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Intra-oral Treatment of OLP With Rivelin®-CLO Patches

A Randomized, Double-blind, Placebo-controlled, Parallel Group Clinical Study to Assess the Safety and Efficacy of Three Doses of Clobetasol Propionate When Administered Intra-orally Twice Daily in Patients With Oral Lichen Planus (OLP) Using Rivelin®-CLO Patches

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03592342
Enrollment
140
Registered
2018-07-19
Start date
2018-06-28
Completion date
2019-12-20
Last updated
2020-07-14

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Oral Lichen Planus

Keywords

Patch, Rivelin-Clo Patch, Oral Lichen Planus, Ulcerative, Erythematous, OLP, OLPClinROM, OLPSSM

Brief summary

Participants with symptomatic Oral Lichen Planus lesions will be treated with Rivelin® patches containing either 0, 1, 5, or 20 μg clobetasol per patch. Each participant will apply up to 6 patches twice daily for 4 weeks.

Detailed description

Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group clinical study with 3 active dose arms (Rivelin®-CLO patches) and one placebo arm (Rivelin® plain patch). Up to 6 Rivelin® patches will be applied to symptomatic ulcerative and symptomatic erythematous OLP lesions. After screening (visit 1, day -14 to day -7), patients who have signed the informed consent form and who are fulfilling the inclusion criteria and none of the exclusion criteria will be randomized at baseline (visit 2, day 1) to one of the four treatment arms in a double-blinded fashion. * Arm A: Rivelin® plain patch (Placebo) * Arm B: Rivelin®-CLO 1 μg/patch * Arm C: Rivelin®-CLO 5 μg/patch * Arm D: Rivelin®-CLO 20 μg/patch Randomization will be 1:1:1:1 and patients will be stratified according to number of patches needed (1-3 and 4-6). The screening phase ranges between 7 and 14 days, i.e. that the screening visit (visit 1) needs to be performed 7 days prior to baseline at latest. For visits 3 (day 8), 4 (day 15), 5 (day 22), and 6 (day 29) a visit window of +/- 2 days will be allowed. Visit 7 will be defined as visit 6 + 14 days, with a visit window of +/- 3 days. Randomized patients will enter a 28-days (4-weeks) treatment period. Dosing is two times per day (morning and evening) with patches applied directly on OLP lesions as instructed by a clinician or delegated site staff. Patients will record symptoms and adhesion time in daily diaries by using an electronic diary (eDiary). During the treatment period, the treating physician or dentist will perform an assessment of the disease status on a weekly basis. A final examination of disease status will be performed at the follow-up visit (visit 7), 14 days after the end of treatment. Other treatments of symptomatic OLP lesions during the study are prohibited. Only rescue analgesics determined by the investigator at study entry on a patient specific basis are allowed to be taken, in case that OLP associated symptoms like pain cannot be managed by the sole use of the patches. All doses of rescue analgesics will be recorded by the patient in the eDiary. If the patients' condition is worsening (at the discretion of the investigator) and if associated symptoms cannot longer be managed acceptably by the additional use of rescue analgesics, i.e. if there is the need to start any other OLP treatment, IMP treatment for that patient should be discontinued prematurely and patient should be withdrawn from the study. At visit 3 (day 8), a blood sample will be drawn to measure the blood plasma concentration of clobetasol and to determine the morning serum cortisol level (between 7 and 9 AM). All patients will have a follow-up visit that will be performed 2 weeks after the EoT/ET visit (visit 6). Safety data (by means of AE documentation including fungal infections and SAE reporting) will be closely monitored by an independent Data and Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB). DSMB will advise the Sponsor of any potential risk for the safeguard of patients.

Interventions

Rivelin® patch is a two-layer patch comprised of a muco-adhesive, drug-delivery layer and a protective layer.

Sponsors

Proinnovera GmbH
CollaboratorINDUSTRY
X-act Cologne Clinical Research GmbH
CollaboratorINDUSTRY
Dermtreat
Lead SponsorINDUSTRY

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)

Masking description

All 4 interventions will be similar in appearance and be allocated by use of a blinded kit number (each kit contains drug for 1 week).

Intervention model description

Randomization will be 1:1:1:1 to 1 of the 4 parallel arms (3 active and 1 placebo) and patients will be stratified according to number of patches needed (1-3 and 4-6).

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* OLP patients with at least one visible and measurable symptomatic ulcerative OLP lesion, assessable via OLP Clinician Reported Outcome Measure (OLPClinROM). * Diagnosis of LP histologically confirmed by result of either an existing clinically relevant biopsi or a new clinically representative biopsy at first screening visit (i.e. a biopsy report either indicative of OLP, LP or indicative of lichenoid inflammation will be sufficient). * Patients aged ≥ 18 years. * Patients practicing daily oral hygiene (by tooth brushing and/or mouth rinse) and willing to maintain at least their routine oral hygiene procedure during study participation. * Willingness to keep already used permitted concomitant medication, food supplements (e.g. probiotics) or herbals, which might have in the discretion of the investigator a potential influence on OLP, on a stable basis during the study.

