Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
100

Summary

Conditions
Psoriatic Arthritis
Type
Observational
Design
Observational Model: Case-ControlTime Perspective: Prospective

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 18 years and 125 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

Psoriatic arthritis (PsA), an inflammatory joint disease associated with psoriasis (Ps), affects approximately 650,000 adults in the United States and is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Bone damage develops in half these patients within the first two years of the disease, often le...

Psoriatic arthritis (PsA), an inflammatory joint disease associated with psoriasis (Ps), affects approximately 650,000 adults in the United States and is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Bone damage develops in half these patients within the first two years of the disease, often leaving them with impaired function and diminished quality of life. The emergence of anti-Tumor Necrosis Factor therapies (TNFi) has dramatically improved clinical response and slowed bone and cartilage degradation in PsA patients, however, only 50-60% of patients respond to these agents. To improve these outcomes, the investigators must address two major gaps: a limited understanding of key events that underlie pathologic bone destruction and the absence of biomarkers to predict biologic response and identify early biologic responders to facilitate optimization of therapy. Bone damage is mediated by osteoclasts which arise from monocyte precursors in the blood. Osteoclast Precursors (OCPs) are dramatically increased in PsA, compared to controls, particularly in patients with bone damage on X-ray. The number of these circulating precursor cells dropped rapidly following treatment with TNFi. OCPs may serve as response biomarkers, but cost, time and high variability limit these assays. Osteoclast precursors express Dendritic Cell-Specific Transmembrane Protein (DC-STAMP), which is a seven-pass transmembrane protein required for fusion of monocytes to form osteoclasts and giant cells. Monocyte DC-STAMP levels dropped rapidly following treatment with TNFi. TNF receptor-associated factor 3 (TRAF3), an inhibitor of OC formation that correlates with extracellular TNF concentrations, is elevated in OCPs from PsA patients. These markers may predict TNFi treatment response. The goal of this study is to examine DC-STAMP in Psoriatic Arthritis patients prior to and after starting standard of care treatment with a TNFi or non-biologic DMARD. We will also examine PsA patients with low disease activity on standard of care TNFi and PsA patients with low disease activity on standard of care non-biologic DMARDs will serve as controls. Three groups of subjects will be recruited. Longitudinal: 30 subjects starting out on standard of care treatment with a TNFi or non-biologic DMARD will take part in the longitudinal section of the study. Subjects may be asked to have a blood draw at one additional visit before starting therapy for additional research assays if they are DC-STAMP positive. If the longitudinal subjects that return for an additional blood draw before starting medication have unusable sample data, they will be replaced by additional longitudinal subjects out of the 30 enrolled longitudinal participants to get sufficient data results of two subjects. The subjects with unusable data will continue in the longitudinal follow up study visits as intended. Cross sectional: 36 patients will take part in the cross-sectional part of the study. 18 patients on stable non-biologic DMARDS and 18 patients on stable TNFi will be compared in the cross-sectional part. This population should be in good disease state such that their disease is controlled and treatment will not need to be changed. If longitudinal subjects fit the cross-sectional criteria and wish to participate, they will be re-consented for the cross-sectional part of the study. While 66 subjects will be studied in both the longitudinal and cross-sectional studies combined, up to 80 PsA subjects may be consented to allow for screen failures and to replace longitudinal subjects who withdraw or are lost to follow-up. Assay Development: Up to 40 PsA or healthy subjects may be enrolled for blood draw for assay development and to test development of techniques for ultrasound comparison and scoring system validation.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT03011242
Collaborators
  • National Institutes of Health (NIH)
  • National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS)
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Christopher Ritchlin, MD/MPH Univerisity of Rochester