TAKAYASU ARTERITIS Clinical Trial
Official title:
Efficacy and Tolerance of First-line Treatment With Tocilizumab in Active Takayasu Arteritis French Prospective Multicenter Study
First-line tocilizumab treatment during 6 months could permit rapid steroid-tapering and induction of remission in Takayasu arteritis (TA).
Scientific/Medical Rationale Takayasu arteritis (TA) is a large-vessel vasculitis that
affects the aorta and its primary branches and may lead to arterial segmental stenosis,
occlusion and/or aneurism formation. The symptoms are either non specific and reflect
systemic inflammation, or related to vascular injury and induced organ-ischemia. Even though
many patients respond to glucocorticoids, relapses or steroid-dependence may necessitate the
use of combination therapy. Azathioprine (2 mg/kg/day) and methotrexate (20-25 mg/week) have
been used in patients with TA, and can induce disease remission and prevent the development
of new arterial lesions. The addition of other immunosuppressive agents to glucocorticoids
could be required in majority of patients. Magnetic resonance imaging constitutes an
interesting non-invasive imaging to assess arterial changes during follow-up.
The pathogenesis of TA includes vessel injury mediated by T-cells, natural killer cells, γδ-T
cells and macrophages. T-cells and macrophages infiltrates contribute to granuloma and giant
cells formation, and produce IFNγ which stimulate the production of pro-inflammatory
cytokines. The secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines, including TNFα and IL-6, is
implicated in vascular inflammation and injury in TA.
In the light of these data, several studies have reported the efficacy of TNFα inhibitors in
TA, but only one observational study of 15 cases and a few case-reports are available. The
investigators have reported the French multicenter experience on infliximab in TA. In this
cohort of 15 french TA patients refractory to other immunosuppressive agents with more than
20 mg prednisone daily, infliximab enabled a significant improvement of both clinical and
biological features, in addition to having a steroid-sparing effect. Furthermore, early
response was notable, since clinical, biological remission and steroid-sparing were achieved
within 3 months in the investigators refractory TA patients.
The importance of targeting pro-inflammatory cytokines in TA was recently raised by the
report of the efficacy of the humanized anti-IL6 receptor antibody (tocilizumab). Likewise to
TNF-α inhibitors, a dramatic and rapid improvement in clinical manifestations and on
laboratory parameters was noted. This early response in even long-standing TA disease, as
also noted in the investigators study and in previous reports, supports the use of
cytokine-targeting therapies in TA.
Like other immunosuppressive agents in TA, TNF-α inhibitors and tocilizumab were used mostly
in refractory TA disease, and thus its benefits as a first-line treatment option,
particularly with regard to their steroid-sparing effect and in prevention of relapses, could
not be assessed.
Recently in severe and relapsing ANCA-associated vasculitis, the use of initial biotherapy
with rituximab was sufficient to induce remission and permit completely tapering
glucocorticoids at 6 months, comparatively to the conventional cyclophosphamide-based
regimen.
Given the limited treatment options and the number of TA, a multicenter trial may be
necessary to address the benefits of first-line tocilizumab treatment in inducing remission
and as steroid-sparing strategy.
Hypothesis:
• First-line tocilizumab treatment during 6 months could permit rapid steroid-tapering and
induction of remission in TA.
Primary objective:
- Evaluation of number of good responders without prednisone after 6-months tocilizumab
treatment
Secondary objectives:
- Influence of 6-months tocilizumab treatment to induction of partial and good responders
at 3, 6 and 12 months
- Influence of 6-months tocilizumab treatment to cumulative dose of steroids during 6
months
- Evaluate the TA global activity associated with tocilizumab treatment, by the
questionnaires: BVAS, PGO, Dei-Tak
- Evaluate the radiological response : PET and MRI at 6, 9 and 12 months
- Evaluate the biological response
- Evaluate the clinical response
- Evaluate the patients' quality of life associated with tocilizumab treatment, by the
quality of life questionnaires: SF-36
- Determine time to recurrence during the observation period of 12 months
- Safety as adverse events.
Number of subjects:
- The number of patient will be 15 patients with active TA, as this protocol is a
non-comparative pilot study.
- A number of 15 patients was chosen, as in this rare disease the 2 most important studies
with TNFalpha antagonists included 15 subjects. In these studies complete or partial
response was obtained in almost 70% of patients, but concerned refractory patients. In
concern on tocilizumab, only case reports are available and all demonstrate a
spectacular improvement and 100% clinical, biological and radiological improvement and
the response seem to be better than to TNFalpha antagonists. Thus, the investigators
calculate at least 50% of response with first-line tocilizumab which could taper
steroids at 6 months, with ± 25% precision with the number of included patients.