Exclusion criteria

* Patients requiring more than 6 patches (corresponding to an area of approximately 3 cm2 per patch) to cover symptomatic ulcerative and erythematous OLP lesions at baseline visit. * Ongoing active visible fungal, bacterial or viral infection of oral mucosa, including ongoing treatment of those at baseline. * Patient with any un-healed oral surgery (including recent diagnostic biopsies, if applicable) or oral laser therapeutic wound(s) at baseline visit. * Any of the following systemic treatments prior to baseline visit and throughout the study: * Protease inhibitors used for the treatment of HIV (e.g. atazanavir, idinavir, nelfinavir, etc.): 1 week * Corticosteroids (i.v., intra articular, intra-lesional): 4 weeks * Antimycotics: 4 weeks The following systemic treatments are allowed, if on stable dose for a defined period of time to baseline and throughout the study. * Antibiotics: 4 weeks * Corticosteroids (oral, rectal, inhalative) washout/stable with maxinum dose of 10 mg daily prednisolone or equivalent for 4 weeks. * Retinoids: 12 weeks * Immunosuppressive drugs (e.g. azathioprine, cyclosporine, mycophenolate mofetil, or biologics): 12 weeks * Any of the following topical treatments used in the oral cavity prior to baseline visit: * Corticosteroids: 2 weeks * Antibiotics: 2 weeks * Cyclosporine: 2 weeks * Tacrolimus, pimecrolimus: 2 weeks * Antimycotics: 2 weeks * Retinoids: 4 weeks * Phototherapy in oral cavity prior to baseline visit: UVB, PUVA. * Current participation in another clinical study and/or having received treatment with any non-marketed / investigational medicinal product (drug substance or medical device) within 4 weeks prior to screening. * Known or suspected intolerance/hypersensitivity/resistance to clobetasol propionate or any component of the investigational medicinal product. * Any history of squamous cell carcinoma (even if resected), as well as history of other non-squamous cell carcinoma (e.g. sarcoma, salivary gland tumors) that have been managed with radiation or chemotherapy. * History of cancer (except resected cutaneous basal cell carcinoma and except in situ cervical cancer) unless it can be documented that the patient has been in a disease-free state for at least 5 years, or at least 2 years in a disease-free state for low-grade cancers. In case of clinical suspicion of malignancy in the oral cavity, a patient can only be included after an excluding biopsy. * Professional dental cleaning within 2 weeks prior to baseline and unwillingness to refrain from professional dental cleaning during study conduct. * Close affiliation with the investigator (e.g. a close relative) or persons working at the study sites or patient who is an employee of the Sponsor's company. * Pregnant, confirmed by a positive pregnancy test, or nursing (lactating) women, or women of childbearing potential (WOCP) planning to become pregnant or WOCP not using or willing to continue to use a defined highly effective method of contraception throughout the study.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Change in ulcer area4 weeksThe change will be calculated from baseline to end of trial

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Change in 5-point erythema score4 weeksThe change will be calculated from baseline to end of trial using a 5-point erythema score (assessed as no redness (0) or very severe redness (4))
Change in Clinical global impression score4 weeksThe change will be calculated from baseline to end of trial using the Clinical Global Impression Score assessed on a 5-point rating scale ranging between no disease (0) and very severe disease (4)
Change in OLPSSM total score (item #1 to #7)4 weeksThe change will be calculated from baseline to end of trial. The OLPSSM (OLP Symptom Severity Measure) is a recently developed questionnaire, which serves for the patient to assess his/her specific OLP symptoms. This questionnaire consists of overall 12 items, to be assessed at different time points. Most items should be completed on a daily basis (in the evening). These items will be assessed as part of the patient's eDiary
Change in individual diary symptom scores (item #1 to #7 of the OLPSSM)4 weeksThe change will be calculated from baseline to end of trial. The OLPSSM (OLP Symptom Severity Measure) is a recently developed questionnaire, which serves for the patient to assess his/her specific OLP symptoms. This questionnaire consists of overall 12 items, to be assessed at different time points. Most items should be completed on a daily basis (in the evening). These items will be assessed as part of the patient's eDiary.
Change in lesion area4 weeksThe change will be calculated from baseline to end of trial
The proportion of positive outcomes (score 0 or 1) on each of the 11 questions in the Patch Sensation Questionnaire2 weeksThe patient will assess the sensation of wearing the Rivelin® patches by answering 11 questions (the Patch sensation questionnaire) according to 5-point rating scales (ranging between 0 \[most positive response\] and 4 \[most negative response\]).The Patch Sensation Questionnaire will be completed during the clinic visit at baseline (visit 2) after first patch application and at visit 4 (2 weeks).
The proportion of patients with successful (>=80% of days on treatment) patch applications4 weeksDefined as an adhesion time more than 30 minutes during the 4 weeks treatment
Incidence of Treatment-Emergent Adverse Events (Safety and Tolerability)4 weeksFrequency and intensity of adverse events (AEs) reported during the study
Change in worst symptoms at anatomical sites4 weeksThe change will be calculated from baseline to end of trial

Countries

Canada, Denmark, Germany, Ireland, United Kingdom, United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026