| Literature DB >> 32222826 |
Mette Vesterhus1,2, Tom Hemming Karlsen3,4,5.
Abstract
Primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) is a progressive liver disease, histologically characterized by inflammation and fibrosis of the bile ducts, and clinically leading to multi-focal biliary strictures and with time cirrhosis and liver failure. Patients bear a significant risk of cholangiocarcinoma and colorectal cancer, and frequently have concomitant inflammatory bowel disease and autoimmune disease manifestations. To date, no medical therapy has proven significant impact on clinical outcomes and most patients ultimately need liver transplantation. Several treatment strategies have failed in the past and whilst prescription of ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) prevails, controversy regarding benefits remains. Lack of statistical power, slow and variable disease progression, lack of surrogate biomarkers for disease severity and other challenges in trial design serve as critical obstacles in the development of effective therapy. Advances in our understanding of PSC pathogenesis and biliary physiology over recent years has however led to a surge of clinical trials targeting various mechanistic compartments and currently raising hopes for imminent changes in patient management. Here, in light of pathophysiology, we outline and critically evaluate emerging treatment strategies in PSC, as tested in recent or ongoing phase II and III trials, stratified per a triad of targets of nuclear and membrane receptors regulating bile acid metabolism, immune modulators, and effects on the gut microbiome. Furthermore, we revisit the UDCA trials of the past and critically discuss relevant aspects of clinical trial design, including how the choice of endpoints, alkaline phosphatase in particular, may affect the future path to novel, effective PSC therapeutics.Entities:
Keywords: Alkaline phosphatase; Primary sclerosing cholangitis; Study design; Therapy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32222826 PMCID: PMC7242240 DOI: 10.1007/s00535-020-01681-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gastroenterol ISSN: 0944-1174 Impact factor: 7.527
Fig. 1Summary of therapeutic approaches in primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC). Numerous smaller trials have been performed to assess the clinical efficacy of wide spectrum of drugs in PSC (left panel). None of the categories of compounds tested has shown significant impact on the progression of biliary strictures (center panel) and the development of end-stage liver disease. Several therapeutics affecting bile acid physiology and the gut microbiota influence alkaline phosphatase (ALP) and other potential markers of disease severity (right panel), but the clinical importance of this phenomenon remains to be firmly established in prospective patient assessments. Paradoxically, despite strong genetic and clinical associations with autoimmune co-morbidities and a strong mechanistic rationale, no convincing clinical efficacy has been observed for immunosuppressive or anti-fibrotic drugs to date. PPAR peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor, UDCA ursodeoxycholic acid, FXR farnesoid X receptor, FGF19 fibroblast growth factor 19, MMF mycophenolate mofetil, TNFα tumor necrosis factor alpha.
Printed with permission from Kari C. Toverud
Results and effects on ALP of UDCA in PSC in therapeutic trials
| References | Year | Design | Lab inclusion criteria | Results—ALP | Other results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beuers et al. [ | 1992 | 14 | 12 months Treatment group: | ALP > 1.5 × ULN Bilirubin > 15 mg/dL | Reduction in ALP (− 67%) in UDCA group compared with placebo group; ΔALP − 72.6% in UDCA group compared to baseline; all 5 patients in UDCA group compared to 3/7 patients in the placebo group achieved ALP reduction | Reduced GGT (− 53%), bilirubin (− 50%) and ALT (− 36%) compared with placebo group |
| Lindor et al. [ | 1997 | 102 | 2 years (at least 3 months; median follow-up 2.2 years) Double-blind RCT Multicenter Treatment group: | ALP > 1.5 × ULN | ΔALP − 40.6% (UDCA group) compared to baseline, compared with ΔALP − 6.1% (placebo group) | ΔAST − 43.3% compared to baseline No significant effect on primary end-points (death, OLT, histology) |
