Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
29
result(s) for
"Heijnen, Ingmar"
Sort by:
Treatment of COVID-19 With Conestat Alfa, a Regulator of the Complement, Contact Activation and Kallikrein-Kinin System
by
Moser, Stephan
,
Heijnen, Ingmar A. F. M.
,
Trendelenburg, Marten
in
Aged
,
Aged, 80 and over
,
Autopsies
2020
A dysregulated immune response with hyperinflammation is observed in patients with severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). The aim of the present study was to assess the safety and potential benefits of human recombinant C1 esterase inhibitor (conestat alfa), a complement, contact activation and kallikrein-kinin system regulator, in severe COVID-19. Patients with evidence of progressive disease after 24 h including an oxygen saturation <93% at rest in ambient air were included at the University Hospital Basel, Switzerland in April 2020. Conestat alfa was administered by intravenous injections of 8400 IU followed by 3 additional doses of 4200 IU in 12-h intervals. Five patients (age range, 53-85 years; one woman) with severe COVID-19 pneumonia (11-39% lung involvement on computed tomography scan of the chest) were treated a median of 1 day (range 1-7 days) after admission. Treatment was well-tolerated. Immediate defervescence occurred, and inflammatory markers and oxygen supplementation decreased or stabilized in 4 patients (e.g., median C-reactive protein 203 (range 31-235) mg/L before vs. 32 (12-72) mg/L on day 5). Only one patient required mechanical ventilation. All patients recovered. C1INH concentrations were elevated before conestat alfa treatment. Levels of complement activation products declined after treatment. Viral loads in nasopharyngeal swabs declined in 4 patients. In this uncontrolled case series, targeting multiple inflammatory cascades by conestat alfa was safe and associated with clinical improvements in the majority of severe COVID-19 patients. Controlled clinical trials are needed to assess its safety and efficacy in preventing disease progression.
Journal Article
Role of lectin pathway complement proteins and genetic variants in organ damage and disease severity of systemic sclerosis: a cross-sectional study
2019
Background
The role of the complement system in the pathogenesis of systemic sclerosis (SSc) is controversial. This study investigated the role of the lectin pathway of complement as a mediator of ischemia/reperfusion injury in SSc.
Methods
This is a prospective observational cross-sectional study of 211 SSc patients and 29 patients with Raynaud’s phenomenon in undifferentiated connective tissue disease (UCTD) at risk of developing SSc from two outpatient clinics. Serum levels of lectin pathway proteins (FCN-2, FCN-3, MBL, and MASP-2) and eight
MBL2
and
FCN2
single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) were analyzed by sandwich-type immunoassays and genotyping and examined for their association with disease manifestations.
Results
Lectin pathway protein levels and SNPs were similar between SSc and UCTD patients. FCN-2 levels were however higher in SSc patients with present evidence of digital ulcers (mean 1.4 vs. 1.0 μg/mL,
p
= 0.05), pitting scars (mean 1.3 vs. 1.0 μg/mL,
p
= 0.01), and puffy fingers (mean 1.2 vs. 1.0 μg/mL,
p
= 0.04). Similarly, higher FCN-2 levels were observed in SSc patients with Scl-70 autoantibodies (mean 1.5 vs. 1.0 μg/mL,
p
= 0.001), interstitial lung disease (mean 1.2 vs. 0.9 μg/mL,
p
= 0.02), and a forced vital capacity (FVC) below 80% (mean 1.4 vs. 1.0 μg/mL, p = 0.02). In line, variant alleles in the
FCN-2
SNP at position + 6359 were associated with a significantly reduced FVC and diffusion capacity. Furthermore, patients with SSc renal crisis harbored higher MBL levels (mean 2.7 vs. 1.5 μg/mL,
p
= 0.04). No other lectin pathway protein levels or polymorphisms were associated with disease manifestations, low complement C3 and/or C4 levels, or inflammatory markers.
Conclusions
This study does not support a relevant role for several lectin pathway complement proteins in the pathogenesis of SSc. Higher FCN-2 levels were however associated with Scl-70 autoantibody positivity, interstitial lung involvement, and digital vasculopathy. Elevated MBL levels were associated with renal crisis.
