Title
Aggressive Combination Drug Therapy in Very Early Polyarticular Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis
Comparison of Anti-TNF Therapy Plus Methotrexate, Combination Therapy of DMARDs, and Methotrexate Alone in Very Early Polyarticular Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis. A National Randomized Multicenter Clinical Trial.
Phase
Phase 3Lead Sponsor
University of HelsinkiStudy Type
InterventionalStatus
Completed No Results PostedIndication/Condition
Juvenile Idiopathic ArthritisIntervention/Treatment
naltrexone hydroxychloroquine sulfasalazine infliximab ...Study Participants
60The objective of this study is to compare in very early polyarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) the efficacy, safety, and cost-benefit-ratio of three treatment strategies: biologic combination, combination of conventional disease-modifying drugs (DMARDs), and methotrexate alone.
DMARD-naive polyarticular JIA patients with an early disease (onset less than 6 months) are randomized into one of three treatment strategies: (1) biological combination, i.e., anti-TNF therapy with infliximab plus methotrexate; (2) Combination of DMARDs with methotrexate, sulfasalazine, plus hydroxychloroquine; and (3) Methotrexate alone.
The efficacy is evaluated by American College of Rheumatology Pediatric (ACR Pedi) criteria based on 6 core set variables (CSVs): 1. no of active joints; 2. no. of joints with pain or tenderness and limitation of motion; 3. ESR (mm/hr); 4. the Childhood Health Assessment Questionnaire (CHAQ); 5. Physician's Visual Analogue Scale (VAS); 6. Patient/Parent VAS. To fulfill ACR Pedi 75 criteria, 3/6 CSVs have to improve 75% and not more than 1/6 CSV worsen more than 30%. All direct and indirect costs are documented.
The first phase of the study is open-label clinical trial lasting for 54 weeks. In the second phase of the study the patients are followed up to 5 years, and the long-term outcome of early aggressive therapy is analyzed. Serum, urine, and saliva samples are collected at 3 and 5 years for translational research.
IFX given 3-5mg/kg every 6 weeks, oral MTX given 15mg/m2 weekly. If ACR Pedi 75 is not reached by week 12, MTX dose is doubled up to parenteral 30 mg/m2 weekly dose. If patient does not reach ACR Pedi 30 after dose escalation, failure.
IFX given 3-5mg/kg every 6 weeks, oral MTX given 15mg/m2 weekly, SSZ 40mg/kg up to 2000mg daily, HCQ 5mg/kg daily. If ACR Pedi 75 is not reached by week 12, MTX dose is doubled up to parenteral 30 mg/m2 weekly dose. If patient does not reach ACR Pedi 30 after dose escalation, failure.
Oral MTX given 15mg/m2 weekly. If ACR Pedi 75 is not reached by week 12, MTX dose is doubled up to parenteral 30 mg/m2 weekly dose. If patient does not reach ACR Pedi 30 after dose escalation, failure.
infliximab 3-5 mg/kg every 6 weeks, plus methotrexate 15 mg/m2 weekly given orally (dose escalation if ACR Pedi less than 75). no oral prednisolone. intra-articular steroids allowed.
methotrexate 15mg/m2 weekly given orally (dose escalation and parenteral injection if ACR Pedi less than 75), plus standard doses of sulfasalazine and hydroxychloroquine. no oral prednisolone. intra-articular steroids allowed.
Conventional drug therapy: methotrexate 15mg/m2 weekly given orally (dose escalation and parenteral injection if ACR Pedi less than 75). no oral prednisolone. intra-articular steroids allowed.
Inclusion Criteria: juvenile idiopathic arthritis arthritis lasting for at least 6 weeks but not more than 6 months polyarticular disease with at least 5 active joints with at least 3 joints with pain or tenderness and limitation of motion no previous treatment with DMARDs Exclusion Criteria: systemic JIA any abnormality in the hematopoietic or lymphatic system any major concurrent medical condition inadequate psychosocial situation pregnancy a non-abstinent female with reproductive capacity without regular contraceptive use