Olaparib for PAH: a Pilot Study

NCT ID: NCT03251872

Last Updated: 2020-08-26

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

TERMINATED

Clinical Phase

EARLY_PHASE1

Total Enrollment

6 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2018-10-25

Study Completion Date

2019-12-01

Brief Summary

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The main OBJECTIVE of this proposal is to extend our preclinical findings on the role of DNA damage and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerases (PARP) inhibition as a therapy for a devastating disease, pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), to early-phase clinical trials. We, and others, have published strong evidence that DNA damage accounts for disease progression in PAH and showed that PARP1 inhibition can reverse PAH in several animal models1. Interestingly, PARP1 inhibition is also cardioprotective. Olaparib, an orally available PARP1 inhibitor, can reverse cancer growth in animals and humans with a good safety profile, and is now approved for the treatment of ovarian cancer in Canada, Europe and the USA. The time is thus right to translate our findings in human PAH. The industry-sponsored clinical research on PARP1 inhibitor is currently entirely cancer-oriented. Nonetheless, AstraZeneca Canada accepted to support an early phase clinical trial through in-kind contribution, but the support from foundations and federal agencies is critical to catalyze early-stage development of PARP1 inhibitors for other indications, especially for orphan diseases. A CIHR Project Scheme grant will thus be submitted on September 15 2017, proposing a Phase 1, followed by a Phase 2 trial that will be conducted in recognized PAH programs throughout Canada. At this stage, however, we propose a pilot study to assess the feasibility of the proposed trials in the PAH population. The overall HYPOTHESIS is that PARP1 inhibition with olaparib is a safe and effective therapy for PAH.

The primary objective of the study is to confirm feasibility, to support the safety of using olaparib in PAH patients, and precise the sample size of the coming Phase 1B trial. The feasibility of the comprehensive patient phenotyping that will be proposed within the phase 1B trial will thus be assessed, in addition to adverse events and efficacy signals.

\*\*\*OPTION pilot trial was merged with the new OPTION multicenter trial (NCT03782818)\*\*\*

Detailed Description

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BACKGROUND PAH is a progressive and multifactorial condition characterized by the chronic elevation of pulmonary artery (PA) pressure leading to RV failure. In spite of currently approved therapies, patients with PAH have poor quality of life and the 3-year survival of idiopathic PAH remains \~55%. The identification and characterization of new therapeutic targets is thus an urgent need.

In recent years, it has become increasingly appreciated that, as in cancer cells, PAH-PA smooth muscle cells (PASMCs) are exposed to stressful conditions, jeopardizing their survival. To deal with these insults, these cells have developed complementary pathways, allowing them to survive and proliferate and leading to intense remodelling of distal PA. Central to these strategies are the activation of the DNA repair machinery. Survival of these cells is associated with an over-efficient activation of PAPR1, a predominant mechanism involved in DNA repair, and pharmacological inhibition of PARP1 reverses PAH in human cells and clinically relevant animal models.

Recently, Olaparib, an orally available PARP1 inhibitor, was shown to be safe, well tolerated and effective in treating cancers and was approved for the treatment of ovarian cancer.

OLAPARIB IN PAH: A PILOT STUDY The study population will include 6 well-characterized PAH patients that have been stable for \>4 months on standard PAH-therapies, as per guidelines.

The primary objective of the study is to confirm the feasibility for a future early stage clinical trial and provide early evidence that Olaparib may be effective in PAH.

Exploratory efficacy end-point: The exploratory efficacy endpoint will be the change in pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) at week 16. Other exploratory efficacy end-points will include changes in: 1) additional haemodynamic data by catheterization; 2) 6-min walk distance (6MWD); 3) RV volumes and mass (cardiac MRI) in eligible patients; 4) WHO functional class; 5) NT-proBNP levels; 6) Quality of life assessed using the CAMPHOR questionnaire.