Journal Article
Functional Activity of the Complement System in Hospitalized COVID-19 Patients: A Prospective Cohort Study
by
Bassetti, Stefano
,
Heijnen, Ingmar A. F. M.
,
Charitos, Panteleimon
in
Adult
,
Aged
,
Alternative pathway
2021
Although the exact factors promoting disease progression in COVID-19 are not fully elucidated, unregulated activation of the complement system (CS) seems to play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of acute lung injury (ALI) induced by SARS-CoV-2. In particular, the lectin pathway (LP) has been implicated in previous autopsy studies. The primary purpose of our study is to investigate the role of the CS in hospitalized COVID-19 patients with varying degrees of disease severity.
In a single-center prospective observational study, 154 hospitalized patients with PCR-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection were included. Serum samples on admission to the COVID-19 ward were collected for analysis of CS pathway activities and concentrations of LP proteins [mannose-binding lectin (MBL) and ficolin-3 (FCN-3)] & C1 esterase inhibitor (C1IHN). The primary outcome was mechanical ventilation or in-hospital death.
The patients were predominately male and had multiple comorbidities. ICU admission was required in 16% of the patients and death (3%) or mechanical ventilation occurred in 23 patients (15%). There was no significant difference in LP activity, MBL and FCN-3 concentrations according to different peak disease severities. The median alternative pathway (AP) activity was significantly lower (65%, IQR 50-94) in patients with death/invasive ventilation compared to patients without (87%, IQR 68-102, p=0.026). An optimal threshold of <65.5% for AP activity was derived from a ROC curve resulting in increased odds for death or mechanical ventilation (OR 4,93; 95% CI 1.70-14.33, p=0.003) even after adjustment for confounding factors. Classical pathway (CP) activity was slightly lower in patients with more severe disease (median 101% for death/mechanical ventilation vs 109%, p=0.014). C1INH concentration correlated positively with length of stay, inflammatory markers and disease severity on admission but not during follow-up.
Our results point to an overactivated AP in critically ill COVID-19 patients
leading to complement consumption and consequently to a significantly reduced AP activity
The LP does not seem to play a role in the progression to severe COVID-19. Apart from its acute phase reaction the significance of C1INH in COVID-19 requires further studies.
Journal Article
Anti-Ha anti-synthetase syndrome presenting as rapidly progressive interstitial lung disease: a case report of high confidence autoantibody testing
by
Gherca, Stefan
,
Tansley, Sarah L.
,
Heijnen, Ingmar A. F. M.
in
Adult
,
anti-Ha
,
anti-synthetase syndrome
2026
We report on a 38-year-old patient who presented with rapidly progressive interstitial lung disease (ILD), without any signs of muscular involvement. Antinuclear antibody testing by indirect immunofluorescence revealed a nuclear titer of 1:320 with a fine speckled and a cytoplasmic titer of 1:1’280 with a fine speckled pattern. Subsequent myositis-specific and myositis-associated antibody tests with commercial multiplex dot-immunoassays showed a strong positive result for anti-Ha antibodies, also confirmed by protein immunoprecipitation, establishing the diagnosis of anti-synthetase syndrome with associated ILD. Despite initial improvement after treatment with intravenous cyclophosphamide and high dose steroids, he relapsed shortly after, with additional muscular symptoms. Subsequent escalation of therapy with rituximab resulted in sustained remission. Considering the scarcity of data about the clinical presentation and prognosis of patients with anti-Ha antibodies, our report provides additional information on diagnostic challenges and therapeutic response in these patients.
Journal Article
Recombinant human C1 esterase inhibitor (conestat alfa) in the prevention of severe SARS-CoV-2 infection in hospitalized patients with COVID-19: A structured summary of a study protocol for a randomized, parallel-group, open-label, multi-center pilot trial (PROTECT-COVID-19)
2021
Objectives
Conestat alfa, a recombinant human C1 esterase inhibitor, is a multi-target inhibitor of inflammatory cascades including the complement, the kinin-kallikrein and the contact activation system. The study objective is to investigate the efficacy and safety of conestat alfa in improving disease severity and short-term outcome in COVID-19 patients with pulmonary disease.
