Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00430105

Pulse Versus Continuous Cyclophosphamide for Induction of Remission in ANCA-Associated Vasculitides

Randomized Trial of Intravenous Pulse Versus Oral Continuous Cyclophosphamide for Induction of Remission in Systemic ANCA-Associated Vasculitides

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 2 / Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
160 (planned)
Sponsor
Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

A comparison of intermittent pulsed cyclophosphamide to daily oral cyclophosphamide for the treatment of ANCA-associated systemic vasculitides with kidney involvement. Performed by the European Vasculitis Study group.

Detailed description

The primary, ANCA-associated systemic vasculitides (AASV), including Wegener's granulomatosis and microscopic polyangiitis, are progressive, multisystem, autoimmune diseases which respond to immunosuppressive therapy. Their treatment with corticosteroids and cytotoxic drugs has been standardised in a first wave of studies (ECSYSVASTRIAL project), but limitations of such regimens include only partial efficacy and appreciable treatment-related toxicity. The present trial, CYCLOPS, aims to reduce the cumulative exposure to immunosuppressive drugs by administering cyclophosphamide (CYC) as intermittent pulses. The potential benefit of using CYC in this way for AASV has been demonstrated in preliminary, smaller studies. Patients with previously untreated AASV and, "generalised", but not life threatening, disease with renal involvement, will be randomised to either continuous oral CYC or intermittent pulse CYC. CYC will be continued until three months after remission has been achieved, with a minimum CYC total duration of six months and maximum duration of twelve months; both limbs will then receive the same maintenance regimen of azathioprine and prednisolone. The study will last 18 months. The primary end-point is the disease-free period, taken as the period of time from remission until relapse or study end; secondary end-points are adverse effects, cumulative damage and immunosuppressive drug exposure. 160 patients will be required.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGcyclophosphamide

Timeline

Start date
1998-02-01
Completion
2004-04-01
First posted
2007-02-01
Last updated
2007-02-01

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00430105. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.