Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT05428488

Efficacy of a Sequential Treatment Strategy in Rheumatoid Arthritis

Efficacy of a Sequential Treatment Strategy in Rheumatoid Arthritis. A Randomized Controlled Trial With an Independent Efficacy Assessor.

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
220 (estimated)
Sponsor
University Hospital, Montpellier · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

In rheumatoid arthritis (RA), the consensual 1st line conventional synthetic disease modifying antirheumatic drugs (csDMARD) of RA is methotrexate (MTX). In case of contra-indication or intolerance to MTX, leflunomide is an alternative. If the treatment target is not achieved with csDMARD strategy, addition of a biological DMARD (TNF inhibitors, anti-Interleukin 6 (anti-IL6)), abatacept, or rituximab) or a targeted synthetic (ts) DMARD (JAK inhibitors) is considered. Current practice is to start a bDMARD (biologic Disease Modifying Antirheumatic Drugs) and especially TNF inhibitors (etanercept or monoclonal anti-TNF antibodies) with the benefit of hindsight. However, abatacept and TNF inhibitors have demonstrated similar efficacy in patients with insufficient response to csDMARD (AMPLE trial). Although abatacept has shown a very good tolerance profile that might be superior to other bDMARDs rheumatologists might be reluctant to use it as a first line bDMARD as there is a belief of a slower efficacy compared to other bDMARDs or JAK inhibitors. Indeed, in real world study, compared to TNF inhibitors it seems that discontinuation of abatacept is more related to lack of effectiveness than safety issues. Investigators have hypothesized that first rapidly controlling the inflammation phase, using TNF inhibitors followed by abatacept to induce an immunological remission would optimize response and tolerance of ACPA positive patients with RA. To demonstrate our hypothesis, the investigaors propose a randomized controlled trial with one arm receiving an induction therapy for 12 weeks with a TNF inhibitor followed by a cell-targeted bDMARD (abatacept) and the other arm, receiving TNF inhibitors.

Detailed description

In rheumatoid arthritis (RA), the consensual 1st line conventional synthetic disease modifying antirheumatic drugs (csDMARD) of RA is methotrexate (MTX) (1). In case of contra-indication or intolerance to MTX, leflunomide is an alternative. If the treatment target is not achieved with csDMARD strategy, addition of a biological (b) DMARD (TNF inhibitors, anti-IL6, abatacept, or rituximab) or a targeted synthetic (ts) DMARD (JAK inhibitors) is considered. Current practice is to start a bDMARD and especially TNF inhibitors (etanercept or monoclonal anti-TNF antibodies) with the benefit of hindsight. However, abatacept and TNF inhibitors have demonstrated similar efficacy in patients with insufficient response to csDMARD (AMPLE trial). Although abatacept has shown a very good tolerance profile that might be superior to other bDMARDs rheumatologists might be reluctant to use it as a first line bDMARD as there is a belief of a slower efficacy compared to other bDMARDs or JAK inhibitors. Indeed, in real world study, compared to TNF inhibitors it seems that discontinuation of abatacept is more related to lack of effectiveness than safety issues. This is the first study to propose a therapeutic sequential strategy with an induction therapy using a TNF inhibitor for 12 weeks to control inflammation followed by a cell-targeted biological DMARD targeting T cells (abatacept) in order to decrease auto-antibodies (rheumatoid factor and/or ACPA). Presence of auto-antibodies (ACPA/RF) are predictive of better response to cell- targeted DMARDs. In early AMPLE trial, RA patients ACPA+ with insufficient response to MTX were treated with abatacept or adalimumab. DAS28-CRP remission rates were 55% in abatacept group and 30% in adalimumab group. Patients carrying the shared epitope (HLA-DR (Human Leucocyte Antigen-DR) alleles associated with RA), were also more likely to reach remission (DAS28-CRP\<2.6) with abatacept (50%) than adalimumab (23%) at 24 weeks. The clinical trial offered by investigateors here could change the paradigm in the strategy used in RA supporting the importance to first control inflammation environment in order to allow the cell-targeted bDMARDs to control immunological process which has been recently associated with a higher percentage of clinical remission. To compare the percentage of remission (DAS28-CRP\<2.6) obtained during the 36 weeks following randomization, with a sequential therapeutic strategy using abatacept versus a routine strategy continuing TNF inhibitors (TNFi), in ACPA positive RA patients responding to a first TNFi, initiated 12 weeks before randomization. The primary endpoint will be analyzed with a generalized estimating equations (GEE) model for repeated data. It is a multicentric, open label, randomized controlled trial comparing two different strategies of treatment with an independent efficacy assessor. For this clinical trial, to limit response bias, bDMARDs with a similar mode of administration (subcutaneous) are proposed. In the experimental arm, a therapeutic sequential strategy will be proposed and in the control arm TNF inhibitors will be proposed for 48 weeks. All included patients will receive TNF inhibitors subcutaneous for 12 weeks. At 12 weeks (W12), patients who have at least a moderate EULAR response (delta DAS28-CRP between W0 and W12\>0.6 and DAS28-CRP≤5.1 at W12) will be randomized with a 1:1 ratio in the sequential strategy arm or the control arm. In the sequential strategy arm, the 88 randomized RA patients will be switched to abatacept subcutaneous for 36 weeks. Patients who will withdraw abatacept during the follow-up will be considered as a failure. In the control group, the 88 randomized RA patients will be treated with TNF inhibitor subcutaneous for another 36 weeks. In case of insufficient response to a first TNF inhibitor at 24 or 36 weeks, a second TNF inhibitor will be proposed. Anti-TNF drugs withdrawal will be considered as a failure. Steroids 0.1mg/kg/ day will be allowed but at stable dose 2 weeks before and with guided step-down strategy targeting withdrawal before 24 weeks following randomization. Clinical evaluation of disease activity using different scores (DAS28-ESR, CDAI, SDAI, Boolean criteria) and tolerance will be performed at all visits.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGAbatacept (W12-W48)The experimental strategy will evaluate abatacept 125 mg/week following 12 weeks of anti-TNF prescribed in usual care. Concomitant treatment with stable doses of csDMARD, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, analgesic agents, glucocorticoids (≤10 mg of prednisone or the equivalent per day), or a combination of these drugs will be permitted. Patients will continue to take methotrexate or leflunomide for the duration of the study.
DRUGTNF Inhibitor (W12-W48)In the control group, the 88 randomized RA patients will be treated with TNF inhibitor subcutaneous for 36 weeks. In case of insufficient response to a first TNF inhibitor at 24 or 36 weeks, a second TNF inhibitor will be proposed.
DRUGTNF Inhibitor (W0-W12)All included patients will receive TNF inhibitors subcutaneous for 12 weeks.

Timeline

Start date
2022-11-28
Primary completion
2026-11-01
Completion
2027-11-01
First posted
2022-06-23
Last updated
2025-10-03

Locations

17 sites across 2 countries: France, Monaco

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05428488. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

Efficacy of a Sequential Treatment Strategy in Rheumatoid Arthritis (NCT05428488) · Clinical Trials Directory