-sectional study - 125 subjects
with Psoriasis (Ps) and 25 Healthy controls. Power Doppler Ultrasound (PDUS) in joints and
entheses will be analyzed to find at least 35 subjects with positive US findings defined as
synovitis, effusion, joint erosions, or increased vascularity otherwise known as a signal. Up
to 50 Ps patients with positive PDUS results will be followed prospectively and contacted at
intervals to update medication history indefinitely. Ps patients will be asked for a follow
up PDUS 4 months post start of biologic, DMARD therapy or phototherapy if the patient decides
to go on such therapies to study longitudinally.
Up to 30 bone marrow aspirations on healthy and PDUS positive Psoriasis subjects will be
performed. A bone marrow aspiration post start of biologic or DMARD standard of care therapy
will be assessed as well.
Research assays: serum will be used to measure biomarker 14-3-3η levels, which may be
analyzed by an external company. Peripheral blood will be used to measure the frequency of
DC-STAMP+ cells (CD14+DC-STAMP+ CD4+DCSTAMP+DC-STAMP+IL-17+). Using multichromatic flow
cytometry, we will measure DC-STAMP expression on peripheral blood cells and on bone marrow
cells. To determine if elevated BM DC-STAMP expression by stromal cells, T cells and/or
monocytes promotes OC formation, co-cultures of bone marrow stromal and hematopoietic cells
with peripheral blood cells will be analyzed for OCPs.