Study assessments:
• Patients will undergo a screening visit and an inclusion visit and will be assessed at
weeks 4, 8, 12, 24, 36, 48, 60, 72.
Duration of Treatment per subject/patient:
• 18 months comprising 6 months treatment and 12 months follow-up
Duration of Trial Recruitment:
- 24 months
Definitions of activity and treatment response:
• Active disease is defined as the presence of activity at least in 1 of 3 domains (clinical,
biological and /or radiological)
Definition of activities:
- Clinical disease activity is defined if the patient presented one of the following
features: (1) new onset and/or aggravation of carotodynia, pain over other large vessels
or ischemic vascular claudication, (2) transient ischemic episodes not attributed to
other factors, (3) new bruit or asymmetry in pulses or blood pressure, (4) systemic
features in the absence of infection or other factors.
- Biological disease activity is defined by the presence of 2 of the following features:
(1) VS>30 mm/h, (2) CRP>10 mg/l, (3) fibrinogen>3 g/l without any infection.
- Radiological activity is defined as the presence of one of the following features:
1. arterial wall thickening with mural enhancement in resonance magnetic imaging, (2)
arterial hypermetabolism on PET-scan, (3) new arterial lesions on resonance
magnetic imaging and /or PET-scan at 3 and/ or 6 months.
Partial responder is defined as patient with response in 2 among 3 domains, Good
responder is defined as patient as patient with response in all 3 domains
(clinical, radiological, biological).
• Clinical response: (1) the absence of new clinical features and (2) stability or
disappearance of baseline features*
- Biological response: disappearance of baseline features or at least 50%
decrease*
- Radiological response: (1) the absence of new radiological features and (2)
stability or disappearance of baseline features*
- These as endpoint measures are not collected as Adverse Events (unless
they do not meet the criteria specified).
Primary Endpoint:
• The main endpoint will be number of good responders without prednisone after
6-months of tocilizumab.
Secondary Endpoints:
The secondary endpoints will assess:
• the number of good and partial responders at 3 , 6, 12 months,
• influence of 6-months tocilizumab treatment to cumulative dose of steroid during
6 months
• TA global activity associated with tocilizumab treatment, by the questionnaires:
BVAS, PGO, Dei-Tak;
• the clinical response
• the biological response;
• the radiological response : PET and MRI at 6, 9 and 12 months;
• patients quality of life associated with tocilizumab treatment, by the quality of
life questionnaires: SF-36
- time to recurrence during the observation period,
- safety as adverse events.
Safety:
Monitoring standard of care for Tocilizumab treatment, as per European SmPC.
Investigators must immediately notify the sponsor, AP-HP of serious adverse events
(SAE) and serious and non serious adverse events of special interest (AESI).
The clinical outcome and the results of any clinical assessments and diagnostic
and/or laboratory investigations and any other information providing a reasonable
analysis of the causal relationship will therefore be reported. For serious adverse
effects the ethical committee and research investigators must be informed.
All SAE and AESI (serious and non serious), need to be reported to Roche within 24
hours. Categories of AESI have been identified for ACTEMRA (Tocilizumab):
infections (including opportunistic infections), myocardial infarction/acute
coronary syndrome, gastrointestinal perforations and related events, malignancies,
anaphylaxis/hypersensitivity reactions, demyelinating disorders, stroke, bleeding
events, hepatics events. The Investigators should use their clinical judgement to
identify events falling in any of these AESI categories.
For all AESI (serious and non serious), Guided Questionnaires will be used to
obtain follow up information.
Statistical analyses The aim of the descriptive analysis will be to determine the
variation of the different parameters during the follow-up and to evaluate their
importance. Data will be presented as means with standard deviations, medians with
interquartiles, ranges including the missing data for continuous variables. Data
will be presented as frequencies with percentages (95%CI) for qualitative
variables.
Kaplan Meier estimation will be used for the analysis of the time to occurrence of
categorical parameters (pe different response: yes/no). The evolution of the
different continuous variables will be analyzed with the model of ANOVA (random
effect) and could be normalized if necessary. In case of failure, rank analyses
will be performed. All tests will be considered as significant with p < 0.05. "
Perspectives:
This first study of Tocilizumab in TA could assess that fist-line tocilizumab
induce remission and steroid-tapering. This study could ascertain the new option of
treatment of vasculitis, as rapid induction of remission by combination therapy to
obtain steroid-tapering and long-standing remission.
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