Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00779194

Prospective Study of Rapamycin for the Treatment of SLE

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
99 (actual)
Sponsor
State University of New York - Upstate Medical University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is an autoimmune disease of unknown origin. It involves multiple organs including the joints, skin, kidneys and central nervous system. The disease process is caused by a dysfunction of the immune system. The drugs currently used for the treatment of SLE are only partially effective and carry significant risks for side-effects. Patients that were resistant or intolerant to conventional medication have been effectively treated with Rapamycin and were able to decrease the amount of prednisone they needed. The purpose of this study is to prospectively determine the therapeutic efficacy and mechanism of action of Rapamune in patients with SLE. Healthy subjects not receiving Rapamune will be asked to donate blood to serve as controls only for immunobiological outcomes. As part of the research effort to understand the reason for the variations in the effects of treatment drugs by different individuals, a sub-study of the DNA makeup of subjects enrolled in the trial will also be done. The purpose of the sub-study is to possibly determine whether different responses to the drugs used to treat SLE have a correlation with the differences in the genetic makeup of the subjects.

Detailed description

43 SLE subjects and 56 healthy controls are being recruited. The study will last 1 year with 9 study visits from day 0 to day 360. The healthy controls only need to donate blood once. The study drug, sirolimus, is taken by mouth at a starting dose of 2mg/day. The dose is adjusted to achieve blood levels in the range of 6-15 ng/ml (the levels found to be effective for preventing organ rejections). Blood samples are obtained before taking sirolimus, every two weeks for the first month, then every three months until 1 year, and then three months later to check the effect of discontinuing rapamycin. Each SLE subject will be asked to provide up to 100 ml (20 teaspoons) of blood at each visit. The first 6 visits will take place within 3 months and the remaining 3 visits every 3 months. Routine laboratory work will be performed. Part of the blood drawn will be used for research and part will be used for routine lab work as part of standard of care. The non-routine laboratory studies include: 1. Assessment of mitochondrial function in intact T cells 2. Analysis of mTOR activity, FKBP12 expression, and global gene expression in lupus T cells. 3. Predictors of therapeutic efficacy of sirolimus in SLE. The study drug levels will be checked at every visit. The non-routine laboratory studies will be performed at Visits 0 and 8 for SLE subjects and at Visit 0 for the healthy control subjects. Healthy control subjects will be matched by age (a decade or less), gender, and ethnic origin. They will be recruited and analyzed only for immunobiological outcomes on the same day as lupus subjects. All subjects will sign an informed consent at visit 0. There is a separate informed consent for the main study, one for the SLE subjects and one for the Healthy Controls. The same subjects can participate in the genetic sub-study. They must sign another informed consent for the genetic sub-study, one for the SLE subjects and one for the Healthy Controls. There is no need for additional blood drawing since part of the blood drawn for the main study can be used for the genetic sub-study.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGRapamycinRapamycin, is given to this group at a starting dose of 2 mg/day.

Timeline

Start date
2008-10-01
Primary completion
2015-12-01
Completion
2015-12-16
First posted
2008-10-24
Last updated
2024-06-12
Results posted
2024-06-12

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00779194. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.