In March 2020, children exposed to the virus that causes the COVID-19 illness, SARS-CoV-2, presented with fever and significant inflammation about a month after exposure to the virus. Some children were sick enough to require care in the intensive care unit for what came to be known as Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome-Children (MIS-C).The clinical presentation shared many features with Kawasaki disease (KD), a self-limited inflammation that can cause ballooning of the arteries of the heart. Thus, physicians reached for many of the therapies used to treat children with KD. Despite the surge of COVID-19 cases and children continuing to present with MIS-C, there are no data that guide the choice of therapy. Thus, the investigators have designed a study to determine which combination of therapies is most effective in helping children with MIS-C recover quickly.
This study is a multi-site, randomized, pragmatic, comparative effectiveness study of children with MIS-C. The current standard of care is that all MIS-C patients are initially treated with IVIG and receive additional therapy if they are severely ill or do not improve clinically. This study design will randomize subjects who have received IVIG but clinically warrant further anti-inflammatory therapy to one of three treatment arms (infliximab, steroids or anakinra) and allow for re-randomization to one of the two remaining arms if clinically warranted.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
73
Infliximab will be administered as a single IV dose of 10 mg/kg over 2 hours.
Anakinra will be administered at a dose of 8 mg/kg/day IV or SQ with 100 mg every 6 hours as the max dose. This is discontinued with a taper during the hospitalization over 2-4 days once a patient is stable with significantly improved clinical course and laboratory profile.
Methylprednisilone (steroids) will be administered as 2 mg/kg IV or orally divided every 12 hours. At the time of hospital discharge the patient will be given a steroid taper that will take at least 3 weeks to complete.
Rady Children's Hospital
San Diego, California, United States
Children's Hospital Michigan
Detroit, Michigan, United States
Number of Participants Needing Additional Anti-inflammatory Therapy Within the First Week of First Randomization
The three arms of the study will be compared to see which initial randomization arm (infliximab, anakinra or steroids) has the lowest rate of additional anti-inflammatory therapy within the first week of first randomization.
Time frame: 1 week
Number of Participants With Adverse Events
Of the three initial randomization arms (infliximab, steroids or anakinra), the rate of adverse events will be compared. The goal is to determine which arm has the lowest rate of adverse events. The AEs reported in the AE section include: All Cause, SAE and Others.
Time frame: 6 weeks
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