Background: Anakinra is a drug used to treat people with certain diseases that affect their immune systems. Sometimes anakinra can cause proteins under the skin to clump together. These clumps are called amyloidosis; they can spread to other organs. The only way to diagnose amyloidosis is to remove a piece of tissue (biopsy). Researchers want to find a way to locate amyloidosis in internal organs using positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT). Objective: To test a new tracer used during PET/CT scans in people with amyloidosis. A tracer is a radioactive dye injected into the body. Eligibility: Adults aged 18 years or older with amyloidosis from anakinra injections. They must be enrolled in NIH protocol 17-I-0016. Design: Participants will come to the clinic once every 6 months for 2 years. Each visit will be 1 day. They will have a PET/CT scan with the new tracer at each visit: The tracer will be given through a tube attached to a needle inserted into a vein. The PET/CT scanner is a machine shaped like a doughnut. Participants will lie still on a padded table. The table will move in and out of the machine. The scan takes about 1 hour. Radiation from the tracer will remain in the body for 24 hours after each scan. Participants will need to follow rules to avoid exposing pets and other people. Participants will collect a 24-hour urine sample before each visit. They will also have blood tests and a physical exam at each visit. Participants will receive a follow-up phone call about 1 week after each visit.
Study Description: This is a phase 1 study to evaluate the feasibility of an investigational positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) radiotracer, 124I-AT-01, to screen for anakinra-induced amyloidosis in people with the cryopyrin-associated autoinflammatory syndromes (CAPS) (Muckle-Wells syndrome \[MWS\] or neonatal onset multisystem inflammatory disease \[NOMID\]), and to follow resolution of amyloidosis. This radiotracer binds to amyloid, so a PET/CT scan can show the presence and relative magnitude of amyloid. Participants aged 18 years and older who developed local skin or systemic amyloidosis as a result of anakinra treatment will be recruited. They will have a PET/CT scan with radiotracer 124I-AT-01 about once every 6 months for 2 years. Blood and urine will be collected for clinical safety analyses, but no specimen will be collected for research or storage purposes. The 124I-AT-01 PET/CT imaging is expected to be able to detect anakinra-induced amyloid in the skin and other organs (such as kidney, liver, and spleen). The percent change in quantitative uptake of 124I-AT-01 from baseline to each subsequent scan is expected to correlate with changes in clinical features related to load of amyloid in the body. Primary Objectives: 1. To screen participants with fixed skin thickening at the site of anakinra injection and/or biopsy-proven anakinra-induced amyloidosis of the skin for the presence of systemic amyloidosis, using 124I-AT-01 PET/CT imaging. 2. To measure changes in organ-specific uptake of 124I-AT-01 from baseline in participants with anakinra-induced amyloidosis (local or systemic) using PET/CT imaging. 3. To assess the safety profile of 124I-AT-01 in participants with CAPS. Primary Endpoints: Change in organ-specific 124I-AT-01 uptake from baseline PET/CT imaging to the follow-up PET/CT imaging every 6 months for 2 years. Frequency of CAPS disease flares after exposure to 124I-AT-01.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
30
124I-AT-01 is an amyloid-reactive synthetic 45-L amino acid polypeptide radiolabeled with iodine-124, with a theoretical molecular weight of 4763.6 Da (based on amino acid sequence). The polypeptide, AT-01, is not pharmacologically active. 124I-AT-01 binds many forms of human and murine amyloid and is intended to be a PET imaging agent for the detection of amyloid deposits.
National Institutes of Health Clinical Center
Bethesda, Maryland, United States
RECRUITINGChange in organ-specific 124I AT-01 uptake from baseline PET/CT imaging to the follow up PET/CT imaging every 6 months for 2 years.
The gold standard for detecting amyloid deposits is tissue biopsy. With this compound, we expect to detect evidence of tissue deposits in the tissue at a much earlier stage and in a non invasive manner. By lowering the exposure to anakinra in participants with anakinra-associated systemic amyloidosis, the burden of amyloidosis is expected to reduce over time.
Time frame: 2 years
Frequency of CAPS disease flares after exposure to 124I AT 01.
This compound has not been used in patients with CAPS. We will monitor the participants to detect possible inflammatory disease flare following the exposure.
Time frame: Through end of study.
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