Human Normal Immunoglobulin

Clinical trials are studying Human Normal Immunoglobulin in different patient groups to see how well it works and how safe it is. These studies include people with immune deficiency, nerve and muscle diseases, infections after transplant, and some blood cancers. The trials look at outcomes such as infections, disability, pain, relapse, and drug levels in the body.

Table of Contents

Clinical trials overview

The source data includes many interventional studies of Human Normal Immunoglobulin, with trials in Phase 2, Phase 3, Phase 4, and low-intervention settings.[1] These studies are testing the treatment in different groups of patients, including people with immune deficiency, infection risk, nerve disease, muscle disease, and some blood cancers.[1]

Several trials compare Human Normal Immunoglobulin with placebo or standard care, while others compare one immunoglobulin product with another product or study how well a product works over time.[1] The goals include checking efficacy, safety, tolerability, and in some studies, pharmacokinetics, which means how the treatment moves through the body.[1]

Conditions being studied

The trials cover a wide range of conditions, showing that Human Normal Immunoglobulin is being studied in both immune and non-immune diseases.[1] Important groups include primary immunodeficiency diseases, primary antibody deficiency, chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP), dermatomyositis, idiopathic inflammatory myopathy, and primary Sjögren’s syndrome-related neuropathies.[1]

Other studies focus on infection prevention in people with multiple myeloma, chronic lymphocytic leukemia, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, kidney transplant recipients, and patients receiving B-cell depletion therapy.[1] There are also trials in post-COVID-19 POTS, COVID-19 with severely impaired B-cell function, pediatric acute-onset neuropsychiatric syndrome, Kawasaki disease, and non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis.[1]

Who can take part

Each trial has its own entry rules, called eligibility criteria, and these depend on the disease being studied.[1] Some studies are for adults only, such as trials in multiple myeloma, CIDP, post-COVID-19 POTS, and idiopathic inflammatory myopathy, while others include children, such as the trial in pediatric acute-onset neuropsychiatric syndrome.[1]

Some studies focus on people with low antibody levels or weak immune function, such as hypogammaglobulinemia, primary immunodeficiency, or severe B-cell problems.[1] Other studies enroll people with a specific diagnosis and a certain treatment history, such as patients who failed initial IVIG treatment in Kawasaki disease or those with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma.[1]

Trial phases and study designs

Most of the listed studies are Phase 3, which usually means a larger trial that compares treatments and confirms benefit and safety.[1] The source data also includes Phase 2 trials, which often look for early signs of benefit, and Phase 4 trials, which study treatment use after wider clinical use has begun.[1]

Some studies are open-label, which means everyone knows which treatment is given, and some are double-blind, which means neither the patient nor the doctor knows the treatment assignment.[1] Several are randomized, meaning participants are assigned by chance to different treatment groups to make the comparison fair.[1]

Main endpoints and what they mean

The primary endpoint is the main result the study is designed to measure.[1] In these trials, common primary endpoints include serious bacterial infections, major infections, time to first infection, relapse events, disability scores, pain scores, response rates, and progression-free survival (PFS), which means the time before the disease gets worse.[1]

Some studies measure disease-specific scores such as mRS, ODSS, CY-BOCS, MG-ADL, QMG, and total improvement score (TIS).[1] Others measure lab or body-based outcomes, such as total IgG levels, area under the curve (AUC), or the number of treatment-emergent adverse events, which are health problems that start after treatment begins.[1]

Selected trial examples

NCT04640142 studied subcutaneous human immunoglobulin in people with primary immunodeficiency diseases and measured the rate of serious bacterial infections per person-year, plus average IgG levels at steady state.[1] This was a Phase 3 study with 72 participants and was completed.[1]

NCT07048262 is a Phase 2 study in adults with non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis, testing nebulized Human Normal Immunoglobulin for time to first exacerbation, which means how long it takes before symptoms worsen again.[1] The study is authorised and plans to enroll 459 people.[1]

NCT04222023 is a low-intervention multicenter study in kidney transplant recipients, looking at whether preventive IVIG lowers the incidence of BKV viremia, which means virus in the blood, after transplantation.[1] It plans to include 664 participants and is authorised.[1]

NCT04502030 tested Panzyga in people with chronic lymphocytic leukemia and secondary hypogammaglobulinemia to prevent infections, with the main endpoint being whether at least one major infection occurs.[1] This was a Phase 3, placebo-controlled study with 240 participants and was completed.[1]

NCT04508530 studied Panzyga in pediatric acute-onset neuropsychiatric syndrome and measured change in CY-BOCS score, a clinician-rated symptom scale.[1] It was a completed Phase 3 study with 92 children and adolescents.[1]

What these studies mean for patients

These trials show that Human Normal Immunoglobulin is being tested for both prevention and treatment goals, depending on the disease.[1] For some patients, the main aim is to lower infection risk; for others, it is to improve nerve, muscle, or brain-related symptoms, or to reduce relapse and disability.[1]

