Treatment for Growth Failure in Patients With X-Linked Severe Combined Immunodeficiency: Phase 2 Study of Insulin-Like Growth Factor-1
Information source: National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)
Information obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov on October 19, 2009 Link to the current ClinicalTrials.gov record.
Condition(s) targeted: Growth Failure; X-linked Severe Combined Immunodeficiency (XSCID); Growth Hormone Resistence
Intervention: Increlex (Drug); Arginine Provocation Test (Procedure); Clonidine Provocation Test (Procedure); IGF-1 Generation Test (Procedure); IVIG (Drug); Haplo-Identical Bone Marrow Transplant (Procedure)
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Status: Recruiting
Sponsored by: National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) Overall contact: Patient Recruitment and Public Liaison Office, Phone: (800) 411-1222, Email: prpl@mail.cc.nih.gov
Summary
This study will evaluate the safety and effectiveness of insulin-like growth factor-1
(IGF-1) to treat patients with X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (XSCID). Those who
have XSCID lack white blood cells that protect their bodies from invasion by all types of
germs. IGF-1 is the main hormone responsible for the body's growth and metabolism. As a
medication, IGF-1 is Increlex[(Trademark)] (mecasermin),
Patients ages 2 to 20 who have not yet begun puberty, have a diagnosis of XSCID, and are
shorter than the 3rd percentile for their age may be eligible for this study. This study
will last about 3 years, and patients' visits will be scheduled at 3-month intervals.
Patients will have a physical history and exam, X-rays, electrocardiogram, blood tests, and
body measurements.
Patients will take estradiol orally for 2 days, to help avoid false results of growth
hormone (GH) levels in blood samples. Then provocation testing is done, with two tests back
to back. It determines blood levels of GH and the body's response to testing with drugs
called arginine and clonidine. Patients are admitted to the pediatric inpatient unit and
will have an intravenous (IV) line placed in the arm. Arginine is given by IV over 30
minutes, and blood samples are taken. Right after arginine testing, the clonidine tablet is
given. The IGF-1 generation test is then done to see if the body makes IGF-1 as a product in
response to injections of GH for 5 consecutive days. This test does not require that
patients are inpatients, but after Day 8, patients must be admitted to the pediatric unit to
have blood sampling, start Increlex injections, and start close monitoring of blood sugar
levels. They will learn how to do a self-injection and follow other advice. They will
complete records about the injection site, symptoms, and side effects-keeping records for at
least the first 2 days after going home, with each dose change, and as needed. Patients
stick their fingertip and place a small drop of blood on a blood sugar monitoring strip. The
strip is put into a glucometer-a small hand-held device to measure the blood sugar level.
Patients will be instructed to always have a source of sugar available in case blood sugar
is too low.
...
Clinical Details
Official title: Treatment for Growth Failure in Patients With X-Linked Severe Combined Immunodeficiency (XSCID): A Phase 2 Study Assessing Safety and Clinical Response to Treatment With Insulin-like Growth Factor-1 (IGF-1)
Study design: Treatment, Non-Randomized, Open Label, Active Control, Single Group Assignment, Safety/Efficacy Study
Primary outcome: The primary outcome is to establish that XSCID patients treated with IGF-1 do not experience more than the expected rate of drug-related adverse events than non-XSCID children receiving IGF-2 therapy, which is estimated at 5 percent.
Secondary outcome: The primary objective is to evaluate the safety of treating XSCID children with growth failure using IGF-1. The secondary objective is to evaluate the efficacy of IGF-1 treatment for growth failure in children with XSCID.
