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Genome-Wide Gene Expression Profiling of Patients With ITP Receiving Thrombopoietin Mimetics

24. april 2017 oppdatert av: James L Zehnder, Stanford University

Introduction:

Ineffective platelet production has been proven to play a role in the etiology of Immune Thrombocytopenia (ITP) in addition to increased platelet destruction. The second-generation thrombopoietin (TPO) mimetics have shown good efficacy in boosting platelet counts in the great majority of patients with chronic ITP in several clinical trials.1, 2 Nevertheless, about 20% of patients with ITP fail to respond to the TPO mimetic treatment. Those treatment-resistant patients are un-characterized and the reasons for the lack of response have not been studied. The identification of predictive blood biomarkers of patients' response to treatment will be useful in reducing both cost and potential side effects; and it will be of equal importance and interest to investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying the patients' heterogeneous responses to TPO mimetic treatment.

Specific Aims:

  1. To identify blood classifier genes which correlate with patients' response to TPO mimetic treatment.
  2. To compare the blood gene expression changes in responders and non-responders after TPO mimetic treatment and explore the possible molecular mechanisms accounting for the non-responsiveness to the treatment.

Studieoversikt

Status

Fullført

Detaljert beskrivelse

  1. Identification and validation of response-predictive genes. The normalized pre-treatment microarray data of the training set is retrieved from SMD for statistical analysis. The supervised analysis SAM (Significance Analysis of Microarrays, two class unpaired) is performed to identify genes whose expression is significantly different between responders and non-responders. Then a Leave-one-out cross-validated gene-expression predictor for the 2 response classes is devised by the PAM (Predication Analysis of Microarrays) method based on nearest shrunken centroids. The unsupervised clustering of the independent test set is performed using the predictive genes and the prediction accuracy is calculated. Quantitative real-time PCR is performed as further validation using the un-amplified RNA samples and Taqman gene expression assays (Applied Biosciences).
  2. Gene expression changes correlated with TPO mimetic treatment and pathway analysis.

2.1. Hypothesis: The transcriptional profile of patients who respond to TPO agonists is different than those who do not respond.

Plan: The expression data of pre-treatment as well as the 1-week and 1-month after initiation of treatment samples is retrieved from SMD. The two class paired SAM analysis is performed to compare pre-treatment samples with samples collected at either 1-week or 1-month after initiation of treatment in responders and non-responders. The two class unpaired SAM analysis is also used to compare post-treatment samples of responders and non-responders at the same time point. The significant genes (q value<0.05, fold change>2.5) are subsequently analyzed by IPA (Ingenuity Pathway Analysis) system to be transformed into a set of relevant networks based on the extensive records maintained in the Ingenuity Pathway Knowledge Base. The statistically significant networks, molecular and cellular functions, top canonical pathways and toxicity lists associated with each pair of dataset will be recognized through this analysis. Hypothesis on non-response to TPO mimetics can be generated based on the different functional subsets of significant genes. Genes involved in important pathways identified by IPA analysis will be validated by QRT-PCR as in our recent publication on oxidative stress pathways in ITP4. Our goal is to develop biomarkers which predict likelihood of response to therapy and identify pathways associated with resistance to therapy which could be targeted.

2.2 Hypothesis: Since available TPO agonists have different mechanisms of action, there may be differences in responders and non-responders between the different drugs.

Plan: We recognize that TPO agonists have different mechanisms of action which could affect downstream signaling pathways and transcriptional responses. For this reason in addition to evaluating the TPO agonists as a group in 2.1 above, patients will also be analyzed by type of agonist. The conclusions of this type of analysis will be limited by the numbers of individuals treated with a particular drug but could be useful for hypothesis generation and confirmation in a larger cohort.

Studietype

Observasjonsmessig

Registrering (Faktiske)

75

Kontakter og plasseringer

Denne delen inneholder kontaktinformasjon for de som utfører studien, og informasjon om hvor denne studien blir utført.

Studiesteder

    • California
      • Stanford, California, Forente stater, 94305
        • Stanford University
    • New York
      • New York, New York, Forente stater, 10065
        • Weill Medical College, Cornell University

Deltakelseskriterier

Forskere ser etter personer som passer til en bestemt beskrivelse, kalt kvalifikasjonskriterier. Noen eksempler på disse kriteriene er en persons generelle helsetilstand eller tidligere behandlinger.

Kvalifikasjonskriterier

Alder som er kvalifisert for studier

  • Barn
  • Voksen
  • Eldre voksen

Tar imot friske frivillige

Nei

Kjønn som er kvalifisert for studier

Alle

Prøvetakingsmetode

Ikke-sannsynlighetsprøve

Studiepopulasjon

Patients with ITP receiving TPO agonists

Beskrivelse

Inclusion Criteria:

  • clinical diagnosis of ITP TPO treatment

Exclusion Criteria:

  • thrombocytopenia not due to ITP

Studieplan

Denne delen gir detaljer om studieplanen, inkludert hvordan studien er utformet og hva studien måler.

Hvordan er studiet utformet?

Designdetaljer

Kohorter og intervensjoner

Gruppe / Kohort
TPO responder
Patients with therapeutic response to TPO
TPO non-responder
Patients not responding to TPO agonists

Hva måler studien?

Primære resultatmål

Resultatmål
Tidsramme
1. To identify blood classifier genes which correlate with patients' response to TPO mimetic treatment.
Tidsramme: 2 years
2 years

Samarbeidspartnere og etterforskere

Det er her du vil finne personer og organisasjoner som er involvert i denne studien.

Etterforskere

  • Hovedetterforsker: James L Zehnder, MD, Stanford University

Publikasjoner og nyttige lenker

Den som er ansvarlig for å legge inn informasjon om studien leverer frivillig disse publikasjonene. Disse kan handle om alt relatert til studiet.

Generelle publikasjoner

Studierekorddatoer

Disse datoene sporer fremdriften for innsending av studieposter og sammendragsresultater til ClinicalTrials.gov. Studieposter og rapporterte resultater gjennomgås av National Library of Medicine (NLM) for å sikre at de oppfyller spesifikke kvalitetskontrollstandarder før de legges ut på det offentlige nettstedet.

Studer hoveddatoer

Studiestart (Faktiske)

1. juli 2012

Primær fullføring (Faktiske)

1. februar 2017

Studiet fullført (Faktiske)

1. februar 2017

Datoer for studieregistrering

Først innsendt

12. november 2012

Først innsendt som oppfylte QC-kriteriene

12. november 2012

Først lagt ut (Anslag)

16. november 2012

Oppdateringer av studieposter

Sist oppdatering lagt ut (Faktiske)

26. april 2017

Siste oppdatering sendt inn som oppfylte QC-kriteriene

24. april 2017

Sist bekreftet

1. april 2017

Mer informasjon

Begreper knyttet til denne studien

Plan for individuelle deltakerdata (IPD)

Planlegger du å dele individuelle deltakerdata (IPD)?

NEI

Denne informasjonen ble hentet direkte fra nettstedet clinicaltrials.gov uten noen endringer. Hvis du har noen forespørsler om å endre, fjerne eller oppdatere studiedetaljene dine, vennligst kontakt register@clinicaltrials.gov. Så snart en endring er implementert på clinicaltrials.gov, vil denne også bli oppdatert automatisk på nettstedet vårt. .

Kliniske studier på Immun trombocytopeni

3
Abonnere