Effect of Dupilumab on Sleep Apnea in Patients With Rhinosinusitis

NCT ID: NCT03675022

Last Updated: 2022-10-05

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

9 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2018-08-15

Study Completion Date

2022-07-01

Brief Summary

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Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) is a common disorder with serious consequences that remains underrecognized, with \>80% of OSA patients undiagnosed, and undertreated due to inadequate treatment options. The development of additional treatments for OSA, such as pharmacotherapy, are critically needed.

The collaboration between Regeneron and Sanofi are funding this project. Regeneron will be providing the drug and the contract will be with Regeneron. Both companies are involved as it is a collaboration across the companies.

Detailed Description

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Clinical Background on OSA OSA is a prevalent disorder, with roughly 1 in 5 adults estimated to have at least mild OSA and 1 in 15 estimated to have at least moderate OSA. Furthermore, OSA causes a number of adverse cardiovascular, neurocognitive, and daytime functional consequences. As a result, understanding the pathophysiology and developing treatments is a major public health goal. Unfortunately, only approximately 50% of patients tolerate the main therapy for OSA, Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP). Therefore, new therapeutic approaches are clearly needed.

OSA is caused by collapse of the pharyngeal airway during sleep due to the sleep state-related loss of pharyngeal muscle activity. High nasal resistance can contribute to pharyngeal collapse as well by increasing the suction pressure downstream in the velo- and oropharynx. In fact, a recent study in 139 patients with chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) demonstrated an extremely high prevalence of OSA (65% of the CRS patients had OSA compared to a prevalence in the normal population of 5-15%). Therefore, a drug that reduces nasal congestion and pharyngeal edema, such as dupilumab, could potentially improve OSA in some patients.

Immunologic Background on OSA and role of Type 2 inflammation Indeed, preliminary patient-reported outcomes data from early clinical trials with dupilumab have shown that dupilumab treatment of patients with sinus disease reduces reports of nocturnal awakenings, as well as sleep-related outcomes on the SinoNasal Outcome Test (SNOT-22). In addition to the known effects of dupilumab on the reduction of nasal polyp size/volume, there is ample evidence to propose that the specific anti-inflammatory effects achieved with IL-4Rα blockade will be particularly relevant to a potential therapeutic effect of dupilumab on OSA in patients with comorbid CRS. There are a number of Type 2 inflammatory markers that are increased in patients with CRS and OSA, which taken together suggest that OSA in these patients is truly an inflammatory disease, and not solely a disease of abnormal anatomy. Serum IL-4 levels are elevated in patients with rhinitis and OSA, and those levels are negatively correlated with time spent in REM sleep. Furthermore, two inflammatory markers of mast cell activation, urinary leukotriene E4 and urinary prostaglandin D2, are also known to be elevated in OSA, likely due to the increased chronic mast cell stimulation afforded by the high circulating IL-4 levels. Strikingly, both urinary leukotriene E4 and prostaglandin D2 levels correlate with OSA severity, as measured by either percentage of overnight time spent with SaO2 \<90% or the apnea/hypopnea index (AHI).

There is additional clinical evidence to suggest that OSA may be more than "just" an anatomic disease. Although endoscopic sinus surgery to remove inflamed sinus tissue in patients with OSA and CRS does improve OSA symptoms, non-surgical anti-inflammatory treatments, including intranasal steroids and leukotriene modification with montelukast, have also been found to improve OSA symptoms and decrease the AHI.

Given these immunological findings, the investigators suspect that extensive Type 2 inflammation is a major contributing factor for patients with CRS and OSA, and that IL-4Rα blockade will be a powerful therapeutic tool in sleep apnea. In combination with the preliminary patient-reported outcomes data suggesting that dupilumab improves sleep quality, the investigators feel confident that dupilumab will successfully provide a clinically-quantifiable therapeutic improvement on the severity of OSA in patients with CRS and OSA. As there are currently no FDA-approved medications for the treatment of OSA, and 65% of all patients with CRS suffer from OSA, the investigators feel as though positive results from this pilot trial would be a powerful step towards providing a new biologic therapy to an underserved medical population.

Conditions

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Sleep Apnea Rhinosinusitis Chronic

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Dupilumab

Dupilumab injections every 2 weeks.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Dupilumab

Intervention Type DRUG

The investigational drug is dupilumab, 300mg in 2ml solution for subcutaneous application. All Patients will receive dupilumab, 300mg, every two weeks (8 subcutaneous injections total).

Interventions

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Dupilumab

The investigational drug is dupilumab, 300mg in 2ml solution for subcutaneous application. All Patients will receive dupilumab, 300mg, every two weeks (8 subcutaneous injections total).

Intervention Type DRUG

Other Intervention Names

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Dupixent

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Adults (18 to 65 years)
* BMI \< 35 kg/m2
* Bilateral CRS (clinical diagnosis) with or without nasal polyposis despite intranasal corticosteroid treatment for at least 3 months.
* Patients will be required to report at least 2 of the following symptoms prior to screening: (1) nasal obstruction/blockage, (2) nasal discharge or discolored postnasal drainage, (3) facial pain or pressure, and (4) reduction or loss of sense of smell, with symptom duration of at least 3 months.
* Suffering from OSA with AHI \> 10 episodes/hr based on the home sleep test (described below) and not using CPAP.
* Willing, committed, and able to return for all clinic visits and complete all study-related procedures.
* In females of childbearing potential: Negative pregnancy test. A urine pregnancy test will be performed in each site visit to ensure that the patients are not pregnant while using dupilumab.

Exclusion Criteria

* Concurrent sleep disorder
* Previous participation in any clinical trial of dupilumab in which active treatment was administered.
* Oral corticosteroids, monoclonal antibodies, immunosuppressive treatment, or anti-immunoglobulin E (anti-IgE) therapy during the 6 weeks preceding the screening.
* Concomitant conditions making them not evaluable for the primary endpoint. Prior diagnosis of OSA will not be exclusionary.
* Lactating females or pregnant females.
* Subjects for whom there is concern about compliance with the protocol procedures.
* Any medical condition which, in the opinion of the Investigator, would interfere with participation in the study or place the subject at risk (chronic infectious diseases such as TB, HIV, Hepatitis, etc.).
* History of hypersensitivity to the study drug.
* History of substance abuse (drug or alcohol) or any other factor (e.g., serious psychiatric condition) that could limit the subject's ability to comply with study procedures.
* Subjects must refrain from intranasal decongestants for 1 week prior to starting the study.
* Subjects with a medical history of HSV1 or HSV2, or with a history of recurrent conjunctivitis.
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

65 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Brigham and Women's Hospital

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Tanya Laidlaw, MD

Director of Translational Research in Allergy

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Locations

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Brigham and Women's Hospital

Boston, Massachusetts, United States

Site Status

Countries

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United States

Other Identifiers

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2018P001031

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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