CXCR4-PET/CT for Diagnosing Giant Cell Arteritis
VasculitisDiagnoses DiseaseGiant cell arteritis (GCA) is the most common vasculitis in the elderly. Accurate diagnosis is of utmost importance in order to then initiate the necessary immunosuppressive therapy. For large-vessel GCA (LV-GCA) involving the aorta and its branches, FDG-PET/CT is the standard in imaging for diagnosis and is recommended by the guidelines. However, this only indirectly visualizes inflammation through vessel wall uptake of glucose. A new PET tracer, 68Ga-pentixafor, is used to visualize the chemokine receptor CXCR4. This receptor is expressed by cells of the immune system. In the context of inflammatory processes, upregulation of CXCL12, the ligand of CXCR4, occurs in affected tissues. The chemotactic effect of this ligand leads to the immigration of CXCR4-positive inflammatory cells into the inflamed area, which can be visualized by PET using the CXCR4-specific tracer 68Ga-Pentixafor. The value of CXCR4-PET should therefore be tested in the context of LV-GCA. This study tests the benefit of CXCR4 in therapy-naïve patients with suspected LV-GCA. For this purpose, patients will receive a FDG-PET and a CXCR4-PET for direct comparison. This is an imaging-only study. Therapy will not be affected by the study. The study is single-arm and not blinded.
COvid-19 Vaccine Booster in Immunocompromised Rheumatic Diseases
Rheumatoid ArthritisAutoimmune Rheumatologic Disease7 morePeople living with Systemic autoimmune rheumatic diseases (SARDs) face a new and urgent dilemma: immunosuppression increases risk for worse COVID-19 infection, yet an immune stimulation, such as vaccination, could re-activate their disease. Fear of vaccine-related disease reactivation is not of concern in other immunosuppressed groups (e.g. patients receiving chemotherapy or hemodialysis) but in SARDs, disease flare could lead to organ failure or even death. Specific research in this population is therefore critical. Moreover, among SARD patients, those on anti-CD-20 monoclonal antibody (mAb) (i.e. rituximab (anti-CD-20 mAb)), a medication used to treat inflammatory types of arthritis, have extremely low immunity post-COVID-19 mRNA vaccine. This study will test the hypothesis that a booster dose of a COVID-19 vaccine is safe and enhances post-vaccine humoral and cellular responses in SARDs patients on anti-CD-20 mAb treatment. The magnitude of this response depends on the type of COVID-19 vaccine administered and is optimal when the booster dose is a vaccine from a different group than the one used for primary immunization (mix-and-match approach).
Biocollection of Patients With ANCA Associated Vasculitis
ANCA-associated VasculitisAs rare disease, vasculitis affects a small number of patients, the cohorts available in the literature are few and the pathophysiological mechanisms remain to be elucidated. The collection of standardized data within a patientheque as part of a multi-year follow-up will facilitate the study of the characteristics of these diseases. This may, in particular, address the main objective of identifying predictors of relapse, as well as secondary objectives for predictive factors of mortality, infectious, cardiovascular or neoplastic complications that affect the prognosis of vasculitis in order to establish a more appropriate management of the patients concerned.
Evaluate the Remission MAINtenance Using Extended Administration of Prednisone in Systemic Anti-neutrophil...
Granulomatosis With PolyangitisImmunosuppressive therapy of granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA, Wegener's) and microscopic polyangiitis (MPA) has transformed the outcome from death to a strong likelihood of disease control and temporary remission. However, most patients have recurrent relapses that lead to damage and require repeated treatment associated with long-term morbidity and death. Rituximab has been shown to be as effective as cyclophosphamide to induce remission and maintenance of remission in severe GPA and MPA patients, with an acceptable safety profile . Although rituximab is becoming the standard of care for maintenance therapy in these patients, relapse still occurs and the optimal duration of prednisone therapy remains debated. On the one hand, most US studies use early withdrawal (6-12 months) because of feared side effects. On the other hand, most European trials propose late withdrawal (>18 months) given a lower observed relapse rate on long-term low dose glucocorticoids treatment. In a systematic review and meta-analysis, glucocorticoids regimen was the most significant variable explaining the variability between the proportions of ANCA-associated vasculitis patients with relapses. Nevertheless, it was an indirect estimation of treatment effect because of the absence of dedicated randomized trial. This meta-analysis concluded that combined longer-term (i.e. >12 months) use of low dose prednisone or nonzero glucocorticoids target is associated with a 20% reduction of relapse compared to early withdrawal (i.e. ≤12 months). The relapse rate in patients with early glucocorticoids (10-12 months) withdrawal was provided in two studies and was of 37 and 34%, respectively. By contrast, the relapse rate in patients with late prednisone withdrawal (18-24 months) and receiving rituximab as maintenance treatment was 14% at 24 months in the MAINRITSAN trial. Of note, the decision to withdraw glucocorticoids after 18 months was left to physician's discretion in this study and two thirds of the nonsevere relapses occurred when patients were off prednisone. The trial detailed here is the first prospective trial evaluating the length of glucocorticoid administration as remission adjunctive treatment for patients with GPA or MPA.