| Mitchell et al. [ | 2001 | 26 | 2-years Double-blind RCT | Stable liver biochemistry for 3 months prior to entry; cholestatic liver enzyme pattern | Reduction in ALP (− 45.4%) compared with baseline | ΔGGT − 62.6% compared with baseline Reduced cholangiographic findings Reduction in histological stage using Modified Histological Activity Index after Ishak in the UDCA group: inflammation ↓ |
| Harnois et al. [ | 2001 | 30 | 12 months Pilot open-label study, compared to UDCA low-dose and placebo groups of a previous RCT Treatment group: | ALP > 1.5 × ULN | ALP reduction of > − 50% compared to baseline was achieved by 38% at 12 months Reduction in ALP (− 45.2%) | Reduction in AST (− 52.2%) Reduction in bilirubin (− 44.4%) in Reduction in Mayo risk score was greater in UDCA high-dose group compared with reduction in the placebo and UDCA low-dose groups in a previous study (− 0.542 ± 0.15 vs 0.167 ± 0.09 and − 0.303 ± 0.12, respectively |
| Olsson et al. [ | 2005 | 219 | 5 years RCT Multicenter | No | A non-significant trend towards ALP reduction with ΔALP ca 0.3 µkat at 6 months and stable thereafter in UDCA group compared to no change in placebo group | No effect on death, OLT or CCA |
| Lindor et al. [ | 2009 | 149 | 6 years Treatment group: | ALP > 1.5 × ULN | Reduction in median ALP (− 48.5%) compared with baseline in UDCA group at 36 months (however | Terminated at 6 years as worse outcome in treatment group for death or OLT |
ALP alkaline phosphatase, ALT alanine transferase, CCA cholangiocarcinoma, GGT gamma-glutamyltransferase, MELD model for end-stage liver disease, OLT orthoptic liver transplantation, RCT randomized controlled trial, UDCA ursodeoxycholic acid, ULN upper limit of normal
Results of non-UDCA therapeutic trials in PSC
| Therapy | References | Design | Lab inclusion criteria | Primary endpoint | Result ALP | Other results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
norUDCA UDCA derivative | Fickert et al. [ | 161 | RCT Multicenter Phase II 12 weeks | Bilirubin < 3.0 mg/dL | ΔALP at 12 weeks | Significant dose-dependent reductions in ALP; ΔALP (compared to placebo) − 12.3%, − 17.3% and − 26.0% in the 500, 1000 and 1500 mg treatment groups | Favorable safety profile (no increase in pruritus) |
NGM282 FGF-19 analogue | Hirschfield et al. [ | 62 | RCT Phase II 12 weeks | No | ΔALP at 12 weeks | No significant change in ALP | Reduced BA Improved (reduced) fibrosis markers ELF test and PRO-C3 |
Obeticholic acid (OCA) FXR agonist AESOP trial | Kowdley et al. [ | 76 | RCT Phase II 24 weeks | ALP ≥ 2.0*ULN Bilirubin < 2.5*ULN | ΔALP at 24 weeks | Significant reduction in ALP in the 5–10 mg treatment arm compared to placebo; ΔALP − 25% from baseline in the 5–10 mg treatment arm compared to ΔALP − 4.8% in placebo group; ΔALP − 14% vs − 25% in patients with and without UDCA at baseline in the 5–10 mg OCA arm | Increased pruritus; pruritus (severe pruritus) reported in 46% (8%), 60% (16%) and 67% (41%) in placebo, 1.5–3 mg and 5–10 mg groups; |
LUM001/maralixibat ASBT inhibitor CAMEO trial | Completed; Results at clinicaltrials.gov | 27 | Open label pilot 14 weeks | ALT and AST ≤ 5*ULN | Δbile acid levels at 14 weeks | No reduction in ALP | ΔBA − 14.8 (− 38%) |
| Bezafibrate 400 mg/day | Mizuno et al. [ | 7 | Open-label pilot 6 months | ALP > 1.5 × ULN | ΔALP at 6 months | ALP reduction with about 40% in 3/7 patients at 6 months | |
| Bezafibrate 400 mg/day | Mizuno et al. [ | 11 | Open-label pilot 12 weeks | ΔALP at 12 weeks | ALP reduction at 12 weeks, ALP increase subsequent to treatment cessation | ||
| Bezafibrate 400 mg/day or fenofibrate 200 mg/day | Lemoinne et al. [ | 20 | Retrospective study | ALP > 1.5 × ULN on UDCA | ΔALP | Reduced ALP after at least 6 months; 40% reached ALP < 1.5 × ULN | Reduced ALT and pruritus |
| Fenofibrate | Dejman et al. [ | 8 | Open label pilot 6 months | ALP > 1.5 × ULN | ΔALP at 6 months | Significant ALP reduction: ΔALP − 43% | Reduced ALT No significant effect on Mayo risk score |
| Vancomycin vs metronidazole | Tabibian et al. [ | 28 | RCT Phase II-III Multicenter 12 weeks | ALP > 1.5*ULN | ΔALP at 12 weeks | Non-dose dependent ALP reduction in all 4 treatment arms (low vs high dose vancomycin or metronidazole) | |
