Title

Study of H.P. ACTHAR Subcutaneous Gelatin (Gel)(Highly Purified Gel Injection) in Uveitis Patients
Prospective Open Label Study of H.P. Acthar Gel Injection in Patients With Active Non-Infectious Uveitis With Associated Glaucoma Thus High Frequency Regional Corticosteroid and Oral Corticosteroids Cause Intolerable Side-Effects
  • Phase

    Phase 4
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Intervention/Treatment

    corticotropin ...
  • Study Participants

    6
Uveitis represents a heterogeneous group of diseases that results from ocular inflammatory reaction involving ocular tissue and vasculature. The inflammation usually causes pain, redness, photophobia and blurred vision. This inflammation, is typically treated with regional or systemic therapy. The regional therapy typically consists of topical corticosteroids or periocular or regional corticosteroids. Regional therapy can lead to a steroid response glaucoma, which is increased intraocular pressure.This pilot study aims to evaluate the possible effectiveness of H.P. Acthar in patients with active ocular inflammatory disease, and currently on treatment for glaucoma or have a history of glaucoma.
Uveitis represents a heterogeneous group of diseases that results from ocular inflammatory reaction involving ocular tissue and vasculature. The inflammation usually causes pain, redness, photophobia and blurred vision.

H.P Acthar Gel stimulate the adrenal cortex to secrete cortisol. Additionally H.P. Acthar gel is also reported to bind to melanocortin receptors. Melanocortin receptor activation has been shown to exert marked anti-inflammatory and immune-modulatory effects in animal studies, by modulating pro inflammatory cytokines, followed by induction of anti- inflammatory mediators and subsequent leukocyte migration. Specifically melanocortins down regulate Tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF) alpha, Interleukin (IL) -2, Interferon gamma and T-cell proliferation and upregulates IL-10 and regulatory T cells. For this reason H.P. Acthar is an approved treatment for ocular inflammatory disease.

Ocular inflammatory disease is typically treated with regional or systemic therapy. The regional therapy typically consists of topical corticosteroids or periocular or regional corticosteroids. Regional therapy can lead to a steroid response glaucoma, which is increased intraocular pressure.This pilot study aims to evaluate the possible effectiveness of H.P. Acthar in patients with active ocular inflammatory disease, and currently on treatment for glaucoma or have a history of glaucoma.

Subjects will be treated with H P Acthar subcutaneous gel, 40 U/ml, given twice weekly x 8 weeks, followed by once weekly x 4 weeks: a total 20 doses with the same cumulative units to be administered, using the approved route, with the option to do 4 additional doses if resolution is incomplete.

This will be a prospective open-label, non-randomized pilot study: 12 week treatment for active non-infectious uveitis, endpoint assessment and safety assessment; additional 12 week assessment for uveitis activity/quiescence and safety assessment.
Study Started
Jun 30
2016
Primary Completion
Dec 07
2016
Study Completion
Dec 20
2016
Results Posted
Jul 02
2018
Last Update
Jul 02
2018

Drug H.P. ACTHAR SUBCUTANEOUS GEL INJECTION

Subcutaneous injection twice weekly

  • Other names: Acthar

H.P. Acthar Subcutaneous Gel Injection Other

For the current protocol we are proposing, 40 U/ml, given twice weekly x 8 weeks, followed by once weekly x 4 weeks: a total 20 doses, using the approved route, with the option to do 4 additional doses if resolution is incomplete.

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Subject has the ability to understand and sign the informed consent document
Subject is 18 years of age or older
Subject can be male or female
Subject has negative Purified Protein Derivative (Tuberculosis skin test) or quantiferon TB Gold Test (blood test for TB) testing done in 3 months
Subject has active ocular inflammation in at least one eye
Subject has visual acuity in at least one eye of 20/400 or better.
Subject has a history of glaucoma or has actively treated glaucoma
Subject is willing and able to comply with the study procedures
Female subjects of childbearing potential must not be pregnant or breast-feeding, must have a negative pregnancy test at screening and must be willing to undergo pregnancy testing throughout the study

Exclusion Criteria:

Subject has any ocular infection
Subject has any systemic infection
Participant has documented immunocompromised or immune-incompetent state
Subject has any ocular co-morbidity than prevents assessment of intraocular inflammation
Subject has had any intra-ocular surgery in previous 6 weeks
Subject has any planned elective surgery ocular or systemic during study duration
Subject is pregnant or breast-feeding
Subject had a recent vaccination with live or attenuated vaccines
Subject has a sensitivity to Porcine derived proteins
Subject has a medical history which is a contraindication to receiving H.P. Acthar

Summary

H.P. Acthar Subcutaneous Gel Injection

All Events

Event Type Organ System Event Term

Number of Participants With Photographic Haze Reduced to Grade 0 or Down 2 Steps Documented With Fundus Photography

Subjects will have fundus photography at baseline and 12 weeks. Intermediate uveitis is graded by haze; it is done using the photographic scale: grades 0-4 (lower values are a better outcome), utilized by the SUN criteria, based on the Nussenblatt photographic vitreous haze scale

H.P. Acthar Subcutaneous Gel Injection

Number of Participants With Clinically Significant Improvement of Macular Edema

Clinically Significant Uveitic Macular Edema: Clinical Improvement of Macular Edema with OCT Documentation of central foveal thickness < 300 microns

H.P. Acthar Subcutaneous Gel Injection

Decrease in central Fovea > 300 Microns

Decrease in Central Foveal Thickness <300

Age, Categorical

Race (NIH/OMB)

Region of Enrollment

Sex: Female, Male

Overall Study

H.P. Acthar Subcutaneous Gel Injection

Drop/Withdrawal Reasons

H.P. Acthar Subcutaneous Gel Injection