Title

Effectiveness of Rituximab in Pediatric OMS Patients.
A Phase I Clinical Trial of Rituximab for Pediatric Opsoclonus-Myoclonus Syndrome
  • Phase

    Phase 1/Phase 2
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Completed No Results Posted
  • Intervention/Treatment

    rituximab ...
  • Study Participants

    25
The purpose of this study is to reduce the symptoms of OMS by testing rituximab (Rituxan®), to remove B lymphocytes that make antibodies and trigger brain inflammation. Evidence suggests that autoimmune brain inflammation causes the symptoms of OMS. This study of blood and spinal fluid intends to find out what effect rituximab has on OMS and on the spinal fluid B-cells.

Rituximab targets and destroys B-cells, which make antibodies that can attack the brain and cause may OMS. It is infused through a vein over a period of several hours. Rituximab has been used widely and studied extensively since its approval in 1997 by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for non-Hodgkin's B-cell Lymphoma (NHL). Today, more than 300,000 patients have received rituximab, and it is part of more than 200 completed, ongoing, or planned clinical trials. Rituximab is not FDA-approved for OMS.
Opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome (OMS) is a rare but pervasive, paraneoplastic neurological disorder, purported to be autoantibody-mediated. We demonstrated expansion of B-cells in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) despite tumor resection, chemotherapy, or conventional immunotherapy. Whether B-cells can be purged from the CSF compartment with benefit to the patient is unknown. Targeting of CSF B lymphocytes represents a novel and valuable paradigm shift in the therapy of centrally-mediated paraneoplastic disorders. The objective of this preliminary study is to determine if rituximab, a monoclonal antibody against CD20+ B-cells, reduces or eliminates CSF B-cells in OMS and whether the reduction results in clinical improvement. B lymphocyte subsets and relevant T-cell subsets will be immunophenotyped in the CSF and peripheral blood of children with OMS by four-color dual-laser flow cytometry. Sixteen children with an increased percentage of CSF B-cells will be treated with rituximab 375 mg/m2 IV once weekly for four consecutive weeks and CSF testing will be repeated at six months with more frequent clinical evaluations and blood testing out to 12 months. Clinical outcome will be rated blindly from videotapes by an experienced observer using a validated 12-item motor evaluation scale and quantifiable parameters of sleep, behavior and motor function. Immunological outcome variables will include percentages of B-cell subsets and quantitative immunoglobulins. Post-treatment results will be compared to pre-treatment values statistically. If rituximab proves to be an efficacious and safe method of treating CSF B-cell expansion and the neurological syndrome, this study will lead to a phase II trial with the eventual aim of gaining FDA approval of rituximab for this indication.
Study Started
Jun 30
2005
Primary Completion
Dec 31
2007
Study Completion
Dec 31
2007
Last Update
May 10
2011
Estimate

Drug rituximab

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

written consent from parents
have symptomatic OMS
have CSF B-cell expansion (>1% B-cells)
adequate renal function as indicated by normal BUN [10-25 mg/dL] and creatinine [0.4-1.2 mg/dL]
adequate liver function, as indicated by up to 2x normal AST [0-35 U/L] and ALT [0-35 U/L].
men and women of reproductive potential must agree to use an acceptable method of birth control during treatment and for twelve months after completion of treatment

Exclusion Criteria:

treatment with any investigational agent within 4 weeks of screening or 5 half-lives of the investigational drug (which ever is longer)
receipt of a live vaccine within 4 weeks prior to enrollment
previous treatment with Rituximab
prior antibody therapy (does not include IVIg) within past 6 months
history of severe allergic or anaphylactic reactions to humanized or murine monoclonal antibodies
history of HIV (patients considered high risk will be screened)
history of hepatitis B and/or hepatitis C (patients considered high risk will be screened)
history of recurrent significant infection or history of recurrent bacterial infections
known active bacterial, viral fungal mycobacterial, or other infection (including tuberculosis or atypical mycobacterial disease, but excluding fungal infections of nail beds) or any major episode of infection requiring hospitalization or treatment with i.v. antibiotics within 4 weeks of screening or oral antibiotics within 2 weeks prior to screening
pregnancy (a negative serum pregnancy test should be performed for all women of childbearing potential within 7 days of treatment)
significant cardiac (symptomatic arrhythmias or symptomatic structural heart disease) or pulmonary disease (including obstructive pulmonary disease)
concomitant chemotherapy
hemoglobin: >13.5 gm/dL or <10.0 gm/dL
platelets: <100,000/mm or >500,000/mm K/cumm
No Results Posted