| Vancomycin | Rahimpour et al. [ | 29 | RCT 12 weeks | No | ΔMayo risk score | ALP reduction at 12 weeks; ΔALP − 18.2% | Reduced Mayo risk score |
| Metronidazole | Farkkila et al. 2004 [ | 80 | RCT Phase III 36 months | No / not specified (possibly ALP or ALT > ULN) | ΔALP or other liver enzymes, Mayo risk score, symptoms or histology at 36 months | ALP reduction at 36 months; ΔALP − 52.4% vs − 37.7% in metronidazole + UDCA group vs UDCA + placebo group | Reduced Mayo risk score; higher proportion of patients showed histologic improvement of stage or grade |
| Minocycline | Silveira et al. [ | 16 | Open-label pilot 12 months | ALP > 1.5*ULN | ΔALP at 12 months | ALP reduction at 12 months; ΔALP − 20% | Reduced Mayo risk score |
| Rifaximin | Tabibian et al. [ | 16 | Open-label pilot 3 months | ALP > 1.5*ULN | 50% ALP reduction at 3 months | No significant ALP reduction | No significant reduction in bilirubin, GGT, Mayo risk score |
| Fecal transplantation | Allegretti et al. [ | 10 | Open-label pilot 24 weeks | ALP > 1.5*ULN | ≥ 50% ALP reduction at week 24 | 30% (3/10) experienced a ≥ 50% decrease in ALP | |
| All-trans retinoic acid | Assis et al. [ | 15 | Open-label pilot 12 weeks | ALP > 1.5 × ULN on UDCA | ΔALP − 30% at 12 weeks | Non-significant ALP reduction; 3/15 achieved ≥ 30% ALP reduction | Reduced ALT and C4; ALT returned to pre-treatment values after washout period |
| Infliximab | Hommes et al. [ | 10 | RCT 52 weeks | ALP > 2*ULN | ≥ 50% ALP reduction at week 18 | Failed to demonstrate effect in the | No change in histologic stage or symptom scores |
Cenicriviroc Anti-inflammatory effects (CCR2/CCR5 antagonist) PERSEUS trial | Completed, not published; results at clinicaltrials.gov | 20 | Open label Phase II 24 weeks | ALP > 1.5*ULN Bilirubin ≤ 2.0 mg/dL | ALP (%Δ) | 50% ( | |
Curcumin Anti-inflammatory effects, upregulation of PPAR-γ? | Completed, not published | 15 | Phase I–II Open-label | ALP > 1.5*ULN | ALP 40% reduction or reduction to < 1.5*ULN | Results submitted to clinicaltrials.gov, but not posted | |
ALP alkaline phosphatase, ALT alanine transferase, ASBT apical sodium-dependent bile acid transporter, BA bile acids, C4 7 Alpha-hydroxy-4-cholesten-3-one (marker of bile acid synthesis), CCA cholangiocarcinoma, ELF Enhanced Liver Fibrosis test, FGF-19 fibroblast growth factor 19, FXR farnesoid X receptor, GGT gamma-glutamyltransferase, PPAR peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor, PRO-C3 marker of type III collagen formation, RCT randomized controlled trial, UDCA ursodeoxycholic acid, ULN upper limit of normal
Some currently registered and ongoing therapeutic trials in adult PSC
| Therapy | Pathophysiologic target | Trial phase | Design | Lab inclusion criteria | Primary endpoint | Secondary endpoint |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
UDCA derivative Unknown receptor | III | Double-blind RCT Multicenter | No (?) | ALP partial normalization | Histology | |
| Cilofexor | FXR agonist | III | Double-blind RCT | ALT ≤ 8*ULN Bilirubin ≤ 2.0 mg/dL INR ≤ 1.4 Platelets ≥ 150,000 | Histology | ΔALP Δother liver biochemistries ΔLSM (TE) + + |
| Seladelpar | Selective PPAR-δ agonist | II | Double-blind RCT | ALP ≥ 1.5*ULN and < 8*ULN Bilirubin ≤ 2*ULN ALT and AST ≤ 5*ULN Platelets ≥ 140,000 | ΔALP at 24 w | LTX ΔMELD Hepatic decompensating events HCC |
| Bezafibrate | PPAR-α agonist | III | Double-blind RCT | No | Proportion of patients reaching 50% reduction in itch intensity at 3 weeks | Δliver biochemistries Δautotaxin activity Δcholesterol, CK, creatinine |
| Vancomycin | Antibiotic | III | Double-blind RCT Multicenter | ALP ≥ 1.5*ULN | ALP normalization at 6, 12, 18, 21, 24 months | ΔTE at 18 months |
| Simvastatin | Immune modulating, receptor? | III | Double-blind RCT Multicenter | No | Overall survival; Listing for liver transplantation; Time to first varices bleeding or CCA, GBC, HCC | ΔALP Δbilirubin ΔMELD or ΔChild–Pugh MRCP progression ΔLSM (TE) or Δserum fibrosis markers Progression of symptoms, biliary dysplasia, colon cancer or dysplasia |
Timolumab BTT1023 BUTEO trial | Anti-VAP-1 antibody | II | Open label | ALP > 1.5*ULN Stable ALP i.e. < 25% variation between screening visits 1 and 2 | ALP 25% reduction by day 99 | |
