Pentoxifylline and Tocopherol (PENTO) in the Treatment of Medication-related Osteonecrosis of the Jaw (MRONJ)



Status:Recruiting
Conditions:Orthopedic
Therapuetic Areas:Orthopedics / Podiatry
Healthy:No
Age Range:18 - 90
Updated:5/16/2018
Start Date:April 1, 2018
End Date:January 2020
Contact:Jasjit Dillon, DDS, MBBS
Email:dillonj5@uw.edu
Phone:2065437722

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Pentoxifylline and Tocopherol (PENTO) in the Treatment of Medication-related Osteonecrosis of the Jaw (MRONJ): A Prospective, Randomized Controlled Trial to Evaluate a Novel Non-operative Treatment

The overall purpose of this project is to answer the following clinical question: Among
Medication-Related Osteonecrosis of the Jaw (MRONJ) patients, do those who are treated with
the Pentoxifylline and Tocopherol (PENTO) regimen and standard of care, when compared to
those treated with standard of care alone, have decreased areas of exposed bone after one
year of treatment?

HYPOTHESES

HA: Among patients with MRONJ, after 12 months of treatment with PENTO, the area of exposed
bone in the PENTO group will be different than the area of exposed bone in the standard
therapy group.

H0: Among patients with MRONJ, after 12 months of treatment with PENTO, the area of exposed
bone in the PENTO group will equal the area of exposed bone in the standard therapy group.

SPECIFIC AIMS

To determine if the PENTO regimen in addition to the standard of care treatment for MRONJ
significantly reduces the area of exposed bone compared to standard of care alone. Standard
of care is defined as the clinical guidelines of the 2014 AAOMS Position Paper on
Medication-Related Osteonecrosis of the Jaw (MRONJ)

1. Challenges: Identifying patients with Stage 1, 2, 3 MRONJ who will be compliant with
therapy and available for follow-up. Measuring greatest anterior-posterior and
superior-inferior dimensions to calculate area. Ensuring patient safety with interim
analyses and an appropriate stopping protocol.

2. Approach: The investigators will treat patients with Stage 1, 2, 3 MRONJ with either
PENTO as an adjunct to the standard of care or standard of care alone with placebo.

Impact: >6 million patients in the US are at risk for MRONJ. If proven to successfully treat
MRONJ, the trial would establish a non-operative treatment option for successful management
of MRONJ with potential for significant decreased morbidity for the patient.

SAMPLE

The sample will be derived from the population of patients who present to a participating
trial site for management of MRONJ during the trial's enrollment period. To be included in
the trial a patient must meet the criteria listed below. If a patient is excluded from the
trial the reason will be documented for the study's record as well as basic demographic data,
MRONJ staging, risk medications, indication for and use of antiresorptive and antiangiogenic
medications and area of exposed bone will be collected.

RANDOMIZATION

A stratified permuted-block randomization will be used to allocate patients to treatment.
This method ensures balanced allocations to achieve approximately the preset treatment
allocation ratio of 1:1 and avoids predictability of future assignments. Strata will be
constructed for the prognostic variables of initial MRONJ stage (1,2,3) and antiresorptive
therapy (bisphosphonate vs. denosumab/RANK-L inhibitor). Within each strata, block sizes of 2
and 4 will be used to randomize patients to PENTO + standard of care or to standard of care
with placebo alone with randomization of treatment sequence to meet the 1:1 allocation ratio
within each block.

A computer-generated list of random allocations will be prepared for each strata. The
allocation sequence will be concealed from the researcher enrolling and assessing
participants in sequentially numbered, opaque, sealed and stapled envelopes. Corresponding
envelopes will be opened only after the enrolled participants complete

DATA MANAGEMENT AND ANALYSIS

The primary analysis of interest is the association between treatment group and area of
exposed bone. The primary analysis will be a repeated measures analysis of variance (ANOVA)
with one within subject (time) factor and one between subject (treatment) factor will be
completed for A = area based upon Dap and Dsi and geometric shape of the lesion. If outcomes
do not meet assumptions then non-parametric analogues will be used.

