The purpose of this trial is to evaluate the symptomatic benefits of immunomodulatory treatment with IVIG for POTS (postural tachycardia syndrome) patients with evidence of autoimmunity.
Gammunex-C, a form of intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG), is approved for the treatment of chronic inflammatory demyelinating neuropathy (CIDP) or idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP). IVIG has been in use for many decades in the treatment of these disorders and many other inflammatory/autoimmune diseases. It is generally very safe and well tolerated. More recently, IVIG has been proposed as an effective treatment for presumed inflammatory neurological disorders which do not meet the criteria for CIDP. Specifically, case reports and cases series have indicated therapeutic responses to IVIG in autonomic neuropathies. Intravenous Albumin is approved for the treatment of hypovolemia (see attached package insert). The use of albumin to increase plasma volume in patients with POTS has been suggested. In this study, albumin will be used as an active control treatment to provide the same volume and protein load as IVIG but without the immunomodulatory effects. There have been few well designed clinical therapy trials aimed at POTS patients and even fewer that are aimed at a particular pathophysiological subtype of POTS. Evidence suggests that POTS is a heterogeneous disorder with differing underlying mechanisms. Several uncontrolled case series have suggested a benefit of IVIG for POTS, but the volume expansion associated with infusion of IVIG make it difficult to assess the immunomodulatory effects of this treatment. We propose to evaluate the efficacy of IVIG using a double-blind randomized cross over design that will determine efficacy while reducing effects of inter-subject variability and placebo effect which are common problems in POTS therapy research. Even with the statistical advantages of a crossover design, the treatment cohort will be small, and this study is designed to be a pilot (phase II) study to evaluate the feasibility, tolerability and potential benefits of treatment. The results of this pilot study will provide the impetus and rationale for a larger multicenter clinical trial to definitively evaluate immunomodulatory treatment in POTS.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
30
If you participate in this study there will be 18 scheduled treatment infusions during the 30 week study period. All the study visits and treatment visits will be outpatient visits. Once you qualify to participate in the study and begin treatment, there will be two 12 week treatment periods separated by a 6 week washout period. The infusion visits will take approximately 3-4 hours each.
This will be the matching placebo used in the study.
UT Southwestern Medical Center
Dallas, Texas, United States
Change in Symptoms Measured by Change in COMPASS-31 Score (After Initial Treatment Phase)
Primary outcome was change in autonomic symptom burden, assessed by total COMPASS-31 (sum of scaled subscores), comparing assessment at week 13 (2 weeks after final infusion) minus the assessment at baseline. This questionnaire generates a weighted score from 0 to 100, and questions fall into one of six domains: orthostatic intolerance, vasomotor, secretomotor, gastrointestinal, bladder, and pupillomotor function. A COMPASS-31 (Composite Autonomic Symptom Score-31) score of ≥20 suggests moderate-to-severe autonomic dysfunction. Higher scores indicate more severe symptoms. A reduction in score (negative change over time) indicates better outcome or response to treatment.
Time frame: Baseline,13 weeks
Number of Participants With Clinical Improvement
The count of participants with clinical improvement at 13 weeks is being reported here. Clinical improvement was defined as a reduction of the COMPASS-31 total score by 20% or more. Lower scores are associated with improvement and a 20% reduction was used as a meaningful change in previous studies of POTS
Time frame: 13 weeks
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