Developing new drugs for the treatment of sarcoidosis isn’t easy. First, the cause of sarcoidosis is unknown. Second, prednisone, a remarkably effective medication for the treatment of sarcoidosis, limited only by its adverse side effect profile, is tough to beat. Third, sarcoidosis is a rare disease, which affects fewer than 200,000 people in the US per year. These challenges notwithstanding, researchers at Mount Sinai will be testing a new drug for the treatment of sarcoidosis. In late 2015, the Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine will be enrolling sarcoidosis patients, who meet prespecified entry criteria, into a clinical trial to evaluate the efficacy and safety of KiactaTM for the treatment of sarcoidosis.
Clinical trials are prospective biomedical or behavioral research studies in humans that generate safety and efficacy data designed to answer specific questions about biomedical or behavioral interventions. These trials may evaluate novel vaccines, drugs, treatments, functional foods, dietary supplements, devices or new ways of using known interventions. They are conducted only after satisfactory information has been gathered that satisfies health authority/ethics committee requirements in the country where approval of the therapy is sought.
Conducting clinical trials, however, is a difficult undertaking. A recent study suggested the following:
- Nearly 80 percent of all clinical trials fail to finish on time and 20 percent of those are delayed 6 months or more.
- 85 percent of clinical trials fail to retain enough patients.
- The average dropout rate among all clinical trials is approximately 30 percent.
- Over two-thirds of trial sites fail to meet original patient enrollment for a given trial.
- Approximately 50 percent of trial sites enroll one or no patients in their clinical studies.
The lackluster recruitment of patients into clinical trials has prompted sarcoidosis researchers in the Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine to collaborate with Transparency Life Sciences (TLS) to innovate the administration of clinical trials. Among other things, TLS utilizes crowdsourcing and mobile health technology to efficiently develop promising drugs for unmet clinical needs, like sarcoidosis. Crowdsourcing enables patients, physicians, researchers and other stakeholders in the clinical trial process to contribute to the design of clinical trials, resulting in protocols that are focused on parameters most relevant to clinical decision-makers and patient needs.
Protocol Builder is TLS’s crowdsourcing survey tool to help develop clinical protocols. Each clinical trial project has its own Protocol Builder that asks specific questions about the study’s design for examining the experimental therapy. In September 2014, sarcoidosis researchers at Mount Sinai and TLS launched separate online patient- and researcher-centered Protocol Builder tools to solicit feedback about the protocol, clinical trial design and utilization of mobile health technology intended for use in the clinical trial evaluating Kiacta in sarcoidosis. The answers to the questions posed in the Protocol Builder survey tools, which are currently being analyzed, will be used to fine tune the design of the protocol for the trial. To date, more than 200 researchers/physicians and patients have participated. Sarcoidosis researchers at Mount Sinai and TLS are confident that the crowdsourcing will provide valuable information, which will improve the design of the trial and enhance patient participation. Stay tuned!
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Adam Morgenthau, MD, is an Assistant Professor in the Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine Division of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. He is a member of the multidisciplinary team of the Mount Sinai – National Jewish Health Respiratory Institute.
Hello,
I have been diagnosed with sarcoidosis of my colon(2 separate biopsies done by different doctors and hospitals (done a year and half apart) showing non caseating granulomas throughout the various section of my colon.
My specialist gastroenterologist has informed me that most of sarcoidosis patients (95%) get it in their lungs….I unfortunately have it in my colon…..my case is extremely rare (1% of sarcoidosis patients have it in their colon).
My doctors are treating me like they would treat sarcoidosis of the lungs.
My doctors have put me on an immune suppressant called Azapress and prednisone, purbac, ..I am popping 19 tabs per day…
I have been told by my doctors that there is no cure for this disease and the only thing to do is to suppress my immune system …..by stopping my immune system…doctors are hoping to stop these granulomas from growing and spreading to my other organs. I will have another biopsy in March 2015.
I have also developed a cyst on my kidney due to calcium being in my blood rather than going to my bones….I believe that this is a common symptom from sarcoidosis?
I would greatly appreciate any advice that you can give to me as I am positive and I will conquer this disease….I refuse to let it take control over my body.
I have also found many other patients in South Africa that have sarcoidosis and I have started a sarcoidosis group in order to provide comfort, support and advice to each other.
Doctors in South Africa don’t understand this disease 100% and they don’t have time and support to do research in order to find a cure. Hence, I am trying to do all I can to assist doctors and other sufferers.
I am also trying eastern therapy called moxibustion which is an ancient Chinese heat therapy that is supposed to shrink these growing cells.
I will try and do whatever it takes to help myself and others in South Africa as they are experiencing no relief from medications so far…they all complain that they are getting sicker….some of them can’t walk or take showers on their own….this disease has been extremely debilitating on their health and quality of life……we lost one of our sarcoidosis friends last week and she was only 24 years old.
I am humbled and will appreciate any advice as I feel that it is my duty to help others like me….”One standeth alone….but Many stand together”
Thanking you in anticipation
Tammy
tammy I have issue with calcium and kidney . Am trying K2M7 seems to be helping one of the things it is suppose to do is take calcium out of blood and put it back into the bones . stop it accumulating in kidneys. do some investigation might be good for you.