Clinical Research Directory
Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.
Fluorescence Imaging of IBD and RA Using Adalimumab-800CW
Sponsor: University Medical Center Groningen
Summary
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and rheumatoid arthritis (RA) are both auto-immune diseases that are characterized by chronic relapsing inflammation of respectively the ileocolonic tissue and the synovium. Pathogenesis of both auto-immune diseases is attributed to the proinflammatory cytokine tumor necrosis factor α (TNFa). Adalimumab is a human monoclonal anti-TNF antibody used for treating patients with moderate to severely active IBD and RA. However, current rates of therapeutic nonresponsiveness to this antibody are variable and difficult to predict in advance, whereas patients are potentially exposed to a non-effective treatment and its potential side effects; while clinical deterioration progresses. A key unmet need is the development of a predictive tool for assessment of a therapeutic (non-) response to patients and finding an optimal dose strategy in individual patients before initiating anti-TNF therapy. Unfortunately, we currently lack crucial information about drug distribution of the drug of interest throughout the targeted inflamed tissue itself. Therefore, it remains unknown in both IBD and RA, if the drug reaches its target (in sufficient amounts) and how local drug concentrations are related to therapeutic response. Thus, we linked adalimumab to a fluorescent dye (adalimumab-800CW) in order to create a fluorescent signal of the labelled drug in the diseased tissue that we can visualize and quantify with dedicated optical fluorescence imaging systems. We hypothesize that this tracer will bind to TNFa in the mucosa/synovium and thus create a map of medicine distribution in vivo due to colocalization of the fluorescent labelled compound. Therefore, the aim of this study is to assess the feasibility of fluorescent molecular imaging of adalimumab-800CW in IBD and RA patients.
Official title: Near-infrared Fluorescence Molecular Imaging of Adalimumab-800CW to Elucidate the Drug Distribution Throughout Inflamed Tissue in Inflammatory Bowel Disease and Rheumotoid Arthritis
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
36
Start Date
2024-08-06
Completion Date
2026-08-01
Last Updated
2025-08-19
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Adalimumab-800CW
Intravenous administration of 4.5 mg, 15 mg or 25 mg 2 - 4 days prior to the fluorescence imaging
Fluorescence Imaging
Rheumatoid arthritis: a flexible fiber-bundle is attached to a fluorescence camera platform to enable the detection of fluorescence signals open-air by using a black-box. Inflammatory bowel disease: a flexible fiber-bundle is attached to a fluorescence camera platform to enable the detection of fluorescence signals. The fluorescence fibre-probe is inserted through the standard working channel of the standard clinical endoscope. Fluorescence imaging will be performed during standard clinical colonoscopy.
Locations (1)
University Medical Center Groningen
Groningen, Provincie Groningen, Netherlands