A Clinical Trial to Evaluate the Efficacy of Abatacept in Moderate to Severe Alopecia Areata
Status: | Not yet recruiting |
---|---|
Conditions: | Dermatology, Dermatology, Hair Loss |
Therapuetic Areas: | Dermatology / Plastic Surgery |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 18 - 75 |
Updated: | 5/5/2014 |
Start Date: | August 2013 |
End Date: | August 2016 |
Contact: | Julian Mackay-Wiggan, MD, MS |
Email: | jc299@columbia.edu |
Phone: | 212-305-6953 |
A Randomized Clinical Trial to Evaluate the Efficacy of Abatacept in Moderate to Severe Alopecia Areata
The purpose of this study is to determine if receiving sub-cutaneous injections of a
medication called abatacept causes regrowth of hair in people with alopecia areata.
Among patients with alopecia areata, patients with worse disease are unlikely to have
satisfactory outcomes with current therapies. Our hypothesis is that Abatacept will be
effective therapy in moderate to severe alopecia areata by blocking re-activation of a
special type of immunecell call a memory T-Cell (CD8+NKG2D+)thereby blocking the
inflammatory response underlying alopecia areata.
medication called abatacept causes regrowth of hair in people with alopecia areata.
Among patients with alopecia areata, patients with worse disease are unlikely to have
satisfactory outcomes with current therapies. Our hypothesis is that Abatacept will be
effective therapy in moderate to severe alopecia areata by blocking re-activation of a
special type of immunecell call a memory T-Cell (CD8+NKG2D+)thereby blocking the
inflammatory response underlying alopecia areata.
Alopecia areata (AA) is a common disease of the immune system, known as an "autoimmune"
disease. In the disease, the immune system mistaken destroys the hair follicle, causing hair
to fall out. Despite many people having this disease, research into its cause and into new,
better ways to treat AA has lagged far behind other similar diseases of the immune system.
Currently, there are no Federal Drug Administration approved drugs for AA. Abatacept (made
by Bristol-Myers Squibb) is a safe intervention known to effectively treat rheumatoid
arthritis,another "autoimmune" disease, by fighting inflammation. There are some genetic and
chemical similarities between those with active rheumatoid arthritis and AA, suggesting that
treatment with the same drug is likely to be effective.
In mice specially designed for testing drugs for the treatment of human alopecia, this
medication worked to prevent the disease AA from starting. To test Abatacept, we are going
to treat 60 patients with moderate to severe AA for 6 months. To make the study results
meaningful, there will be a control or "placebo" group that does not receive the study drug.
Patients will be randomly assigned to either receive the real or the inactive medication,
and neither the patient nor the doctor will know which it is. The effectiveness of the
medication will be measured by changes in hair re-growth as determined by physical exam and
photography, as well as by patient and physician scoring. Patients will be followed for
another 6 months off of the drug to see if the effects of treatment last and if there is
delayed response. Small scalp biopsies and peripheral blood will be taken at the beginning
of the study before treatment and then after 4,12 and 24 weeks. The chemical analysis of
these skin samples and blood will help us to understand how the disease happens, how the
treatment works, and even guide us to better treatments in the future.
disease. In the disease, the immune system mistaken destroys the hair follicle, causing hair
to fall out. Despite many people having this disease, research into its cause and into new,
better ways to treat AA has lagged far behind other similar diseases of the immune system.
Currently, there are no Federal Drug Administration approved drugs for AA. Abatacept (made
by Bristol-Myers Squibb) is a safe intervention known to effectively treat rheumatoid
arthritis,another "autoimmune" disease, by fighting inflammation. There are some genetic and
chemical similarities between those with active rheumatoid arthritis and AA, suggesting that
treatment with the same drug is likely to be effective.
In mice specially designed for testing drugs for the treatment of human alopecia, this
medication worked to prevent the disease AA from starting. To test Abatacept, we are going
to treat 60 patients with moderate to severe AA for 6 months. To make the study results
meaningful, there will be a control or "placebo" group that does not receive the study drug.
Patients will be randomly assigned to either receive the real or the inactive medication,
and neither the patient nor the doctor will know which it is. The effectiveness of the
medication will be measured by changes in hair re-growth as determined by physical exam and
photography, as well as by patient and physician scoring. Patients will be followed for
another 6 months off of the drug to see if the effects of treatment last and if there is
delayed response. Small scalp biopsies and peripheral blood will be taken at the beginning
of the study before treatment and then after 4,12 and 24 weeks. The chemical analysis of
these skin samples and blood will help us to understand how the disease happens, how the
treatment works, and even guide us to better treatments in the future.
Inclusion Criteria:
- Signed Written Informed Consent
- Must be between 18 and 75 years of age.
- Must have a diagnosis of moderate to severe AA - defined as the presence of equal to
or more than 40% and equal to or less than 95% total scalp hair loss at baseline as
measured using the SALT score.
- Duration of hair loss must be between 3 to 12 months.
- There may be no evidence of regrowth present at baseline.
