The purpose of this study is to test the hypothesis that anti-IL-6 therapy is effective for reducing plaque inflammation as measured by fluorine-2-deoxy-D-glucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) who are synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (dMARD) inadequate responders and are naive to biologic therapy.
This multi-center study will recruit 21 subjects to undergo an open-label tocilizumab treatment for 13-18 weeks in order to examine the efficacy of tocilizumab on plaque inflammation in RA patients. This multi-center study will employ PET/MR imaging of the carotid and coronary arteries and aorta to assess the effect of anti-IL-6 therapy on arterial inflammation in patients with RA who are synthetic dMARD inadequate responders and are naive to biologic therapy. Secondary, exploratory evaluation will also examine correlations between atherosclerotic plaque inflammation and the inflammatory activity of the rheumatoid joint measured by PET-MR imaging, as well as how the changes in inflammation correlate with lipid and inflammatory biomarkers, and how stress levels are associated with inflammatory activity. Adults between 50 and 75 years old diagnosed with RA will come in for an initial screening visit to assess for clinical eligibility criteria (visit 1). During the screening period, patient acceptability for the study will be assessed on the basis of medical history, concomitant medications, physical examination, and clinical laboratory test results. The study doctor will review the screening test results and procedures to determine the subject eligibility prior to imaging. Women able to become pregnant will be excluded due to teratogenic side effects. A FDG-PET/MR imaging study will be performed at a second screening visit (visit 2) to assess for the presence of arterial, plaque and joint inflammation. A serum pregnancy test will be drawn and confirmed to be negative prior to imaging for female subjects of childbearing potential. Acceptability for study participants will be confirmed on the basis of a tissue-to-background ratio (TBR) of greater than or equal to 1.7 in qualifying vessel (calculated using the mean of the maximum SUV) as measured from FDG-PET/MR imaging. Participants who meet clinical and imaging eligibility criteria will be enrolled into the study (visit 3). Subjects will receive first dose of tocilizumab subcutaneously, on subsequent weeks, subjects will be instructed to self-administer tocilizumab at a dose of 162mg every week for a 12 week period. 4 weeks post-initiation, participants will return for a clinical safety follow-up (visit 4). Final evaluation will include physical exams, clinical assessments and carotid IMT test. A second FDG-PET/MR imaging session will take place 12 weeks post-administration (visit 5). Effect of tocilizumab on arterial plaque inflammation will be examined by measuring the change in FDG uptake in the carotid arteries, coronary arteries and aorta between the baseline and 12 week FDG-PET/MRI.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
16
subjects will be treated with 162mg of weekly subcutaneous tocilizumab in an open-label manner, this will be done addition to MTX or monotherapy. On subsequent weeks after the first dose of tocilizumab, subjects will be instructed to inject the full amount of syringe according to the directions provided in the Instructions For Use (IFU).
Change in Arterial Inflammation in the Carotids
The change in the target-to-background ratio of FDG uptake of the carotid, measured on PET-MR imaging before vs after 12 weeks of tocilizumab treatment. FDG uptake is calculated as Target to background values (TBR) . TBR, in turn, is calculated as the mean arterial standardized uptake value (SUV) divided by background blood pool SUV.
Time frame: Baseline and 13-18 weeks follow-up
Association Between Change in Arterial Inflammation and Change in Articular Inflammation
Change in FDG uptake in joints over the treatment period will be compared to the change in FDG uptake in arteries over the same period. FDG uptake is calculated as Target to background values (TBR)) . TBR, in turn, is calculated as the mean arterial standardized uptake value (SUV) divided by background blood pool SUV.
Time frame: Baseline and 13-18 weeks follow-up
Change in Target to Background Ratio Within Carotid Artery Plaques
Changes of Target to Background Ratio within the most diseased segment of the carotid arteries( a plaque-based analysis) before vs. after 12 weeks treatment
Time frame: Baseline and 13-18 weeks follow-up
Association Between Change in Arterial Inflammation and Change in LDL
Change in LDL over the treatment period will be compared to the change in FDG uptake in arteries over the same period. FDG uptake is calculated as Target to background values (TBR)) . TBR, in turn, is calculated as the mean arterial standardized uptake value (SUV) divided by background blood pool SUV.
Time frame: Baseline and 13-18 weeks follow-up
Association Between Change in Arterial Inflammation and Change in CRP
Change in CRP (C-reactive protein) over the treatment period will be compared to the change in FDG uptake in arteries over the same period. FDG uptake is calculated as Target to background values (TBR)) . TBR, in turn, is calculated as the mean arterial standardized uptake value (SUV) divided by background blood pool SUV.
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Time frame: Baseline and 13-18 weeks follow-up
Correlation Between Change in BOLD Signals in the Amygdala and Anterior Cingulate Cortex With Atherosclerotic Plaque FDG Uptake
Correlation coefficients cannot be calculated. The BOLD imaging was optional. Only one subject produced measurable BOLD imaging at baseline and follow-up. Thus while the data are analyzed, correlation coefficients cannot be calculated.
Time frame: Baseline to 13-18 weeks follow-up