Because the trials use different designs and outcome measures, the results will not be the same for every condition.[1] Together, they help researchers learn where Human Normal Immunoglobulin may be useful, how well it works, and how safe it is in the studied groups.[1]

Trial ID Phase Condition studied Status Enrollment
NCT04640142 Phase 3 Human Normal Immunoglobulin / primary immunodeficiency diseases Completed 72
NCT07048262 Phase 2 Non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis Authorised 459
NCT06524739 Phase 3 Post-COVID-19 POTS Completed 177
2024-517450-95-00 Phase 3 CIDP Authorised 65
NCT04222023 Low Intervention Kidney transplantation and BKV infection Authorised 664
2024-518420-80-00 Phase 3 Multiple myeloma with secondary immunodeficiency Authorised 212
2022-501717-31-00 Phase 4 Idiopathic painful small fiber neuropathy or sensory neuronopathy Authorised 30
NCT05645107 Phase 3 Hypogammaglobulinemia with recurrent or severe infections in blood cancers Authorised 380
NCT04502030 Phase 3 CLL with secondary hypogammaglobulinemia Completed 240
NCT04508530 Phase 3 Pediatric acute-onset neuropsychiatric syndrome Completed 92
2024-513124-41-00 Phase 3 Primary antibody deficiency Completed 100
2024-516057-42-00 Phase 2 Idiopathic inflammatory myopathy Authorised 48
2025-522756-97-00 Phase 2 COVID-19 with severely impaired B-cell function Authorised 92
NCT03700138 Phase 3 Primary Sjögren’s syndrome-related painful sensory neuropathies Completed 24
NCT04656184 Phase 3 Kawasaki disease after failure of initial IVIG Authorised 84

Ongoing Clinical Trials on Human Normal Immunoglobulin

  • Comparison of TAK-881 and HyQvia for adults with chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (CIDP)

    Recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    Czechia Denmark Germany Greece Italy Poland +2
  • Study of elranatamab and lenalidomide combination versus standard chemotherapy and transplant in newly diagnosed multiple myeloma patients

    Recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    France
  • Study Comparing Elranatamab, Daratumumab, and Lenalidomide with Daratumumab, Lenalidomide, and Dexamethasone for Patients with Newly Diagnosed Multiple Myeloma

    Recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    Austria Belgium Czechia Denmark Finland France +6
  • Study Comparing Teclistamab, Talquetamab, and Drug Combination for Patients with Newly Diagnosed Multiple Myeloma Not Suitable for Stem Cell Transplant

    Recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    Austria Belgium Czechia Denmark France Germany +8
  • Comparing Anakinra versus Immunoglobulin for Treatment-Resistant Kawasaki Disease in Patients Who Failed Initial Immunoglobulin Therapy

    Recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    France
  • Study on Long-term Safety of TAK-881 (Human Normal Immunoglobulin, Hyaluronidase) for Patients with Primary Immunodeficiency Diseases

    Recruiting

    1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Czechia Denmark Germany Greece The Netherlands Poland +2
  • Study Comparing Elranatamab to Drug Combinations for Patients with Relapsed/Refractory Multiple Myeloma After Anti-CD38 Therapy

    Recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    Belgium Croatia Czechia Denmark Finland France +10
  • Study on the Effectiveness and Safety of Nipocalimab for Adults with Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyneuropathy (CIDP)

    Recruiting

    1 1
    Czechia France Germany Greece Italy Poland +2
  • Study of KYV-101 Therapy for Patients with Refractory Generalized Myasthenia Gravis

    Recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Germany
  • Study on Human Normal Immunoglobulin to Prevent BKV Infection in Kidney Transplant Patients with Low Antibody Levels

    Recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Investigated drugs:
    France

Glossary

  • Clinical trial: A research study in people that tests whether a treatment is safe, works well, or both.
  • Phase 2: A study stage that mainly looks at early signs of benefit and safety in a smaller group of people.
  • Phase 3: A larger study stage that compares a treatment with placebo or standard care to confirm how well it works.
  • Phase 4: A later study stage done after a treatment is already in wider use, often to learn more about safety or real-world effect.
  • Placebo: A look-alike treatment with no active study medicine, used to compare results fairly.
  • Interventional study: A trial where researchers give a treatment and measure what happens.
  • Enrollment: The number of people planned or included in a study.
  • Primary endpoint: The main result the study is designed to measure.
  • Safety: How often unwanted medical problems happen during the study.
  • Efficacy: How well the treatment works for the condition being studied.
  • IgG: A type of antibody measured in some immunoglobulin studies to check blood levels over time.
  • mRS: A disability scale used to measure how much a disease affects daily life.

References