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Study of Sotatercept in Newly Diagnosed Intermediate- and High-Risk PAH Participants (MK-7962-005/A011-13)
The objective of this study is to evaluate the effects of sotatercept (MK-7962, formerly called ACE-011) treatment (plus background pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) therapy) versus placebo (plus background PAH therapy) on time to clinical worsening (TTCW) in participants who are newly diagnosed with PAH and are at intermediate or high risk of disease progression.
Study details:
This is a phase 3, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study to evaluate sotatercept when added to background PAH therapy in newly diagnosed intermediate- or high risk PAH participants. Participants enrolled in the study will have a diagnosis within 12 months of study screening of symptomatic PAH (World Health Organization (WHO) Group 1, classified as functional class (FC) II or III) and presentation of idiopathic or heritable PAH, PAH associated with connective tissue diseases (CTD), drug- or toxin- induced PAH, post shunt correction PAH, or PAH presenting at least 1 year following the correction of congenital heart defects.
Eligibility criteria
Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. See if you qualify.
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Eligibility
Age eligible for study : 18 and older
Healthy volunteers accepted : No
Gender eligible for study: All
Things to know
Study dates
Study start: 2022-03-18
Primary completion: 2026-08-27
Study completion finish: 2029-12-27
Study type
TREATMENT
Phase
PHASE3
Trial ID
NCT04811092
Intervention or treatment
DRUG: Sotatercept
OTHER: Placebo
Conditions
- • Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension
Find a site
Closest Location:
Royal Prince Alfred Hospital ( Site 1106)
Research sites nearby
Select from list below to view details:
Royal Prince Alfred Hospital ( Site 1106)
Camperdown, New South Wales, Australia
John Hunter Hospital ( Site 1101)
Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia
Prince Charles Hospital ( Site 1104)
Chermside, Queensland, Australia
Princess Alexandra Hospital ( Site 1108)
Woolloongabba, Queensland, Australia
Study Plan
This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.
How is the study designed?
Participant Group/Arm | Intervention/Treatment |
---|---|
PLACEBO_COMPARATOR: Placebo plus background PAH therapy
| OTHER: Placebo
|
EXPERIMENTAL: Sotatercept plus background PAH therapy
| DRUG: Sotatercept
|
What is the study measuring?
Primary outcome
Primary Outcome Measure | Primary Outcome Description | Primary Outcome Time Frame |
---|---|---|
Time to Clinical Worsening | Time to clinical worsening is defined as time from randomization to the first confirmed morbidity event or death. Clinical worsening events are defined as all-cause death, non-planned PAH-related hospitalization of ≥ 24 hours in duration, atrial septostomy, lung transplant and deterioration in performance in 6-minute walk test from baseline combined with one of the following conditions: worsening of WHO functional class from baseline, signs/symptoms of increased right heart failure, addition of a background PAH therapy or change in the background PAH therapy delivery route to parenteral. All events will be adjudicated by a blinded, independent committee of clinical experts. | Up to ~46 months |
Secondary outcome
Secondary Outcome Measure | Secondary Outcome Description | Secondary Outcome Time Frame |
---|---|---|
Percentage of Participants Achieving the Multicomponent Improvement Endpoint of 6-Minute Walk Distance (6MWD), N-terminal prohormone Btype natriuretic peptide (NT-ProBNP) and World Health Organization (WHO) Functional Class (FC) | Multicomponent improvement endpoint measured by the percentage of participants achieving all of the following at Week 24 relative to baseline: * Improvement in 6MWD * Improvement or maintenance/achievement of NT-proBNP * Improvement in WHO FC or maintenance of WHO FC II | Baseline and Week 24 |
Percentage of Participants who Achieved a Low Registry to Evaluate Early and Long Term PAH Disease Management (REVEAL) Lite 2 Risk Score | The REVEAL Lite 2 uses renal insufficiency (by estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR)), WHO FC, systolic blood pressure (SBP) and heart rate, 6MWD, and NT-proBNP to determine the total risk score. The scores (range: 1-14) can be defined as: low risk as a score of ≤5, intermediate risk as a score of 6 or 7, and high risk as a score of ≥8 for the survival rates. | Baseline and Week 24 |
