Efficacy and Safety of Canakinumab in Schnitzler Syndrome

Sponsor
Radboud University Medical Center
Study ID
NCT01276522
Phase
PHASE2
Status
Completed

Conditions

  • Schnitzler Syndrome

Eligibility Criteria

Sex
ALL
Age
18 Years - N/A
Healthy Volunteers
Not accepted

Interventions

  • Canakinumab — DRUG
    Monthly subcutaneous injection with 150mg Canakinumab for 6 months

Study Details

Schnitzler syndrome is a disabling inflammatory disease, characterized by chronic urticaria, fever, arthralgia, bone pain and gammopathy, which can so far only be effectively treated with anakinra, an interleukin-1 receptor antagonist. However, this drug is not registered for use in Schnitzler syndrome, and it needs to be injected daily, which is uncomfortable and unpractical. Therefore other treatments targeting IL-1 are needed. Canakinumab is a long-acting monoclonal antibody against IL-1β that has been registered for bimonthly use in the rare autoinflammatory disease Cryopyrin-associated periodic syndrome (CAPS). We hypothesize that it will be effective in Schnitzler syndrome too in view of clinical similarities to CAPS and the targeting of IL-1B, which is also blocked by anakinra (which blocks both IL-1B and IL-1A). This is a 6-month open-label, single treatment arm study of canakinumab 150 or 300 mg (in case of insufficient response to 150 mg) subcutaneous injection once per month in patients with active Schnitzler syndrome, in which efficacy and safety will be assessed.

Key Dates

Start date
Jan 31, 2011
Status verified
May 2012
Primary completion
May 31, 2011
Completion
Dec 31, 2011

Study Design

Enrollment
8 participants (actual)
Allocation
NA
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
TREATMENT

Arms

  • Experimental: Canakinumab
    A 6-month open-label, single treatment arm study of canakinumab 150 or 300 mg (in case of insufficient response to 150 mg) subcutaneous injection once per month.

Primary Outcome Measure

Complete or clinical remission at Day 14. [ Time Frame: Day 14 ]