Scleritis Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Phase I/II Study to Investigate Subconjunctival Sirolimus for the Treatment of Active Autoimmune Non-Necrotizing Anterior Scleritis
Background:
Autoimmune scleritis is an inflammatory disease that affects the white outer part of the eye.
It is associated with immune system disorders like rheumatoid arthritis. It can cause
blindness in severe cases. Most treatments for scleritis involve steroid or
immune-suppressing drugs, but these can cause side effects in the whole body.
Sirolimus is a drug used to help prevent transplant rejection. It helps prevent the immune
system from attacking the body. Researchers want to try giving sirolimus injections into the
eye to treat severe scleritis.
Objectives:
To see if sirolimus is a safe and effective treatment for autoimmune scleritis.
Eligibility:
Individuals at least 18 years of age with autoimmune scleritis in at least one eye that has
not responded to standard treatments.
Design:
- Participants will be screened with a medical history, physical exam, and eye exam. Blood
and urine samples will also be collected.
- One eye will be selected as the study eye to receive injections.
- Participants will have six study visits over 4 months (initial visit and weeks 2, 4, 8,
12, and 16). The injection will be given at the first visit. If the study eye responds
to the treatment, participants may have injections in the other eye at the second visit.
- If there is still inflammation after the first injection, or if the scleritis improves
but then returns, participants may have a second injection at Week 4.
- Injections will be monitored with blood tests and eye exams.
- Participants may have study visits and injections for up to 1 year if the injections
seem to be working.
OBJECTIVE:
Scleritis is a chronic, painful and potentially blinding inflammatory disease characterized
by edema of the episcleral and scleral tissues and is commonly associated with systemic
autoimmune disorders. Sirolimus suppresses cytokine-driven T-cell proliferation and thus,
inhibits the production, signaling and activity of many growth factors relevant to scleritis.
Subconjunctival sirolimus administration could reduce or eliminate the need for topical
and/or systemic immunosuppressive drugs often taken with immunosuppressive disorders that
could result in reduced morbidity. The study objective is to investigate the safety,
tolerability and potential efficacy of subconjunctival sirolimus as a possible treatment for
active, autoimmune, non-necrotizing, anterior scleritis.
STUDY POPULATION:
Five participants with active, autoimmune, non-necrotizing, anterior scleritis with scleral
inflammatory grade ≥ 1+ in at least one quadrant will be initially enrolled. Participants
must have a history of past flares requiring oral non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
(NSAIDS), or oral or topical corticosteroids or immunosuppressive medication. Up to seven
participants may be enrolled, as up to two participants may be accrued to account for
participants who withdraw from the study prior to receiving any investigational product.
DESIGN:
This is a phase I/II, single-center, open-label, non-randomized, prospective and uncontrolled
pilot study to evaluate the safety and possible efficacy of subconjunctival sirolimus
injections for active, autoimmune, non-necrotizing, anterior scleritis. If two eyes are
active, the eye with worse inflammation will be injected first (study eye) at baseline
followed two weeks later with injection of the second eye (fellow eye). If both eyes have
equal inflammation, the study eye will be chosen at the physician's discretion after
consultation with the participant. Participants that still demonstrate active inflammation or
experience a flare-up after the initial study eye injection may be eligible for a
re-injection at or after Week 4 (not to exceed a dose of 1,320 μg per eye within an
eight-week period).
OUTCOME MEASURES:
The primary outcome is the number of participants who experience at least a 2-step reduction
or reduction to grade 0 of scleral inflammation in the study eye according to a standardized
photographic scleritis grading system developed at the National Eye Institute (NEI) by the
Week 8 visit. Secondary outcomes include changes in visual acuity, step changes in scleral
inflammation, the number of participants who experience a disease flare, the number of
participants tapered from the standard immunosuppressive regimen after 16 weeks and, of the
participants who experience a disease flare, the number of days to disease flare from
baseline as well as the number of participants who require re-injection due to a flare.
Safety outcomes include the number and severity of systemic and ocular toxicities and adverse
events (AEs), the proportion of participants who experience vision loss ≥ 15 Early Treatment
Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) letters and the number of participants who experience a
substantial rise in elevated intraocular pressure (IOP).
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