Phase 4
N=93
Relevance of Monitoring Blood and Salivar Levels of Drugs Used in Rheumatic Autoimmune Diseases
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) · Juvenile SLE · Cutaneous Lupus
Bottom Line
View on ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03122431 ↗Enrolled (actual)
93
Serious AEs
0.0%
Results posted
Dec 2021
Primary outcome: Primary: Serum Levels of Thalidomide — 415.1 ng/mL
Study Design & Population
- Study type
- Interventional
- Phase
- Phase 4
- Interventions
- Thalidomide (Drug); Hydroxychloroquine reduced (Drug); standard dose of HCQ (Drug)
- Age
- Pediatric, Adult · 5+ yrs
- Sex
- All
- Sponsor
- University of Sao Paulo General Hospital
- Primary completion
- Dec 2020
Outcome Measures
| Outcome | Result | p-value |
|---|---|---|
| PRIMARY Serum Levels of Thalidomide |
415.1 | — |
| PRIMARY Serum Levels of Hydroxycloroquine |
991.6; 569.0 | — |
Summary
No drug treatment is completely free of risk and lack of response, adverse events and poor adherence may affect its effectiveness. Within this context, this project aims to evaluate the importance of monitoring blood levels and salivary drug used in rheumatic autoimmune diseases in the monitoring of adherence to therapy. In addition, this project intends to use the monitoring of drug levels, based on pharmacokinetic studies and pharmacokinetics/pharmacodynamics modeling, to broaden the understanding of the possible cellular, tissue and immunological mechanisms involved in efficacy and adverse effects of these drugs with the prospect of reducing the damage and maintain therapeutic efficacy. The high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) coupled to mass spectrometry, which will be used to evaluate hydroxychloroquine, thalidomide, glucocorticoids, is considered the gold standard technology to qualitative and quantitative analysis of drugs in blood and its comparison with the dosage in the saliva is an improvement in simplification of the process. For biological agents the focus will be on the understanding the loss of efficacy and the possible role of anti-TNF antibodies using ELISA capture methodology.This project will be divided into four sections with their respective sub-projects according to the medications that will be studied: hydroxychloroquine, thalidomide, biologic agents and glucocorticoids.
Eligibility Criteria
Thalidomide subproject:
Inclusion Criteria
- SLE diagnosis according to 1997 ACR criteria
- Active and refractory cutaneous lupus lesions
- Male gender (using contraceptive barrier method) or confirmed infertility for female gender
- Normal electroneuromyography at study entry
Exclusion Criteria
- Alcoholism
- History of peripheral neuropathy
- Previous history of thrombophilia or positive antiphospholipid antibodies
- Renal and/or central nervous system and/or hematological activity
HCQ reduced subproject:
Inclusion Criteria
- SLE diagnosis according to 1997 ACR criteria
- Use of hydroxychloroquine (5 to 6.5mg/kg/day) for ≥5 years
- SLEDAI-2K <4
Exclusion Criteria
- Alcoholism
- Renal dialysis
- Concomitant infectious process
- Acute and chronic liver diseases
- Concomitant use of some drugs that interact with HCQ (cimetidine, antacids, digoxin, aminoglycosides, penicillamine, neostigmine, pyridostigmine)
- Signs of Retinopathy
HCQ high subproject:
Inclusion Criteria
- SLE diagnosis according to 1997 ACR criteria
- No use of hydroxychloroquine for ≥ 6 months
- LES/LESJ in activity (SLEDAI≥6)
Exclusion Criteria
- Alcoholism
- Renal dialysis
- Concomitant infectious process
- Acute and chronic liver diseases
- Concomitant use of some drugs that interact with HCQ (cimetidine, antacids, digoxin, aminoglycosides, penicillamine, neostigmine, pyridostigmine)
- Signs of Retinopathy
Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03122431). Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication.