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Natural History Study of the KSHV Inflammatory Cytokine Syndrome (KICS)

Recruiting
18 years of age
Both
Phase 2

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Overview

Background
  • KSHV inflammatory cytokine syndrome (KICS) is a newly recognized disease caused by Kaposi sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV). This virus can cause cancer. People with KICS can have severe symptoms. They include fever, weight loss, and fluid in the legs or abdomen. People with KICS may also be at risk of getting other cancers associated with KSHV. These cancers include Kaposi sarcoma and lymphoma. Because KICS is a newly identified disease, more information is needed on how the disease works and what can be done to treat it.
    Objectives
  • To collect genetic and medical information from people with KSHV inflammatory cytokine syndrome.
    Eligibility
  • Individuals at least 18 years of age who have Kaposi sarcoma herpes virus and symptoms that resemble those caused by KICS.
    Design
  • Participants will have regular study visits. The schedule will be determined by the study researchers.
  • Participants will provide a complete medical history and have a full physical exam. Blood and urine samples will be collected as well.
  • People with KICS that requires treatment may get new experimental treatments. These treatments may include antiviral drugs and chemotherapy drugs, depending on the nature of the disease.
  • Participants will have imaging studies, such as chest x-rays and computed tomography scans, to study the tumors.
  • Bone marrow and lymph node biopsies may be done to collect tissue samples for study.
  • Participants who have Kaposi sarcoma will have photographs taken of their lesions.

Description

Background

-Kaposi sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV) inflammatory cytokine syndrome (KICS) is a newly recognized syndrome caused by KSHV. It is characterized by severe inflammatory symptoms including fevers, wasting, cytopenias, hypoalbuminemia, and hyponatremia, associated in some cases with lymphadenopathy or effusions, without pathological evidence of MCD. Patients with KICS exhibit elevated KSHV viral loads and cytokine dysregulation, with elevations of IL-6, IL-10, and a KSHV-encoded IL-6 homolog, viral IL-6.

Objective

-Assessment of the natural history of KSHV inflammatory cytokine syndrome (KICS), including the spectrum of clinical, laboratory and radiographic abnormalities seen in affected participants.

Eligibility

  • Adults of any HIV status with:
  • At least two symptoms, laboratory or radiographic abnormalities which are at least possibly attributable to KICS (including fever, fatigue, cachexia, edema, respiratory or gastrointestinal symptoms, hematologic cytopenias, hypoalbuminemia, hyponatremia, lymphadenopathy, organomegaly, effusions)
  • C-reactive protein >3mg/L
  • Evidence of KSHV infection or a risk exposure for KSHV infection
  • No evidence of KSHV-associated multicentric Castleman disease
  • Participants with these characteristics will be further evaluated to identify those whose clinical and laboratory features are consistent with the KICS working case definition to be followed in the natural history phase of the study.

Design

-This is a single center natural history study with a cohort of up to 120 evaluable participants. Participants who meet the criteria for KICS will go onto a natural history arm, which permits observation for KICS with or without other concurrent KSHV-associated disorders. Participants who require KS and/or primary effusion lymphoma (PEL) treatment along with a KICS diagnosis will receive rational therapies for these conditions or be treated for their KS and/or PEL on a separate protocol while still followed on this study.

Eligibility

  • INCLUSION CRITERIA:
    • Age greater than or equal to18 Years.
    • Any HIV status.
    • At least two manifestations drawn from at least two of the categories (clinical symptoms, laboratory abnormalities and radiographic abnormalities), which are at least possibly attributable to KICS and are not readily explicable from known medical conditions in the participant:
    • Clinical symptoms (each at least grade 1 by CTCAE definitions)
    • Fever (>38 degrees C), chills or rigors
    • Fatigue or lethargy
    • Cachexia or edema
    • Cough, dyspnea, airway hyperreactivity, or nasal inflammation
    • Nausea, anorexia, abdominal pain or altered bowel habit
    • Athralgia or myalgia
    • Altered mental state
    • Neuropathy with or without pain
    • Laboratory abnormalities
    • Anemia (hemoglobin<12.0g/dL)
    • Thrombocytopenia (platelets<100,000 cells/microL)
    • Leukopenia (white cell count<4,000 cells/microL)
    • Hypoalbuminemia (albumin<3.5g/dL)
    • Hyponatremia (sodium<135mmol/L)
    • Coagulopathy (PT or PTT >1.5 times upper limit of normal)
    • Radiographic Abnormalities
    • Pathologic lymphadenopathy (at least five discrete nodes each >1cm in their longest dimension)
    • Splenomegaly (>12 cm in the longest dimension)
    • Hepatomegaly (>17cm in the longest dimension)
    • Body cavity effusions not caused by primary effusion lymphoma nor chylous effusions directly related to lymphatic infiltration by KS
    • C-reactive protein (CRP) >3mg/L.
    • Exposure risk for KSHV infection (including being a first or second generation immigrant from an endemic area, or male-to-male sexual activity) or evidence of KSHV infection demonstrated by one of:
      • Molecular evidence of KSHV in whole blood, confirmed by testing at Focus Laboratories, CA (HHV-8 Quantitative PCR, Focus Unit Code 45700) or KSHV viral load levels within circulating peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) as determined by the Whitby laboratory
      • Immunohistochemical evidence of KSHV in tissues (for example by staining for LANA or vIL-6) confirmed in the Laboratory of Pathology (LP), CCR, NCI.
      • Presence of KS or PEL (KSHV-associated malignancies), confirmed in the LP, CCR, NCI.
    • Women of child-bearing potential (WOCBP) and men must agree to use adequate

      contraception (hormonal or barrier method of birth control; abstinence) prior to study entry, for the duration of study participation, and after treatment (if received), according to drug requirements. Should a woman become pregnant or suspect she is pregnant while she or her partner is participating in this study, she should inform her treating physician immediately.

EXCLUSION CRITERIA:

  • Biopsy proven KSHV-associated MCD, confirmed in the LP, CCR, NCI.
        Note: In collaboration with LP, we have recently found that some participants with KICS but
        without a lymph node or splenic diagnosis of MCD have MCD-like cells in their effusions or
        circulating blood. This may in fact represent a newly recognized form of KSHV-MCD, but our
        analysis continues. While certain of these participants were historically included in this
        study, given this new understanding, they will not be entered on this protocol and removed
        if liquid MCD is diagnosed.
          -  Pregnancy
          -  Any abnormality that would be scored as NCI CTC Grade 4 toxicity that is unrelated to
             HIV, its treatment, or to KICS that would preclude the use of all of the study
             treatments or the ability to monitor the natural history of KICS untreated.
          -  Any condition or set of circumstances that in the opinion of the investigators would
             make participation in this study unsafe or otherwise inappropriate for a given
             individual.

Study details

KSHV Inflammatory Cytokine Syndrome (KICS), KSHV, HHV-8

NCT01419561

National Cancer Institute (NCI)

22 June 2024

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