Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00651885

Safety Study of UT-15C SR (Oral Treprostinil) in Patients Undergoing a Lower Limb Endovascular Procedure

A Randomized, Single-Center, Placebo Controlled Study To Assess the Safety of UT-15C (Treprostinil Diethanolamine) Sustained Release (SR) in Patients Undergoing an Infra-Popliteal Endovascular Intervention for the Treatment of Critical Limb Ischemia

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
7 (actual)
Sponsor
Ochsner Health System · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

In chronic CLI patients who are appropriate candidates for endovascular procedures - and many patients are not because of their advanced age and disease state - the treatment regimen may include endovascular procedures such as percutaneous transluminal endovascular intervention, as well as reconstructive surgical procedures such as grafts or bypasses. Amputation is a last resort where limb salvage cannot be achieved. Despite the success of percutaneous intervention for small coronary vessels with lumen diameters less than 3 mm, similar techniques have had limited success in the lower extremity vessels. Infra-popliteal, or below the knee endovascular intervention, is commonly plagued by subacute thrombotic closure and restenosis in as many as 50% of treated patients. As a result of the limited success, these percutaneous procedures have been reserved for the severest cases whereby limb loss is imminent without intervention. In this context, the sickest of all patients are enrolled in these trials and poor outcomes are common regardless of the intervention. Agents that promote intracellular cAMP accumulation, including prostacyclin analogues and phosphodiesterase inhibitors, suppress smooth muscle proliferation, promote vasodilatation and inhibit platelet aggregation. These properties suggest that prostacyclin analogues such as treprostinil will be useful adjuncts to peripheral endovascular intervention and perhaps increase the number of patients with CLI that can benefit from peripheral endovascular intervention. An orally available prostacyclin analogue could represent an important treatment advance in the prevention of restenosis following infrapopliteal angioplasty. In the present study, the safety and efficacy of oral UT-15C sustained release (SR) tablets will be compared to placebo in patients with CLI undergoing an infra-popliteal endovascular intervention.

Detailed description

This study is a randomized, placebo controlled, single-center, evaluation of the safety and efficacy of UT-15C SR compared to placebo in patients with CLI with a planned infra-popliteal endovascular intervention procedure. Conventional therapy should be continued for all patients in the study. Conventional therapy is defined as the customary best medical practice at this investigative site for CLI, including analgesics for rest pain, debridement and wound care for ischemic wounds, etc., as long as such care meets the other requirements of the study and does not include prohibited therapies or investigational medications. A total of 20 patients will be prospectively randomized (1:1) to conventional treatment and placebo therapy in conjunction with an endovascular procedure or conventional treatment and UT-15C SR therapy in conjunction with an infrapopliteal endovascular procedure. Treatment is UT-15C sustained release (SR) tablets (1.0 mg dosage strength) or placebo. Treatment will be initiated at 1 mg twice daily with dose escalation of an additional 1 mg twice daily every 5 days if clinically indicated based upon the presence of known prostacyclin adverse events or adverse events that in the opinion of the investigator are attributable to UT-15C SR. Doses should be maximized throughout the Treatment Phase up to a maximum dose of 5 mg twice daily at the end of 12-weeks. Patients will return to the institution for the endovascular procedure at least 4 days after starting study drug and continue study drug, throughout the endovascular procedure and to Week 12. All patients will return to the clinic at Weeks 2, 6 and 12 for Treatment Phase assessments, and then Weeks 26 and 52 for follow-up assessments.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGtreprostinil dienthanolmine sustained releaseUT-15C SR 1mg tablet
DRUGPlaceboPlacebo

Timeline

Start date
2008-03-01
Primary completion
2010-12-01
Completion
2010-12-01
First posted
2008-04-03
Last updated
2023-04-24

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00651885. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.