| All-trans retinoic acid | FXR/RXR complex activation | II | Open label | ALP ≥ 1.5*ULN | ΔALP at 24 w | ALP > 1.5*ULN ΔALT Δbile acids ΔELF test ΔLSM (TE) |
| Sulfasalazine | Immune modulating | II | Double-blind RCT Multicenter | ALP ≥ 1.67*ULN Bilirubin ≤ 3 mg/dL INR ≤ 1.4 Platelets ≥ 100,000 MELD ≤ 10 | ALP ≥ 1.5 at 22 w | Δother liver biochemistries ΔMayo risk score Symptoms |
| Vidofludimus calcium | Blocks IL-17 production | II | Open label | ALP > 1.5*ULN Indirect bilirubin < 1.2 *ULN | ΔALP at 3 and 6 months | Δother liver biochemistries IL-17 and IFNγ levels at 3 and 6 months |
ALP alkaline phosphatase, ALT alanine transferase, CCA cholangiocarcinoma, ELF Enhanced Liver Fibrosis test, FXR farnesoid X receptor, GBC gallbladder cancer, HCC hepatocellular cancer, IFNγ interferon gamma, LSM liver stiffness measurements, MELD model for end-stage liver disease, PPAR peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor, RCT randomized controlled trial, RXR retinoid X receptor, TE transient elastography, ULN upper limit of normal, VAP-1 vascular adhesion protein-1
Suggested surrogate markers for therapeutic trials in PSC
| Biomarker | Pathophysiologic target | PRO | CON |
|---|---|---|---|
| ALP | Cholestasis Inflammation | Consistent association with clinical outcome in multiple studies [ | Fluctuates naturally during the course of PSC, thus single measurements in individuals are unreliable Diverging definitions of defined risk groups or treatment effect across studies (various cutoff values proposed; or 40% reduction in ALP; or normalization); attempts at cross-validation of suggested definitions have failed |
| Amsterdam-Oxford model | Clinical score; PSC subtype, age at PSC diagnosis, albumin, platelets, AST, ALP, bilirubin | Showed adequate discriminative performance and good prediction accuracy at PSC diagnosis and during follow-up; independently validated in a large ( | Dynamic features and responsiveness to various therapies have not been tested Some components are not modifiable by therapy |
| Autotaxin | Consistent association with shorter transplant-free survival in two independent panels in a monocenter study as well as with 2.6-fold risk of liver transplantation or death in another study [ | Variation over time in individuals not tested | |
| Bilirubin | Cholestasis | Consistent and strong association with clinical outcome in multiple studies. Directly reflects cholestasis, thus biologically meaningful | Intercurrent increases may be due to temporary and treatable bile duct obstruction by gallstones or sludge, bacterial cholangitis, or strictures available to endoscopic therapy. Increasing bilirubin due to liver failure is a late event in PSC and not useful as a surrogate marker in early disease |
| CD14 | Gut barrier function: bacterial translocation | Associated with transplant-free survival in a monocenter study, independent of Mayo score [ | Independent validation is lacking Variation over time in individuals not tested |
| ELF test | Fibrosis A direct test of fibrogenesis based on a panel of fibrosis markers (HA, PIIINP, TIMP-1) | Strong association with clinical outcome (LTX or death) independently of the Mayo risk score; initially shown in two independent panels at a single center, then independently validated in a large, international multicentre study [ Showed change at 12 weeks of treatment in a phase II study on NGM282, indicating dynamic potential [ ELF test directly reflects fibrogenesis, which is important in the pathogenesis of PSC and a therapeutic target | Variation over time in individuals not tested. Usefulness in early disease not tested |
| IL-8 | Inflammation | Associated with clinical outcome in PSC as a serum marker (and in bile) [ | Outperformed by fibrosis markers regarding prediction of transplant-free survival |
| Mayo risk score | Clinical score; age, bilirubin, AST, INR, variceal bleeding status | Strong association with clinical outcome; the most commonly used clinical risk score in PSC | Not validated at the individual level. Did not predict adverse events in a previous high-dose UDCA trial INR and variceal bleeding and partly bilirubin reflect changes seen in advanced disease Some components are not modifiable by therapy |