Detailed description:
This is a Phase 2 protocol evaluating the safety and efficacy of standard dose insulin-like
growth factor-1 (IGF-1) for the treatment of growth failure in patients diagnosed with
X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (XSCID). This condition is a fatal inherited
immunodeficiency caused by defects in the common cytokine receptor gamma chain (gc), a
subunit shared by many cytokine receptors. The common gamma subunit signals through the
Janus kinase/signal transducers and activators of transcription (JAK/STAT) pathway, a
complex intracellular signaling pathway used by many cytokines and growth factors, including
growth hormone (GH). Studies have suggested that the gc defect may result in
hyporesponsiveness to GH. This is supported by a report of GH hyporesponsiveness in an XSCID
child that was successfully ameliorated following immune reconstitution using bone marrow
transplantation (BMT). Haplo-identical BMTs for XSCID children often achieve only partial
immune reconstitution, and many BMT recipients experience ongoing problems with growth
failure, achieving heights well below 2 standard deviations for their chronological age. It
is possible that in these partially corrected conditions, administration of IGF-1, a
substance the body produces downstream in response to GH, may achieve an improved growth
response.
This study proposes to evaluate the safety and efficacy of Increlex(Trademark) (recombinant
human IGF-1) for the treatment of patients with XSCID who have growth failure (children with
heights less than 3rd percentile for age). Increlex(Trademark) is a Food and Drug
Administration-approved drug for treatment of growth hormone non-responsiveness in the
general population of children with growth hormone hyporesponsiveness or primary IGF-1
deficiencies. The scientific objectives are to determine safety and to assess the efficacy
of using subcutaneous IGF-1 in XSCID patients with growth failure. The long-term goal of
this study is to establish improved treatment regimens for growth failure in children with
XSCID.
Eligibility
Minimum age: 2 Years.
Maximum age: 20 Years.
Gender(s): Both.
Criteria:
- INCLUSION CRITERIA:
Participants Must:
- Have a diagnosis of XSCID
- Have NO fusion of epiphyses/closed growth plates as determined by X-ray of left wrist
and hand (special skeletal age film)
- Be between 2 years to 20 years old and have not completed puberty
- Consent to permit blood and/or tissue samples for storage
- Demonstrate short stature: height below the 3 rd percentile for chronological age
- Have a primary care physician at home
- Demonstrate growth failure, defined as growth velocity (measured as linear growth)
that is less than 5% to 10% of that expected for children of the same age group, over
the past 12 months
- Willingness to remain hospitalized for several days
- Provide evidence of serum IGF-1 level performed within the preceding 6 months and the
results fall below normal limits for age
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
Participants Must NOT:
- Have fusion of epiphyseal plates
- Be under the age of 2 years or have reached completion of puberty
- Have a serum IGF-1 level that is within normal limits for age
- Be above the 3rd percentile height for chronological age
- Demonstrate any history of anaphylactic reaction or hypersensitivity to mecasermin or
any component of the drug's formulation
- Have any active or suspected neoplasia
- Demonstrate signs of intracranial hypertension as evidenced by papilledema upon
examination by fundoscopy
- Have any condition that, in the investigator's opinion, places the patient at undue
risk by participating in the study
- Be unwilling to undergo testing or procedures associated with this protocol
Locations and Contacts
Patient Recruitment and Public Liaison Office, Phone: (800) 411-1222, Email: prpl@mail.cc.nih.gov
National Institutes of Health Clinical Center, 9000 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, United States; Recruiting
Additional Information
NIH Clinical Center Detailed Web Page
Related publications: Buckley RH, Schiff RI, Schiff SE, Markert ML, Williams LW, Harville TO, Roberts JL, Puck JM. Human severe combined immunodeficiency: genetic, phenotypic, and functional diversity in one hundred eight infants. J Pediatr. 1997 Mar;130(3):378-87. Puck JM, Pepper AE, Henthorn PS, Candotti F, Isakov J, Whitwam T, Conley ME, Fischer RE, Rosenblatt HM, Small TN, Buckley RH. Mutation analysis of IL2RG in human X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency. Blood. 1997 Mar 15;89(6):1968-77. Leonard WJ, Shores EW, Love PE. Role of the common cytokine receptor gamma chain in cytokine signaling and lymphoid development. Immunol Rev. 1995 Dec;148:97-114. Review.
Starting date: June 2007
Ending date: June 2012
Last updated: September 3, 2009
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