This is a clinical trial to see if treatment with etanercept for early skin graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) can effectively treat and prevent progression of the disease without using high dose steroids. GVHD is a common complication following a bone marrow transplant from another donor. GVHD occurs after transplant, when the donor's blood cells (called lymphocytes) recognize parts of your body, such as the skin, as foreign. A certain chemical, called Tumor Necrosis Factor, or TNF, also causes damage to the skin. The main effect on the skin is a red rash, when the skin GVHD is mild, but in more severe forms the skin can blister. We have been studying GVHD at the University of Michigan for the past decade. We know that high levels of TNF makes GVHD worse. Our research has shown that adding an anti-TNF drug (called etanercept or Enbrel®) to the standard GVHD treatment of high dose steroids leads to improvement in the GVHD in twice as many patients compared to when steroids alone are used. It is now standard practice at the University of Michigan and many other centers to treat GVHD with both steroids and etanercept. The management of early skin GVHD for most patients involves treatment with steroids, given both as a cream and by either the mouth (in pills) or IV. Early skin GVHD is also called grade I GVHD, which means the skin rash covers less than half of the body. Steroid treatment can be effective; however, it also causes many complications such as an increased risk of infection, weight gain, stomach ulcers, muscle weakness and bone damage, among many others. We have developed this study to test whether starting treatment with etanercept and steroid creams alone can treat the GVHD without requiring the use of high dose steroids. The goal is to avoid the complications that come with high dose oral or IV steroid treatment. The high dose steroid treatment would only begin if your GVHD got worse.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
34
Etanercept will begin within 72 hours of the diagnosis of Grade I acute GVHD and after consent for this study. Subjects receive eight doses of etanercept over four weeks. All doses will be administered by SQ injection. All subsequent doses will be given as subcutaneous injections into the skin. Injections will be given twice weekly with at least one day in between injections. The injections can be given in clinic, in the hospital, or self administered injections.
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States
The Percentage of Patients Who Progress Within 28 Days of Initiation of Etanercept Treatment
We hypothesized that treatment of grade 1 acute GVHD (Graft Versus Host Disease) with etanercept would reduce the proportion of patients who progressed to grade 2 to 4 acute GVHD within 4 weeks of diagnosis from 58%, historically observed at our institution, to 38%.
Time frame: 28 days
The Number of Patients in Complete Remission (CR) at Four Weeks.
Estimate the proportion of patients in complete remission (CR) at four weeks who remain alive and never require additional therapy four weeks after the last dose of etanercept. Complete remission is defined as the resolution of all manifestations of GVHD (Graft Versus Host Disease) within the first four weeks of treatment. All organs must have a Grade 0.
Time frame: 28 days
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