Pope Janet, McBain Donna, Petrlich Lisa, Watson Sharon, Vanderhoek Louise, de Leon Faye, Seney Shannon, Summers Kelly
St. Joseph's Health Care and University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada.
Arthritis Rheum. 2011 Nov;63(11):3547-51. doi: 10.1002/art.30549.
To better understand the feasibility of using imatinib, a tyrosine kinase inhibitor, to treat active diffuse cutaneous systemic sclerosis (dcSSc).
We performed a 6-month, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, proof-of-concept pilot study of imatinib in patients with active dcSSc. Data on safety, modified Rodnan skin thickness scores (MRSS), Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ) scores, patient's and physician's global assessments (100-mm visual analog scale), and biomarkers in serum and skin biopsy samples were collected. We used a 4:1 randomization strategy (imatinib 200 mg administered twice a day versus placebo), stratifying according to current use of methotrexate. The plan was to enroll 20 dcSSc patients.
After enrolling 10 patients (9 receiving active drug and 1 receiving placebo), we found poor tolerability and high rates of adverse events with imatinib, and study enrollment was discontinued. There was no significant difference in the mean MRSS in all patients who took imatinib (31.1 at baseline versus 29.4 at 6 months) or in only those who completed 6 months of imatinib (31.0 at baseline versus 30.3 at 6 months), and there was no difference in the C-reactive protein level, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, physician's global assessment, patient's global assessment, response to the Health Transition query, or the HAQ scores between those who did and those who did not complete 6 months of therapy. Side effects were edema, fluid retention, fatigue, nausea, cramps/myalgias, diarrhea, alopecia, and anemia. Most side effects occurred within the first week of treatment, and even when imatinib was reintroduced at a lower dosage (200 mg daily), it was poorly tolerated. Two patients were hospitalized because of side effects of the medication. In general, biomarker levels in plasma and skin did not change.
Imatinib was poorly tolerated, and this could limit its application in SSc. The study was too small to form conclusions about the efficacy of imatinib in SSc.
为了更好地了解使用酪氨酸激酶抑制剂伊马替尼治疗活动性弥漫性皮肤系统性硬化症(dcSSc)的可行性。
我们对活动性dcSSc患者进行了一项为期6个月的伊马替尼随机、双盲、安慰剂对照概念验证性试验研究。收集了关于安全性、改良罗德南皮肤厚度评分(MRSS)、健康评估问卷(HAQ)评分、患者和医生整体评估(100毫米视觉模拟量表)以及血清和皮肤活检样本中生物标志物的数据。我们采用4:1随机化策略(伊马替尼200毫克每日两次与安慰剂),根据甲氨蝶呤的当前使用情况进行分层。计划招募20例dcSSc患者。
在招募了10例患者(9例接受活性药物治疗,1例接受安慰剂治疗)后,我们发现伊马替尼耐受性差且不良事件发生率高,因此停止了研究招募。所有服用伊马替尼的患者(基线时为31.1,6个月时为29.4)或仅完成6个月伊马替尼治疗的患者(基线时为31.0,6个月时为30.3)的平均MRSS无显著差异,并且在完成和未完成6个月治疗的患者之间,C反应蛋白水平、红细胞沉降率、医生整体评估、患者整体评估、对健康转变询问的反应或HAQ评分也无差异。副作用包括水肿、液体潴留、疲劳、恶心、痉挛/肌痛、腹泻、脱发和贫血。大多数副作用发生在治疗的第一周内,即使以较低剂量(每日200毫克)重新引入伊马替尼,其耐受性也很差。两名患者因药物副作用住院。总体而言,血浆和皮肤中的生物标志物水平没有变化。
伊马替尼耐受性差,这可能限制其在系统性硬化症中的应用。该研究规模太小,无法就伊马替尼在系统性硬化症中的疗效得出结论。