| PREsTo | Clinical score; age, years since PSC diagnosis, bilirubin, albumin, ALP x ULN, platelets, AST, hemoglobin, sodium | Associated with clinical outcome defined as hepatic decompensation. Derived using machine-learning techniques in a large ( | Validation in an independent study is lacking Some components are not modifiable by therapy |
| PRO-C3 | Fibrosis A specific marker of collagen III formation | Associated with clinical outcome (LTX or death) in a single center study [ Showed change at 12 weeks of treatment in a phase II study on NGM282, indicating dynamic potential [ PRO-C3 directly reflects collagen III formation, which is an important part of fibrogenesis and hence the pathogenesis of PSC, and a therapeutic target | Usefulness in early disease not tested |
| PRO-C5 | Fibrosis A specific marker of collagen V formation | Associated with clinical outcome (LTX or death) in a single center study [ | Usefulness in early disease not tested |
| VAP-1 | Autoimmunity Leukocyte recruitment to sites of inflammation | Vap-1 predicted clinical outcome in two independent PSC patient panels from two different centers in one study [ | No independent validation study No prospective data |
| Transient elastography (TE) | Fibrosis Liver stiffness as a proxy for fibrosis | Baseline LSM values and ΔLSM were both associated with clinical outcome in a retrospective, single center study, and validated in a study from an independent center [ | Impact of severe cholestasis/cholangitis uncertain Not applicable in ascites or (severe) obesity |
| MR elastography (MRE) | Fibrosis Liver stiffness as a proxy for fibrosis | Associated with clinical outcome (hepatic decompensation) in a large ( | Not widely available Costly. Time-consuming |
| Annali score (MRCP) | MRC findings of intrahepatic bile duct dilatation, dysmorphy (lobar atrophy, lobular surface changes, or an abnormal caudate to right lobe volume ratio) and portal hypertension | Annali score without gadolinium was associated with clinical outcome in a single center study, then validated in two independent panels in a large, international, multicentre study [ | Major weight on late changes related to cirrhosis Dynamic changes are likely to be slow |
| Histological stage | Fibrosis Grading systems may include various pathophysiologic processes | Strong association with clinical outcome (LTX-free survival, time to LTX) for stage assessed by Ishak, Nakanuma, and Ludwig staging systems was demonstrated in a single-center study and validated in an independent international multicentre study. Nakanuma staging appeared to have the best prognostic value [ Association of Ludwig stage with clinical outcome has been demonstrated in several studies One study estimated (using a Markov model) that change in stage at 2 and 5 years would appear in 66% and 96% of PSC patients with Ludwig’s stage II at baseline, indicating that changes in histology can be seen within the scope of a therapeutic trial [ | Invasive, risk of adverse events Staging discord between multiple biopsies unless care is taken to biopsy same localization (using ultrasound) No consensus on a single system for histological grading and staging of PSC No data to support the use of change in histological grade as a surrogate marker The most prominent pathology in PSC relates to the larger bile ducts, which are not accessed by standard liver biopsy |
| Biliary calprotectin | Biliary inflammation | Associated with transplant-free survival in two studies by independent groups [ | Requires invasive sampling by ERCP, with risk of adverse events |
ALP alkaline phosphatase, AST aspartate transferase, CCA cholangiocarcinoma, ELF Enhanced Liver Fibrosis test, ERCP endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography, HA hyaluronic acid, IL-8 interleukin-8, LSM liver stiffness measurements, LTX liver transplantation, MRCP magnetic retrograde cholangiopancreatography, MRE magnetic resonance elastography, PIIINP propeptide of type III procollagen, PSC primary sclerosing cholangitis, TE transient elastography, TIMP-1 tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-1, VAP-1 vascular adhesion protein-1