SAMPLE SIZE ESTIMATE

alpha = 0.05, beta = 0.10, Anticipated drop-out rate = 30%

A stratified permuted- block randomization will be used to allocate patients to treatment.
Intention to treat to include all subjects as randomized to treatment (detailed on page 3 of
the application). If a patient drops out or is withdrawn prior to 12-month treatment
endpoint, the last observation carried forward (LOCF) will be included in analysis. In
addition, patients "as treated" (patient received incorrect treatment) or "as protocol"
(doesn't include patient dropouts or withdrawals) will be analyzed to evaluate effectiveness
of the treatment. To detect a relative change in primary outcome ≥20% with the above
parameters, a minimum sample of 44 patients in each study arm is required (total n=88).

The investigators deemed that an improvement of ≥20% by the intervention group compared to
the control group in decreased bone exposure to be clinically significant. There is no
consensus in the current literature on a clinically significant difference between the
control and treatment arms. However, if the study is powered for the outcomes expected based
on current literature, a difference of 50% between arms would only require 7 patients per
arm. Therefore the investigators believe the study to be overpowered to ensure the
statistical analysis would remain significant if the suspected success of the PENTO regimen
is not true.

STOPPING RULES

Because this is an investigational use of pentoxifylline and the benefits of PENTO in MRONJ
are not presently established, interim analyses (p=.001) will be performed at 3 and 6 months.
If the trial is stopped after an interim analysis for proven benefit, the trial will be
converted to an open trial and the patients will be followed for the entire 12-month
treatment period, or until they achieve complete mucosal coverage.

Patient withdrawal from study criteria include:

- A serious adverse event related to the trial medication.

- Patient becomes pregnant.

- Any relevant deterioration in the health of the subject (AEs, vital signs, ECG,
laboratory parameters).

- Clinically relevant change in vital signs if technical failure

OVERSIGHT RESPONSIBILITIES

Oversight of the trial is provided by the Principal Investigator (PI) Dr. Dillon and Co-
Investigators (Co-I) Dr. Petrisor, Dr. Ruggiero, Dr. Morlandt, and Dr. Ward.

MONITORING PROCEDURES

Drs. Dillon, Ruggiero, Petrisor, Morlandt, and Ward assure that informed consent is obtained
prior to performing any research procedures, that all subjects meet eligibility criteria, and
that the study is conducted according to the IRB-approved research plan. Blinded study data
are accessible at all times for the PI and Co-investigators to review. All five investigators
will review study conduct including accrual, drop-outs, and protocol deviations on a
quarterly basis. In addition, the investigators will review adverse events (AEs) individually
real-time and in aggregate on a monthly basis. Last, the investigators will review serious
adverse events (SAEs), dose limiting toxicities, and any other specific intervention
complications in real-time. The PI ensures all protocol deviations, AEs, and SAEs are
reported to the FDA, DSMB and IRB according to the applicable regulatory requirements.

COLLECTION AND REPORTING OF SAEs AND AEs

For this study, the following standard AE definitions are used:

Adverse event (AE): Any unfavorable and unintended sign (including an abnormal laboratory
finding), symptom or disease temporally associated with the use of a medical treatment or
procedure, regardless of whether it is considered related to the medical treatment or
procedure.

Serious Adverse Event: Any AE that results in any of the following outcomes:

- Death

- Life-threatening

- Event requiring inpatient hospitalization or prolongation of existing hospitalization

- Persistent or significant disability/incapacity

AEs are graded according to the following scale:

- Mild: An experience that is transient & requires no special treatment or intervention.

- Moderate: An experience that is alleviated with simple therapeutic treatments.

- Severe: An experience that requires therapeutic intervention. The experience interrupts
usual daily activities.

The study uses the following AE attribution scale:

- Not related: The AE is clearly not related to the study

- Possibly related: An event that follows a reasonable temporal sequence from the
initiation of study procedures, but that could readily have been produced by a number of
other factors.

- Related: The AE is clearly related to the study procedures.

SAEs and specific procedure-associated AEs are reported to the University of Washington IRB
and DSMB within 24 hours. In addition, all AEs are reported according to the University of
Washington IRB AE reporting guidelines.

