Objective: To investigate the safety and pharmacokinetics of a 28 day continuous subcutaneous infusion of recombinant human relaxin in patients with systemic sclerosis with diffuse scleroderma.
Methods: Thirty patients with stable diffuse scleroderma of moderate severity received recombinant human relaxin at 6, 12, 50, 100, and 200 microg/kg/day or placebo in a double blind, sequential panel, dose escalation study.
Results: All patients completed 28 days of study treatment. Steady state concentrations of serum relaxin were achieved by the 3rd day of infusion and were dose proportionate. Patients receiving 200 microg/kg/day achieved levels about 50-fold those of normal pregnancy. Pharmacokinetics of relaxin were nonlinear with hyperbolic increases of both t1/2 and volume of distribution and parallel decrease of elimination rate coefficient. An elimination transport system was suggested with saturation at serum relaxin concentration of 45 ng/ml. Adverse events included local infusion site rash and pain, minor bleeding episodes, and decreased hemoglobin concentration (mean reduction 1.1 g/dl). Standard measures of scleroderma were unchanged, although global assessment favored relaxin over placebo.
Conclusion: Recombinant human relaxin in the doses used was safe and well tolerated. Longer term controlled trials are warranted to define the potential efficacy of relaxin in patients with diffuse scleroderma.