Percentage of Participants who Maintain or Achieve a Low Simplified French Risk Score | The simplified French Risk Score uses WHO FC, 6MWD, and NT-proBNP to determine the total risk score. A low risk score can be defined as attaining or maintaining all three low-risk criteria: WHO FC I or II, 6MWD \> 440m, and NT-proBNP \< 300 ng/L. The percentage of participants who maintain or achieve a low risk score at Week 24 versus baseline using the simplified French Risk score calculator will be reported. | Baseline and Week 24 |
Change from Baseline in NT-proBNP Levels | Blood samples will be collected at baseline and at Week 24 to measure NT-proBNP blood concentration. | Baseline and Week 24 |
Percentage of Participants who Improve in WHO FC or Maintain WHO FC II at 24 Weeks from Baseline | The severity of an individual's PAH symptoms was graded using the WHO FC system. WHO functional classification for PAH range from Class I (no limitation in physical activity, no dyspnea with normal activity), Class II (slight limitation of physical activity), Class III (marked limitation of physical activity) and Class IV (cannot perform a physical activity without any symptoms, dyspnea at rest). The change from baseline in WHO FC is classified into "Improved", "No change" and "Worsened". Improvement = reduction in FC, worsened = increase in FC and no change = no change in FC. | Baseline and Week 24 |
Change from Baseline in 6MWD | The 6MWD tests the distance walked in 6 minutes as a measure of functional capacity. Change from baseline in 6MWD at Week 24 will be reported. | Baseline and Week 24 |
Change from Baseline in the Physical Impacts Domain Score of Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension Symptoms and Impact (PAH-SYMPACT)® | PAH SYMPACT is a self-rating questionnaire to assess symptoms and their physical and cognitive/emotional impact. The PAH-SYMPACT® questionnaire consists of consists of 16 symptom and 25 impact items. A higher score indicates worse symptoms. Change from baseline in responses in PAH-SYMPACT questionnaire at Week 24 will be reported. | Baseline and Week 24 |
Change from Baseline in the Cardiopulmonary Symptoms Domain Score of PAH-SYMPACT® | PAH SYMPACT is a self-rating questionnaire to assess symptoms and their physical and cognitive/emotional impact. The PAH-SYMPACT® questionnaire consists of consists of 16 symptom and 25 impact items. A higher score indicates worse symptoms. Change from baseline in responses in PAH-SYMPACT questionnaire at Week 24 will be reported. | Baseline and Week 24 |
Change from Baseline in the Cognitive/Emotional Impacts Domain Score of PAH-SYMPACT® | PAH SYMPACT is a self-rating questionnaire to assess symptoms and their physical and cognitive/emotional impact. The PAH-SYMPACT® questionnaire consists of consists of 16 symptom and 25 impact items. A higher score indicates worse symptoms. Change from baseline in responses in PAH-SYMPACT questionnaire at Week 24 will be reported | Baseline and Week 24 |
Number of Participants who Experience an Adverse Event (AE) | An AE is any untoward medical occurrence in a clinical investigation participant administered a study drug, which does not necessarily have a causal relationship with this treatment. An AE can therefore be any unfavorable and unintended sign (including an abnormal laboratory finding), symptom, or disease temporally associated with the use of the study drug whether or not it is considered related to the study drug. The number of participants who experienced an AE are presented. | Up to ~46 Months |
Number of Participants who Discontinued Study Treatment due to AEs | An AE is any untoward medical occurrence in a clinical investigation participant administered a study drug, which does not necessarily have a causal relationship with this treatment. An AE can therefore be any unfavorable and unintended sign (including an abnormal laboratory finding), symptom, or disease temporally associated with the use of the study drug whether or not it is considered related to the study drug. The number of participants who discontinued study treatment due to an AE are presented. | Up to ~44 months |
Incidence of Anti-drug Antibodies (ADAs) to Sotatercept | Blood samples collected at designated timepoints will be used to determine the ADA response to Sotatercept. The incidence of ADAs to Sotatercept over time will be presented. | Up to ~46 Months |
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