MANAGEMENT OF RISKS TO SUBJECTS

Expected AEs associated with the Pentoxifylline and Tocopherol include: Dizziness, headache,
nausea, vomiting, indigestion, flushing, angina, palpitations, hypersensitivity, itchiness,
rash, hives, bleeding, hallucinations, arrhythmias, aseptic meningitis

AE Management

If any unanticipated problems related to the research involving risks to subjects or others
happen during the course of this study (including SAEs) these will be reported to the IRB in
accordance with University of Washington Human Subjects Division (HSD) protocols and the
DSMB. AEs that are not serious but that are notable and could involve risks to subjects will
be summarized in narrative or other format and submitted to the IRB and DSMB at the time of
continuing review.

DATA SAFETY AND MONITORING (DSMB) ANALYSIS PLAN

The Analysis for safety (AEs) will be conducted at a minimum of 3 and 6 months. However,
depending upon recruitment the analysis of safety will be as follows when:

10, 20, 30, 40, 60, 80, 100 patients have completed 3 months of follow up.

Patient withdrawal criteria include:

- A serious adverse event related to the trial medication.

- Patient becomes pregnant.

- Any relevant deterioration in the health of the subject (AEs, vital signs, ECG,
laboratory parameters).

- Clinically relevant change in vital signs if technical failure can be excluded and
result is confirmed by at least 1 additional measurement.

PLAN FOR DATA MANAGEMENT

Compliance of regulatory documents and study data accuracy and completeness will be
maintained through an internal study team quality assurance process.

Confidentiality throughout the trial is maintained by the previously described study-specific
confidentiality procedures. DATA will be stored as de-identified on a REDCap database which
will be password protected and only accessible by study members.

INFORMED CONSENT/ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS

Quality and integrity of the research will be ensured through data safety monitoring and
informed patient consent for participation. Enrollment will be done by the study coordinator
at each site not the participating surgeon. Other than the UW study coordinator the other
coordinators will be research students participating in the trial. The research will be
independent and impartial, and key study personnel directly involved in patient care will be
blinded to the treatment. Informed consents to be obtained from patients will state the
overall purpose of the study, alternatives to participation, and any direct and indirect
risks/benefits from participation. All patient literature and consents will be written at an
8th grade reading level. The confidentiality and anonymity of the research respondents and
patient health information will be respected. IRB approvals will be obtained at all study
sites prior to beginning any research activities. The individual study site IRBs will
determine if it is appropriate to pursue an expanded access Investigational

Inclusion Criteria:

1. Stage 1, 2, or 3 MRONJ as defined by the AAOMS Position Paper on Medication-Related
Osteonecrosis of the Jaw—2014 Update (Ruggiero 2014).

2. History of exposure to antiresorptive medications such as bisphosphonates or RANK-L
inhibitors

3. Absence of tumor in the jaw at the time of recruitment

4. Patients with the capacity to give informed consent

Exclusion Criteria:

1. Patients with history of external radiation therapy to the jaws

2. Patients who underwent any surgical intervention for MRONJ in the past 4 months

3. Patients with past microvascular reconstruction of the head and neck

4. Patients with an expected survival less than 1 year

5. Patients with allergy or hypersensitivity to pentoxifylline, xanthines, or tocopherol

6. Patients with planned invasive dental procedure in the next year

7. Patients taking oral anticoagulants

8. Patients with known hemorrhagic and coagulation disorder

9. Patients with a vitamin K deficiency due to any cause

10. Female patients who are pregnant or lactating

11. Patients with history of serious bleeding or extensive retinal hemorrhage

12. Patients with ischemic heart diseases, including, but not limiting, recent myocardial
infarction

13. Patients with serious cardiac arrhythmia

14. Patient with history of prostate cancer

15. Patients with severe liver disease

16. Patients with severe renal failure (Creatinine clearance <30 mL/min)

17. Patients with diagnosed hypotension

18. Patients taking CYP1A2 inhibitors (e.g. ciprofloxacin, fluvoxamine)

19. Diagnosis of MRONJ with no exposed bone

20. Patient cannot tolerate impressions of exposed bone in a clinical setting, if needed.

21. There is a change in the patient's clinical presentation (tooth extraction,
sequestrectomy) from alginate impression, if impression is indicated.

22. Any other situation or condition that, in the opinion of the INVESTIGATOR, may
interfere with optimal PARTICIPATION in the study

23. A patient who has taken both bisphosphonate and Denosumab
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