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Clinical Trial Summary

Schnitzler syndrome:

Schnitzler syndrome is a rare disabling autoinflammatory syndrome characterized by a chronic urticarial rash and monoclonal gammopathy, accompanied by intermittent fever, arthralgia or arthritis or bone pain. Diagnostic criteria have been established. The disease never remits spontaneously. Although there is no standard of care, there have been promising developments in therapeutic options, especially anti-interleukin-1 therapy. Anakinra, a synthetic analogue of the endogenous interleukin-1 receptor antagonist, has caused rapid clinical remission in 24 patients with Schnitzler syndrome. However, to sustain remission, continuous daily administration (100 mg sc) is required. The level of monoclonal protein does not decrease. Side effects of anakinra include painful injection site reactions and neutropenia.

Interleukin-1 and the autoinflammatory diseases:

As a key proinflammatory cytokine mediating local and systemic responses to infection and tissue injury, interleukin-1 can induce a range of responses, including fever, pain sensitization, bone and cartilage destruction, and the acute-phase inflammatory response. The so-called autoinflammatory diseases are mediated entirely by interleukin-1; reducing interleukin-1 activity brings about a rapid and sustained remission. Autoinflammatory diseases include relatively uncommon disorders such as familial Mediterranean fever, adult and juvenile Still's disease, the hyper-IG D syndrome, Behçet's syndrome, the cryoporin-associated periodic syndrome (CAPS), deficiency of the interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (DIRA) and Schnitzler's syndrome. Some common conditions such as gout and type 2 diabetes, are also likely to be autoinflammatory diseases.

Canakinumab:

Canakinumab (Ilaris, Novartis Pharma) is a fully human anti-interleukin-1-bèta monoclonal antibody. Treatment with subcutaneous canakinumab (150 mg) once every 8 weeks was associated with a rapid remission of symptoms in the great majority of children and adults with CAPS. Serum inflammatory markers quickly returned to normal. In general, the side effects seen in this small study (35 patients) were not serious, though suspected infections ware significantly more prevalent in patients receiving canakinumab than in those receiving placebo. The prolonged duration of action of canakinumab and low incidence of injection-site reactions may confer certain advantages over other interleukin-1 inhibitors (anakinra and rilonacept), since both are frequently associated with injection-site reactions, and both require more frequent administration (daily for anakinra and weekly for rilonacept).

Canakinumab was approved for the treatment of CAPS by the US Food and Drug Administration in June 2009 and by the European Medicines Agency in October 2009.

Canakinumab is currently being evaluated for its potential in the treatment of systemic-onset juvenile idiopathic arthritis, diabetes mellitus, and difficult-to-treat gouty arthritis.


Clinical Trial Description

Description of the study:

Objectives:

- Primary objective: To evaluate if canakinumab 150mg every 8 weeks can induce and maintain clinical remission in patients with the Schnitzler syndrome.

- Secondary objectives:

- To test if canakinumab 150mg can induce a complete clinical response at Day 7.

- To assess if addition canakinumab 150mg given at Day 7 for patients demonstrating only a partial response can induce a complete clinical response at Day 14.

- To evaluate if canakinumab 300mg every 8 weeks can maintain clinical remission in those patients who required canakinumab 150 mg additional dose on Day 7 and achieved clinical remission at Day 14.

- To evaluate the safety of canakinumab treatment in patients with the Schnitzler syndrome.

- To assess the changes in C-reactive protein (CRP) levels during the treatment period.

Study rationale:

Although no standard therapy has been established for the Schnitzler syndrome, given the rarity of this auto-inflammatory syndrome, reports on the use of Anakinra, a synthetic analog of the endogenous interleukin-1 receptor antagonist, have been encouraging. However, side effects (including local infusion site reactions and neutropenia) and the need for daily sc administration have hampered its use. The anti-interleukin-1-inhibitor canakinumab may constitute an effective and more convenient alternative. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01245127
Study type Interventional
Source Universitaire Ziekenhuizen Leuven
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 2
Start date May 2011
Completion date May 2012

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Not yet recruiting NCT04213274 - Study of the Efficacy and Safety of RPH-104 in Adult Subjects With Schnitzler Syndrome Phase 2
Terminated NCT03595371 - Pilot Study of Dapansutrile Capsules in Schnitzler's Syndrome Phase 2
Completed NCT01390350 - Ilaris® Effects in Schnitzler Syndrome (ILESCH) Phase 2
Completed NCT00933296 - Schnitzler Syndrome: Clinical Study, Physiopathological and Search for Genetic Factors N/A
Completed NCT01276522 - Efficacy and Safety of Canakinumab in Schnitzler Syndrome Phase 2
Completed NCT01045772 - Safety and Tolerability of Rilonacept in Muckle-Wells Syndrome (MWS) or Schnitzler Syndrome (SchS) Phase 2
Recruiting NCT05200715 - AutoInflammatory Disease Alliance Registry (AIDA)