| Literature DB >> 28400731 |
Perrine Dusser1, Isabelle Koné-Paut1.
Abstract
Kawasaki disease (KD) is an acute inflammatory vasculitis occurring in young children before 5 years and representing at this age, the main cause of acquired heart disease. A single infusion of 2 g/kg of intravenous immunoglobulins along with aspirin has reduced the frequency of coronary artery aneurysms from 25 to 5%. However, 10-20% of patients do not respond to standard treatment and have an increased risk of cardiac complications and death. The development of more potent therapeutic approaches of KD is an urgent need. Phenotypical and immunological similarities between KD and systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis led to the hypothesis that KD could be considered as an autoinflammatory disease. New insights regarding KD's pathogenesis have merged from the combination of genetic and transcriptomic data revealing the key role of interleukin-1 (IL-1) signaling in the pathogenesis of the vasculitis. Once activated, IL-1α and IL-1β trigger a local proinflammatory environment-inducing vasodilatation and attracting monocytes and neutrophils to sites causing tissue damage and stress. Both IL-1α and IL-1β have been shown to induce myocarditis and aneurysm formation in Lactobacillus casei cell-wall extract mouse model of KD; both being successfully improved with IL-1 blockade treatment such as anakinra. Treatment failure in patients with the high-risk inositol-triphosphate 3-kinase C genotype was associated with highest basal and stimulated intracellular calcium levels, increased cellular production of IL-1β, and IL-18, and higher circulating levels of both cytokines. Three clinical trials of IL-1 blockade enrolling KD patients are currently being conducted in Western Europe and in USA, they could change KD outcome.Entities:
Keywords: Kawasaki disease; autoinflammatory disease; coronary artery aneurysms; interleukin-1; pediatric; pediatrics; vasculitis
Year: 2017 PMID: 28400731 PMCID: PMC5368266 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2017.00163
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Kawasaki disease (KD) clinical algorithm (Newburger et al., 2004).
Clinical trials of IL-1 blockade enrolling KD patients conducted in Western Europe and in USA (Burns et al., 2016).
| Name | Type of trial | IL-1 blockade/Doses | Population KD patients | Objective | Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kawakinra trial (Europe) (Eudract Number: 2014-002715-41) | Phase IIa, multi-centered trial | Anakinra: 2 mg/kg/day Dose can be increased by 2 mg/kg/24 h if persistent or recrudescent fever (max 6mg/kg/d) | Children: 8 months (≥10 kg)–18 years Screened: 4th–13th day of fever | Primary end points Efficacy and safety of anakinra Secondary objectives Effects of anakinra on coronary artery Disease activity and inflammation biomarkers | 14 days of treatment |
| Anakid trial (USA) (clinicaltrials.gov#NCT02179853) | Phase I/IIa study: Two-centered and dose escalation trial | Anakinra: 2, 4 or 8 mg/kg Persistent or recrudescent fever after ≥36 h and <7 days following the end of intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) infusion | Children (≥8-M -old) with acute KD and with coronary artery ( | Safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of anakinra | 2–6 weeks |
| Canakinumab trial (Europe) | Phase II trial: Two-arm, multi-centered and carried out in seven European countries | Canakinumab: 6 mg/kg IV Group 1: Complete fever resolution Canakinumab (1 or 2 SC injections) at 4 and 8 weeks Depending on the clinical and CRP course Group 2 Fever remains after 48–72 h of canakinumab IVIG | Naïve KD patients or IVIG-resistant KD patient | The presence or absence of fever will be looked-for. |