- Subjects may be naïve to treatment or unresponsive to intralesional (IL) steroids or
other treatments for AA.
- Must be willing to avoid live vaccines while on the study medication, and within 3
months of its discontinuation.
- Women of childbearing potential must use highly effective methods of birth control
[for up to 12 weeks after the last dose of investigational product] to minimize the
risk of pregnancy].
- Women of childbearing potential must follow instructions for birth control for the
entire duration of the study including a minimum of 90 days after dosing has been
completed.
- Women must have a negative serum or urine pregnancy test (minimum sensitivity 25 IU/L
or equivalent units of HCG) within 24 hours prior to the start of investigational
product.
- Women must not be breastfeeding
- Sexually active fertile men must use highly effective birth control if their partners
are women of childbearing potential.
- Men that are sexually active with women of childbearing potential must follow
instructions for birth control for the entire duration of the study and a minimum of
90 days after dosing has been completed.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Women of childbearing potential who are unwilling or unable to use an acceptable
method to avoid pregnancy for the entire study period and for up to 10 weeks after
the last dose of study drug.
- Women of childbearing potential using a prohibited contraceptive method.
- Women who are pregnant or breastfeeding.
- Women with a positive pregnancy test on enrollment or before administration of
abatacept.
- Sexually active fertile men not using effective birth control if their partners are
women of childbearing potential.
- Patients with alopecia totalis/universalis
- Patients with a history of or active skin disease on the scalp such as psoriasis or
seborrheic dermatitis.
- Patients in whom the diagnosis of alopecia areata is in question.
- Patients with active medical conditions or malignancies (except adequately treated
basal or squamous cell carcinoma) that in the opinion of the investigator would
increase the risks associated with study participation, including patients with a
history of recurrent infections.
- Patients with COPD
- Patients known to be HIV or hepatitis B or C positive.
- Patients with history or evidence of hematopoietic abnormality.
- Patients with history of immunosuppression or history of recurrent serious
infections.
- Patients unwilling or unable to discontinue treatments known to affect hair regrowth
in AA
- Patients taking TNF antagonists or other biological therapy such as anakinra.
- Patients known to be HIV or hepatitis B or C positive.
- Patients with evidence of infection or active/untreated skin cancer.
- Patients who have been treated with intralesional steroids, systemic steroids,
anthralin, squaric acid, DPCP (diphenylcycloprophenone), protopic, minoxidil or other
medication which in the opinion of the investigator may affect hair regrowth within
one month of the baseline visit.
- Subjects who are impaired, incapacitated, or incapable of completing study-related
assessments.
- Subjects with current symptoms of severe, progressive, or uncontrolled renal,
hepatic, hematologic, gastrointestinal, pulmonary, cardiac, neurologic, or cerebral
disease, which, in the opinion of the investigator, might place a subject at
unacceptable risk for participation in the study.
- Female subjects who have had a breast cancer screening that is suspicious for
malignancy and in whom the possibility of malignancy cannot be reasonably excluded by
additional clinical, laboratory, or other diagnostic evaluations.
- Subjects with a history of cancer in the last 5 years, other than non-melanoma skin
cell cancers cured by local resection or carcinoma in situ.
Existing non-melanoma skin cell cancers should be removed, the lesion site healed, and
residual cancer ruled out before administration of the study drug.
- Subjects who currently abuse drugs or alcohol.
- Subjects with evidence (as assessed by the investigator) of active or latent
bacterial or viral infections at the time of potential enrollment, including subjects
with evidence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) detected during screening.
- Subjects with herpes zoster or cytomegalovirus (CMV) that resolved less than 2 months
before the informed consent document was signed.
- Subjects who have received any live vaccines within 3 months of the anticipated first
dose of study medication.
- Subjects with any serious bacterial infection within the last 3 months, unless
treated and resolved with antibiotics, or any chronic bacterial infection (e.g.,
chronic pyelonephritis, osteomyelitis, or bronchiectasis).
- Subjects at risk for tuberculosis (TB). Specifically excluded from this study will be
subjects with a history of active TB within the last 3 years, even if it was treated;
a history of active TB greater than 3 years ago, unless there is documentation that
the prior anti-TB treatment was appropriate in duration and type; current clinical,
radiographic, or laboratory evidence of active TB; and latent TB that was not
successfully treated (≥ 4 weeks).
- Subjects must not be positive for HIV, Hepatitis B or C.
- Subjects who are positive for hepatitis C antibody
- Subjects who have at any time received treatment with any investigational drug within
28 days
- Any concomitant biologic Disease Modifying Anti-Rheumatic Drugs (DMARDS), such as
anakinra.
- Subjects who have been treated with intralesional steroids, systemic steroids,
anthralin, squaric acid, DPCP (diphenylcycloprophenone), protopic, minoxidil or other
medication which in the opinion of the investigator may affect hair regrowth within
one month of the baseline visit.
OTHER EXCLUSION CRITERIA
- Prisoners or subjects who are involuntarily incarcerated.
- Subjects who are compulsorily detained for treatment of either a psychiatric or
physical (e.g., infectious disease) illness.
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