Trial design
This study is an investigator-initiated, randomized (2:1 ratio), open-label, parallel-group, controlled, multi-center, phase 2a clinical trial.
Participants
This trial is conducted in 3 hospitals in Switzerland, 1 hospital in Brazil and 1 hospital in Mexico (academic and non-academic). All patients with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection requiring hospitalization for at least 3 calendar days for severe COVID-19 will be screened for study eligibility.
Inclusion criteria:
- Signed informed consent
- Age 18-85 years
- Evidence of pulmonary involvement on CT scan or X-ray of the chest
- Duration of symptoms associated with COVID-19 ≤ 10 days
- At least one of the following risk factors for progression to mechanical ventilation on the day of enrolment:
1) Arterial hypertension
2) ≥ 50 years
3) Obesity (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2)
4) History of cardiovascular disease
5) Chronic pulmonary disease
6) Chronic renal disease
7) C-reactive protein > 35mg/L
8) Oxygen saturation at rest of ≤ 94% when breathing ambient air
Exclusion criteria:
- Incapacity or inability to provide informed consent
- Contraindications to the class of drugs under investigation (C1 esterase inhibitor)
- Treatment with tocilizumab or another IL-6R or IL-6 inhibitor before enrolment
- History or suspicion of allergy to rabbits
- Pregnancy or breast feeding
- Active or anticipated treatment with any other complement inhibitor
- Liver cirrhosis (any Child-Pugh score)
- Admission to an ICU on the day or anticipated within the next 24 hours of enrolment
- Invasive or non-invasive ventilation
- Participation in another study with any investigational drug within the 30 days prior to enrolment
- Enrolment of the study investigators, their family members, employees and other closely related or dependent persons
Intervention and comparator
Patients randomized to the experimental arm will receive conestat alfa in addition to standard of care (SOC). Conestat alfa (8400 U followed by 4200 U every 8 hours) will be administered as a slow intravenous injection (5-10 minutes) over a 72-hour period (i.e. 9 administrations in total). The first conestat alfa treatment will be administered on the day of enrolment. The control group will receive SOC only. SOC treatment will be administered according to local institutional guidelines, including supplemental oxygen, antibiotics, corticosteroids, remdesivir, and anticoagulation.
Main outcomes
The primary endpoint of this trial is disease severity on day 7 after enrolment assessed by an adapted WHO Ordinal Scale for Clinical Improvement (score 0 will be omitted and score 6 and 7 will be combined) from 1 (no limitation of activities) to 7 (death).
Secondary outcomes include (i) the time to clinical improvement (time from randomization to an improvement of two points on the WHO ordinal scale or discharge from hospital) within 14 days after enrolment, (ii) the proportion of participants alive and not having required invasive or non-invasive ventilation at 14 days after enrolment and (iii) the proportion of subjects without an acute lung injury (defined by PaO
2
/FiO
2
ratio of ≤300mmHg) within 14 days after enrolment.
Exploratory outcomes include virological clearance, C1 esterase inhibitor pharmacokinetics and changes in routine laboratory parameters and inflammatory proteins.
Randomisation
Subjects will be randomised in a 2:1 ratio to treatment with conestat alfa in addition to SOC or SOC only. Randomization is performed via an interactive web response system (SecuTrial®).
Blinding (masking)
In this open-label trial, participants, caregivers and outcome assessors are not blinded to group assignment.
Numbers to be randomised (sample size)
We will randomise approximately 120 individuals (80 in the active treatment arm, 40 in the SOC group). Two interim analyses after 40 and 80 patients are planned according to the Pocock adjusted levels α
p
= 0.0221. The results of the interim analysis will allow adjustment of the sample size (Lehmacher, Wassmer, 1999).
Trial Status
PROTECT-COVID-19 protocol version 3.0 (July 07 2020). Participant recruitment started on July 30 2020 in one center (Basel, Switzerland, first participant included on August 06 2020). In four of five study centers patients are actively recruited. Participation of the fifth study center (Mexico) is anticipated by mid December 2020. Completion of trial recruitment depends on the development of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic.
Trial registration
Clinicaltrials.gov, number:
NCT04414631
, registered on 4 June 2020
Full protocol
The full protocol is attached as an additional file, accessible from the Trials website (Additional file
1
). In the interest of expediting dissemination of this material, the familiar formatting has been eliminated; this Letter serves as a summary of the key elements of the full protocol.