Study design: This is a standard-design, dose-escalating pilot study. In line with most pilot and safety studies, the design is open-label. A 4-week pre-treatment phase will allow ensuring that patients are on stable doses of medication. Patients will be given progressive doses of olaparib up to 400mg BID for 16 weeks. Patients will be regularly followed. At baseline and week 16, a cardiac catheterization and MRI will assess changes in pulmonary hemodynamics and RV function.

Toxicity monitoring/withdrawal: Based on experience to date with olaparib, doses up to 400mg BID should be tolerated. Subjects may experience mild side effects or other events that the investigator may consider related to study drug but not of sufficient clinical significance to warrant withdrawal from treatment. At the investigators' discretion, olaparib may be managed by dose reduction. If the lower dose is not tolerated, the patient will be withdrawn from the study. Subjects who require a dose reduction should be maintained at the reduced dose level through to the end of the 16-week treatment period. Adverse events will be submitted to our ethics committees.

Analysis: This pilot study is not meant to prove efficacy. As a result, power calculations were not determined. The safety and exploratory endpoint analysis will be only descriptive. Nonetheless, it is hoped that olaparib will be associated with hemodynamic improvements, giving precision about the dose to be tested and sample size calculation for subsequent studies. Thus, there is a need for assessment of the exploratory efficacy endpoints. These analyses will be based on the per protocol set (all treated patients who did not violate the protocol in a way that might influence the evaluation of the effect of the study drug on the primary endpoint).

Conditions

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Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

The design is open-label. A 4-week pre-treatment phase will allow ensuring that patients are on stable doses of medication. Patients will be given progressive doses of olaparib up to 400mg BID for 16 weeks.
Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Drug: Olaparib

Olaparib up to 400 mg BID (100 to 400 mg) for 16 weeks

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Olaparib

Intervention Type DRUG

Olaparib tablets

Interventions

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Olaparib

Olaparib tablets

Intervention Type DRUG

Other Intervention Names

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Lynparza

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* 1\) adults (18-75 yrs) with PAH of idiopathic/ hereditary/drug or toxin-induced origin or associated with connective tissue diseases; 2) mean PA pressure ≥25mmHg, PA wedge pressure ≤15mmHg, PVR \>480 dyn.s.cm-5 and absence of acute vasoreactivity (we expect PARP1 inhibition will be most effective in patients with significant PA remodelling); 3) WHO functional class II or III; 4) clinically stable with unchanged vasoactive therapy for ≥4 months; 5) two 6MWD of 150-550m and within ±15% of each other (the latter being used as baseline value); 6) a negative serum pregnancy test prior to receiving the first dose of study treatment and willing to use adequate contraception from enrolment through 3 months after the last dose of study treatment for patients of childbearing potential

Exclusion Criteria

* 1\) other types of pulmonary hypertension; 2) significant restrictive (total lung capacity \<60% predicted) or obstructive (FEV1/FVC\<60% after a bronchodilator) lung disease; 3) systolic blood pressure \<90 mmHg; 4) acute RV failure within the last 3 months; 5) received any investigational drug within 30 days; 6) BMI \<18 or \>40 kg/m2; 7) cardiopulmonary rehabilitation program planned or started ≤12 weeks prior to Day 1; 8) presence of ≥3 risk factors for heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (BMI \>30 kg/m2, diabetes mellitus, hypertension or coronary artery disease); 9) organ dysfunction other than RV failure; 10) anticipated survival \<1 year due to concomitant disease
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

75 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Laval University

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Steeve Provencher

Professor

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Steeve Provencher, MD, MSc

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

IUCPQ-UL

Sébastien Bonnet, PhD, FAHA

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

IUCPQ-UL

Locations

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IUCPQ-UL

Québec, Quebec, Canada

Site Status

Countries

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Canada

References

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Related Links

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https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03782818?term=NCT03782818&draw=2&rank=1

OPTION pilot trial merged to a new multicenter trial (OPTION multicenter - NTC03782818)

Other Identifiers

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CER-21658

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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