Recombinant Herpes Zoster Vaccine in Patients With Autoimmune Rheumatic Diseases
Rheumatoid ArthritisSpondylitis12 moreIntroduction: Patients with autoimmune rheumatic diseases (ARDs), rheumatoid arthritis (RA), juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), psoriatic arthritis (PAs), ankylosing spondylitis (AS), systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), primary Sjögren's syndrome (pSS) , systemic sclerosis (SSc), idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIM) and primary vasculitides, have a high risk of herpes zoster (HZ) infection. This increased susceptibility is caused by a deficient cell-mediated immune response due to the underlying disease and glucocorticoid and immunosuppressive treatments that impair the T-cell response, including conventional and unconventional synthetic disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (DMARDs) and biological agents. In this context, the recent availability of a recombinant vaccine against HZ (RZV or Shingrix®), composed of recombinant VZV glycoprotein E (gE) and the AS01B adjuvant system (HZ/su), is a major progress regarding safety for immunosuppressed patients. Its effectiveness, however, has been clearly demonstrated for non-immunosuppressed patients and in selected populations of immunocompromised individuals. There are no prospective controlled studies evaluating the immunogenicity of RZV and its impact on the activity of the underlying disease, as well as its safety in patients with ARDs at high-risk for HZ. Hypothesis: RZV has a good safety profile, including with respect to underlying rheumatic disease activity, in patients with ARDs at high risk of HZ. Objectives: Primary: To assess the short-term safety profile in relation to underlying disease activity in patients with ARDs at high risk of HZ immunized with RZV compared to unvaccinated patients. Secondary: To evaluate the general safety of the vaccine in patients with ARDs at high risk of HZ immunized with RZV and non-immunosuppressed control subjects (CG); the humoral and cellular immunogenicity of RZV in patients with ARDs at high risk of HZ compared to CG; the influence of disease treatment on vaccine response; the 12-month persistence of humoral immunogenicity and incident cases of HZ. Specific studies will also be carried out to evaluate the effect of drug withdrawal (methotrexate-MTX and mycophenolate mofetil-MMF) after vaccination in increasing the immune response in patients with ARDs with controlled underlying disease.
Infliximab Therapy for Dolichoectactic Vertebrobasilar Aneurysms
AneurysmStroke2 morePatients harboring dolichoectactic vertebrobasilar (DVB) aneurysms are at risk of suffering SAH, ischemic stroke, and/or brainstem compression and many patients are not offered invasive treatment due to the futility of existing surgical methods. Consequently, there is demand for development of medical therapy for DVB aneurysms
Soluble CD95 Ligand Role in the Pathophysiology of Antineutrophil Cytoplasmic Antibody (ANCA) Associated...
ANCA Associated VasculitisThe study aims at defining the role of soluble CD95 Ligand in the physiopathology of a rare group of inflammatory diseases: ANCA associated vasculitis. Soluble CD95 Ligand might have a prognostic and diagnostic interest as well as potential for the discovery of new therapeutic strategies.
Rituximab and Belimumab Combination Therapy in PR3 Vasculitis
ANCA Associated VasculitisGranulomatosis With PolyangiitisMechanistic study to assess whether dual B-cell immunotherapy by co-administration of rituximab and belimumab will result in improvements in biological endpoints, functional outcomes and clinical status compared to rituximab with placebo.
The Assessment of Prednisone In Remission Trial (TAPIR) - Patient Centric Approach
Granulomatosis With PolyangiitisWegener Granulomatosis1 moreThis is a randomized controlled trial in patients with a diagnosis of granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA; Wegener's)that are in remission to evaluate the effects of using low-dose glucocorticoids ( 5 mg/day of prednisone) as compared to stopping glucocorticoid treatment entirely (0 mg/day of prednisone)on rates of disease relapse/disease flares. This study is a novel approach to conducting a randomized clinical trial in the community setting. This study is being conducted in parallel with a similar study at established vasculitis institutions. This study will have a patient centric approach to research in that subjects will be recruited online and through social media and vasculitis support networks. Participants will be consented online and will receive care through their regular treating physician so no travel or additional doctor visits are required. Study participants will consent to the study and complete online questionnaires about their prednisone dose and about how they are feeling.
Abatacept for the Treatment of Relapsing, Non-Severe, Granulomatosis With Polyangiitis (Wegener's)...
Granulomatosis With Polyangiitis (Wegener's)Granulomatosis With Polyangiitis2 moreMulti-center, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of abatacept to achieve sustained glucocorticoid-free remission in patients with relapsing non-severe granulomatosis with polyangiitis (Wegener's) (GPA) . Participants will be randomized 1:1 to receive either abatacept 125 mg or placebo administered by subcutaneous injection once a week. Participants will continue on study treatment for a minimum of 12 months unless they experience a disease relapse or disease flare. Participants who experience a non-severe disease relapse, non-severe disease worsening, or who have not achieved remission by month 6 will have the option of entering an open-label trial period whereby they would receive open-label abatacept.