Journal Article
Anti-C1q Antibodies as a Follow-Up Marker in SLE Patients
2015
In cross-sectional studies autoantibodies against complement C1q (anti-C1q) were found to be highly associated with active lupus nephritis. The aim of this retrospective study was to determine the value of anti-C1q as follow-up marker of disease activity and renal involvement in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Fifty-two patients with SLE and a minimum of three anti-C1q measurements during follow-up were analyzed. Anti-C1q levels correlated with global disease activity scores. In subgroup analyses, patients without renal involvement did not show a significant correlation between anti-C1q levels and disease activity. In contrast, in patients with renal involvement, anti-C1q levels correlated well with global disease activity. In addition, a positive correlation with the urine protein-to-creatinine ratio and anti-dsDNA antibody levels as well as a negative correlation with complement levels was observed. Anti-C1q antibodies were found to strongly correlate with parameters of SLE disease activity during follow-up, in particular with regard to renal involvement.
Journal Article
Recombinant C1 inhibitor in the prevention of severe COVID-19: a randomized, open-label, multi-center phase IIa trial
by
Bacci, Marcelo R.
,
Huber, Lars C.
,
Sumer, Johannes
in
Adult
,
Biometrics
,
C1 esterase inhibitor
2023
Conestat alfa (ConA), a recombinant human C1 inhibitor, may prevent thromboinflammation.
We conducted a randomized, open-label, multi-national clinical trial in which hospitalized adults at risk for progression to severe COVID-19 were assigned in a 2:1 ratio to receive either 3 days of ConA plus standard of care (SOC) or SOC alone. Primary and secondary endpoints were day 7 disease severity on the WHO Ordinal Scale, time to clinical improvement within 14 days, and safety, respectively.
The trial was prematurely terminated because of futility after randomization of 84 patients, 56 in the ConA and 28 in the control arm. At baseline, higher WHO Ordinal Scale scores were more frequently observed in the ConA than in the control arm. On day 7, no relevant differences in the primary outcome were noted between the two arms (
= 0.11). The median time to defervescence was 3 days, and the median time to clinical improvement was 7 days in both arms (
= 0.22 and 0.56, respectively). Activation of plasma cascades and endothelial cells over time was similar in both groups. The incidence of adverse events (AEs) was higher in the intervention arm (any AE, 30% with ConA vs. 19% with SOC alone; serious AE, 27% vs. 15%; death, 11% vs. 0%). None of these were judged as being related to the study drug.
The study results do not support the use of ConA to prevent COVID-19 progression.
https://clinicaltrials.gov, identifier NCT04414631.
Journal Article
Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxin A- and B-specific IgE in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
by
Stolz, Daiana
,
Papakonstantinou, Eleni
,
Berkemeier, Caroline Maria
in
Allergens
,
Allergies
,
Allergy
2023
Sensitization to Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxins A (SEA) and B (SEB) has been associated with asthma severity, exacerbations, and disease control. Our study aimed to investigate if there are differences in serum SEA-IgE and SEB-IgE levels between patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), asthma, and controls, and to assess the association between SE sensitization and COPD clinical parameters and Th2 inflammation biomarkers in two well-defined COPD cohorts. Our findings suggest that COPD patients do not exhibit higher SEA and SEB sensitization compared to asthma patients and controls. However, in COPD patients, the presence of atopy and allergy is associated with positivity for SEA-IgE and SEB-IgE. Consequently, these allergens may aid in identifying atopic or allergic subgroups within the COPD population, but they are not directly associated with the diagnosis of COPD, elevated circulating blood eosinophils, or fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FENO) levels.
Journal Article
Circovirus Hepatitis in Immunocompromised Patient, Switzerland
2024
We identified a novel human circovirus in an immunocompromised 66-year-old woman with sudden onset of self-limiting hepatitis. We detected human circovirus 1 (HCirV-1) transcripts in hepatocytes and the HCirV-1 genome long-term in the patient's blood, stool, and urine. HCirV-1 is an emerging human pathogen that persists in susceptible patients.
Journal Article