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Clinical Trial Summary

This study will examine whether the combination of the drugs daclizumab and sirolimus can effectively treat adults with uveitis, an eye inflammation. Daclizumab is a monoclonal antibody that is designed to prevent a specific chemical interaction needed for immune cells called lymphocytes to produce inflammation. Sirolimus is an immune-suppressing drug that also controls lymphocyte activity and is marketed to prevent organ rejection in kidney transplants.

Patients 18 years of age and older with non-infectious uveitis in one or both eyes who are being treated with daclizumab and have not had a relapse or disease flare for 6 months before entering this trial may be eligible for this study. Candidates are screened with a medical history and physical examination, blood tests, complete eye examination, and pregnancy test for women who can have children. Women of child-bearing potential who enroll in this study will have a pregnancy test every 12 weeks.

After enrollment, participants have the following additional exams:

- Fluorescein angiography: This test is done to check for abnormalities of eye blood vessels. A yellow dye is injected into an arm vein and travels to the blood vessels in the eyes. Pictures of the retina are taken with a special camera that flashes a blue light into the eye. The pictures show if any dye has leaked from the vessels into the retina, indicating possible abnormalities. This test is done at enrollment and after 1 year, unless additional tests are needed for medical management.

- Pelvic ultrasound and urine test: These tests are done at enrollment and after 1 year to check the kidneys, lymph nodes, and pelvic area.

- Blood tests: Blood tests are done at enrollment and every 3 to 6 months for laboratory and immunology study

Patients receive daclizumab subcutaneously (under the skin) or in infusions at regularly scheduled visits for 52 weeks. At each treatment, blood pressure, pulse, breathing rate, and temperature are monitored. After the first 52 weeks, patients whose disease remains quiet increase the time between injections to 6 weeks and then to 8 weeks. Patients who are doing well at this time may stop daclizumab.

One or 2 days after the first daclizumab treatment, patients receive 6 mg of sirolimus by mouth. Their blood pressure, pulse, breathing rate, and temperature are monitored for at least 60 minutes. Two days after the first dose, patients begin 2-mg maintenance doses every other day for 2 weeks. If there are no intolerable side effects, the dose is increased to 2 mg daily for the next 2 weeks. Patients who have no intolerable side effects at that dose continue the medication for another 4 weeks. Patients who experience intolerable side effects may decrease the medication to every other day or withdraw from the study. After week 78 of the study, if the daclizumab treatments are stopped, the sirolimus dose is reduced within 8 weeks and may eventually be discontinued if the patient continues to do well.

Patients who experience any of the following will leave the study:

- Inflammation flare that requires concomitant treatment with additional systemic immunosuppressive medications, such as prednisone or cyclosporine

- Disease flares more than twice in the first year

- Any disease flares in the second year


Clinical Trial Description

We propose to investigate the possible efficacy of combination daclizumab and sirolimus therapy to induce peripheral immune tolerance in participants presenting with non-infectious intermediate and posterior uveitis. This will be performed using a Phase I/II pilot study. Subjects on daclizumab monotherapy will receive a 6 mg loading dose of oral sirolimus at week 0, followed by a 2 mg dose every other day for 2 weeks. If tolerated, the subject will be increased to a 2 mg daily dose. After one year of combination therapy, the subject will be tapered off daclizumab first and then sirolimus. The primary outcome will be the ability of the participant to be successfully tapered off daclizumab and sirolimus while their disease remains quiet (vitreous haze less than or equal to Trace) for 24 weeks on no systemic immunosuppressive medications (approximately week 134). ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00078689
Study type Interventional
Source National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 1
Start date March 3, 2004
Completion date July 18, 2008

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