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Judith R. Kelsen, Joel Rosh, Mel Heyman, Harland S. Winter, George Ferry, Stanley Cohen, Petar Mamula, Robert N. Baldassano, Phase I trial of sargramostim in pediatric Crohn's disease, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases, Volume 16, Issue 7, 1 July 2010, Pages 1203–1208, https://doi.org/10.1002/ibd.21204
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Abstract
Improving granulocyte function may represent an effective therapy for Crohn's disease (CD). We performed a Phase I-2 trial of sargramostim (SRG) in children with CD.
This was multicenter, open-label study in 6–16-year-old patients with moderate to severely active CD. Patients received either 4 or 6 μg/kg SRG subcutaneously daily for 8 weeks, with and without concomitant corticosteroids (CS). The primary endpoint was identification of a safe and tolerable dose in children. The secondary endpoint was establishment of the pharmacokinetics (PK). Efficacy, a tertiary endpoint, was measured by the Pediatric CD Activity Index (PCDAI). Response was defined as a decrease from baseline of ≥12.5 points and remission as absolute PCDAI of ≤10.
In all, 22 patients were enrolled: 12 and 10 received 4 and 6 mg/kg, respectively; 19 completed the course. Both doses were found to be safe and well tolerated. Mild injection-site reactions occurred in 90% of patients. Three patients required dose reductions due to elevated absolute neutrophil counts. Following 4 μg/kg the mean area under the curve (AUC) was 2.64 and 2.80 ngh/mL for the 6–11- and 12–16-year-old groups, respectively. The mean half-life (t1/2) was 1.22 and 1.59 hours, respectively. Following 6 μg/kg, the mean AUC was 5.01 ngh/mL for the 12–16-year-old group, a 1.8-fold increase. A total of 16/18 patients (88%) achieved remission or response.
Sargramostim at both 4 and 6 mg/kg was well tolerated. PK analysis suggested dose proportionality unaffected by CS exposure. Remission and response data are encouraging, but further trials are needed to assess efficacy. (Inflamm Bowel Dis 2010)