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Sponsors and Collaborators: |
Helsinki University Göteborg University Uppsala University |
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Information provided by: | Helsinki University |
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: | NCT00543166 |
Our research contributes to the understanding of some of the basic biology of the salivary glands. The etiology and many of the pathomechanisms of Sjögren's syndrome are unknown. In particular, reasons for the female dominance, late age of onset, fatigue and the prominent involvement of exocrine glands are unknown. We hypothesize, due to the disease characteristics, that the primary target hit by the disease process is the secretory acinar cell and that this cell is particularly damaged in women due to insufficient support, normally provided by dehydroepiandrosterone and its intracrine processing.
Condition | Intervention | Phase |
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Sjogren's Syndrome |
Drug: dehydroepiandrosterone |
Phase IV |
Study Type: | Interventional |
Study Design: | Treatment, Randomized, Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator), Placebo Control, Crossover Assignment, Efficacy Study |
Official Title: | Sex Steroids in Sjögren's Syndrome: Effect of Substitution Treatment on Fatigue |
Enrollment: | 107 |
Study Start Date: | February 2003 |
Estimated Study Completion Date: | December 2009 |
Arms | Assigned Interventions |
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2: Placebo Comparator
180 patients divided to two separate groups (each containing 90 patients). This study has a cross-over, wash-out design, which consists of two 4 month treatment period separated by a one month long wash-out period. During one treatment period the patient gets placebo and during one of the treatment periods the patient gets 50mg of dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) in the morning.
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Drug: dehydroepiandrosterone
50 mg of dehydroepiandrosterone in the morning for 4 months in the treatment group.
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We hypothesize, due to the Sjögren's syndrome (SS) disease characteristics, that the primary target hit by the disease process is the secretory acinar cell and that this cell is particularly in women damaged due to insufficient support, normally provided by dehydroepiandrosterone and its intracrine processing. Dehydroepiandrosterone deficiency at the time of adrenopause seems to us as the more likely endocrine trigger than estrogen deficiency caused by menopause as androgens in general are considered to be protective against autoimmunity and estrogens to favor it. Acinar cell is normally responsible for the production of primary saliva. Acinar cell damage can lead to acinar cell apoptosis and loss. Normally this is compensated by division of the acinar cells in situ or, according to recent reports, perhaps rather by division and subsequent migration of one of the daughter cells into the acinar space and transdifferentiation of this intercalated ductal cell progenitor into mature acinar cell. In SS this remodeling seems to be impaired, perhaps for the same reason, which also leads to primary acinar cell damage. According to this hypothesis, the primary changes occur in the salivary glands and more specifically in the acinar cells, whereas immune activation and autoimmunity are secondarily activated against abnormally damaged acinar cells so that individuals with the "right" genetic background also produce SS-A and SS-B antibodies. The cause of the acinar cell damage may not be a direct, damaging stimulus, e.g. virus infection or irradiation damage, but rather lack of a supporting anabolic stimulus and inadequate maintenance of the acinar cell health leading to cytopathic acinar cell changes. In peri-menopausal women (who still produce some estrogens) this abnormal antigen release and processing from acinar cells, which reveals cryptic epitopes, together with autoimmunity enhancing effects of estrogens, may lead to the full picture of SS (Cutolo et al., 2004).
This neuroimmunoendocrine working hypothesis would explain many central disease characteristics, but does not provide a final answer to the mystery of this intriguing syndrome as the reasons for the insufficient production and generation of DHEA remain to be solved. We have done some preliminary studies to analyze this topic by mapping the signals of the extracellular matrix in the adrenal cortex, where the cells proliferate in the outer zone and subsequently migrate in a centripetal direction, during which phenotypic transition occurs from the outer zone (zona glomerulosa) cells producing aldosterone to the intermediate zone (zona fasciculata) cells producing glucocorticosteroids and finally to the inner zone (zona reticularis) cells producing DHEA. However, in this research project we have decided to totally focus on the salivary gland acinar cell-sex steroid interactions.
Ages Eligible for Study: | 18 Years to 80 Years |
Genders Eligible for Study: | Both |
Accepts Healthy Volunteers: | No |
Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
Finland | |
Department of Medicine, Helsinki University Central Hospital | |
Helsinki, Finland, 00029 |
Principal Investigator: | Yrjö Konttinen, MD, PhD | Helsinki University Central Hospital, Helsinki, Finland |
Study ID Numbers: | T101090002 |
Study First Received: | October 9, 2007 |
Last Updated: | November 2, 2007 |
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: | NCT00543166 |
Health Authority: | Finland: Ethics Committee |
Sjögren's syndrome fatigue salivary gland dehydroepiandrosterone |
Mouth Diseases Autoimmune Diseases Fatigue Eye Diseases Joint Diseases Arthritis, Rheumatoid Dehydroepiandrosterone Lacrimal Apparatus Diseases Dry Eye Syndromes |
Rheumatic Diseases Xerostomia Musculoskeletal Diseases Arthritis Connective Tissue Diseases Sjogren's Syndrome Stomatognathic Diseases Salivary Gland Diseases |
Pathologic Processes Disease Immunologic Factors Immune System Diseases |
Syndrome Physiological Effects of Drugs Adjuvants, Immunologic Pharmacologic Actions |