Cervical Dystonia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Phase II, Double Blind, Randomized, Placebo Controlled Trial of Dronabinol for the Treatment of Cervical Dystonia
Cervical dystonia (CD) is characterized by abnormal, involuntary sustained cervical muscles contractions associated with twisting movements and abnormal postures of the neck that can be quite disabling. Currently there are no good oral medications for the treatment of CD. While botulinum toxin injections are effective in most, they require repeat injections and there are some patients who either stop responding or who never respond at all. Therefore, better treatments are needed. While the underlying mechanisms of dystonia are not entirely known, there is some information suggesting that it is ude to an underactivity of a chemical compound, GABA, that is located in the basal ganglia. Cannabinoids are a compound than can enhance transmission of GABA, and thus, may alleviate the symptoms of dystonia. Dronabinol, one such cannabinoid, has been widely used to treat anorexia and nausea in chemotherapeutic patients. The aim of this study, therefore, is to study the effect of dronabinol on cervical dystonia
The study is a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, crossover, phase II study of
dronabinol versus placebo. Thirty patients with idiopathic cervical dystonia will be enrolled
in the study. Patients will be randomized to either dronabinol or placebo by a
computer-generated random numbers table that will be kept in the central pharmacy until the
end of the trial. Only the central pharmacy will be aware of treatment allocation; all others
will be blinded for the duration of the trial.
Regardless of treatment allocation, study participants will begin taking their assigned study
medications on Day 1, increasing the "dose" (actual increase in dose for dronabinol-assigned
arm, fictional increase in dose for placebo-assigned arm) every 3 days. At the end of the
third week, on Day 21, the study participant will complete the first phase of study
medication and remain off study medication for a period of two weeks, and will have a planned
study visit. On Day 36, the study participant will have a planned study visit, the new
medication will be dispensed, and the participant will begin taking the other arm of the
study medication for a period of 3 weeks, in the same manner as the first arm. At the end of
the 3 weeks (8 weeks in total), the study participant will discontinue the assigned study
medication and will attend a planned study visit for study termination. At each visit,
patients will be assessed with a medical and neurological history and examination and a video
recording made for post hoc analysis of TWSTRS by a rater blinded to the treatment arm.
The main issue with compliance to study medication will relate to side-effects. Side-effects
are mainly dose related and can be minimized with a dose escalation protocol, which is
planned in this study. Compliance and adverse effects will be monitored by weekly phone calls
for side effects and pill counts at the end of each treatment arm.
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