The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if avacopan in combination with short-term (4 weeks) reduced-dose glucocorticoid and rituximab works to treat patients with newly-onset ANCA-associated vasculitis. It will also learn about the long-term safety of avacopan. The main questions it aims to answer are: Is avacopan in combination with short-term reduced-dose glucocorticoid and rituximab as effective as the combination of 20 week reduced-dose glucocorticoid and rituximab in the proportion of the patients achieving remission? Does avacopan lower the relapse rate compared to the 6 monthly rituximab maintenance therapy? What medical problems do participants have when taking long-term avacopan? Participants will: Be treated with avacopan in combination with short-term (until 4 weeks) reduced-dose glucocorticoid and rituximab (at 0 week) or reduced-dose glucocorticoid (until 20 weeks) and rituximab (at 0, 26, 52 and 78 weeks). Be assessed at 0, 4, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 and 104 weeks regarding disease status (remission/relapse), disease activity by Birmingham Vasculitis Activity Score ver3, disease damage by Vasculitis Damage Index and adverse events. The primary endpoint is remission rates at 26 weeks.
Anti-neutrophil cytoplasm antibody (ANCA)-associated vasculitis is characterized by a small to medium-size vasculitis and the presence of ANCA. ANCA-associated vasculitis includes microscopic polyangiitis, granulomatosis with polyangiitis and eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis. ANCA-associated vasculitis can be a life-threatening disease and the mortality is 80% at 1 year in untreated patients. In 2010s, standard therapies for remission induction of ANCA-associated vasculitis were the combination of high-dose glucocorticoids and either cyclophosphamide or rituximab. Although those therapies have high remission rates of 80-90%, mortality at 5 years is still high at 10-20% mainly due to treatments-related adverse events. In the LoVAS trial (2021, JAMA), the combination of reduced-dose glucocorticoid and rituximab showed non-inferiority to high-dose glucocorticoid and rituximab in remission rates at 6 months. In addition, adverse events were dramatically less in the reduced-dose group than in the high-dose group. In the ADVOCATE trial (2021, NEJM), the combination of avacopan, newly developed complement C5a inhibitor, and rituximab or cyclophosphamide showed non-inferiority to high-dose glucocorticoid and rituximab or cyclophosphamide in remission rates at 6 months. The avacopan group was allowed to use glucocorticoid within 1 month from the trial entry, and over 80% of patients used glucocorticoid indeed. Regarding adverse events, they were less in the avacopan group than in the glucocorticoid group. Although both the reduced-dose glucocorticoid regimen in the LoVAS trial and the avacopan regimen in the ADVOCATE trial are effective and safe for patients with ANCA-associated vasculitis, there is no trial directly comparing both regimens at the moment. Thus, in this multicenter, open-label, randomized, non-ineriority, phase 4 trial, the investigators aim to investigate if the combination of avacoapn, short-term (4 weeks) reduced-dose glucocorticoid and rituximab is non-inferior to the combination of reduced-dose glucocorticoid (20 weeks) and rituximab. The investigators also compare safety profiles and disease relapse between the two groups. A total of 160 patients with new-onset ANCA-associated vasculitis (microscopic polyangiitis and granulomatosis with polyangiitis) will be recruited and randomized to the two treatments groups. The primary end point is remission rate at 26 weeks, and the patients will be followed until 104 weeks for assessing disease relapse and long-term safety.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
160
Patients in the avacoapn group will be treated with avacoapn, short-term reduced-dose prednisolone and rituximab.
Patients in the glucocorticoid arm will be treated with reduced-dose prednisolone and rituximab.
Fujita Health University Hospital
Toyoake, Aichi-ken, Japan
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGAsahi General Hospital
Asahi, Chiba, Japan
RECRUITINGChiba Aoba Municipal Hospital
Chiba, Chiba, Japan
RECRUITINGChiba University
Chiba, Chiba, Japan
RECRUITINGChiba Rosai Hospital
Ichihara, Chiba, Japan
RECRUITINGKameda Medical Centre
Kamogawa, Chiba, Japan
RECRUITINGInternational University of Health and Welfare
Narita, Chiba, Japan
RECRUITINGJapanese Red Cross Narita Hospital
Narita, Chiba, Japan
RECRUITINGGunma University
Maebashi, Gunma, Japan
RECRUITINGKagawa University
Hiragi, Kagawa-ken, Japan
RECRUITING...and 12 more locations
Proportions of patients achieving remission
Remission is defined as BVAS (Birmingham vasculitis activity score)=0 and less than 5mg/day of prednisolone.
Time frame: 26 weeks
Sustained remission without taking prednisolone at 104 weeks
Remission is defined as BVAS (Birmingham vasculitis activity score)=0 and less than 5mg/day of prednisolone.
Time frame: 104 weeks
Survival, relapse and end-stage renal disease
Assessed by Kaplan-Meier curves.
Time frame: 26 and 104 weeks
Accumulative dose of glucocorticoids
Accumulative dose of glucocorticoids during the study period
Time frame: 26 and 104 weeks
Birmingham Vasculitis Activity Score (BVAS) version 3
BVAS is a scoring system for assessing the disease activity of vasculitis.
Time frame: 26 and 104 weeks
Vasculitis Damage Index (VDI)
VDI is a scoring system for assessing irreversible disease damage due to vasculitis.
Time frame: 104 weeks
Short-Form 36 (SF-36)
SF-36 is a scoring system for assessing patient QOL.
Time frame: 26 and 104 weeks
Serious adverse event (SAE)
Event numbers and proportions of patients with one or more SAEs.
Time frame: 26 and 104 weeks
Proportions of the patients with new onset diabetes mellitus
Diabetes mellitus requiring drug treatments
Time frame: 26 and 104 weeks
Proportions of the patients with new onset hypertension
Hypertension requiring drug treatments
Time frame: 26 and 104 weeks
Proportions of the patients with new onset hyperlipidemia
Hyperlipidemia requiring drug treatments
Time frame: 26 and 104 weeks
Proportion of the patients with new onset bone fracture, bone density
Bone density is assessed at lumber spines.
Time frame: 104 weeks
Number of infections, proportions of the patients with infection
Infections requiring drug treatments
Time frame: 26 and 104 weeks
Number of serious infections, proportions of the patients with serious infection
Serious infections are serious events among infections requiring drug treatments.
Time frame: 26 and 104 weeks
Proportions of the patients with liver dysfunction
Liver dysfunction \>= grade 3 liver dysfunction (CTCAE)
Time frame: 26 and 104 weeks
Proportions of the patients with new onset malignancies
Malignancies diagnosed after the trial entry
Time frame: 26 and 104 weeks
Proportions of patients achieving remission without the rescue therapy
Remission is defined as BVAS (Birmingham vasculitis activity score)=0 and less than 5mg/day of prednisolone.
Time frame: 26 weeks
Sustained remission without taking prednisolone at 104 weeks and the rescue therapy during the trial period
Remission is defined as BVAS (Birmingham vasculitis activity score)=0 and less than 5mg/day of prednisolone.
Time frame: 104 weeks
Proportions of patients treated with the rescue therapy
Details of the rescue therapy are written in the section of "Arms and Interventions".
Time frame: 26 and 104 weeks
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