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Clinically Isolated Syndrome clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Clinically Isolated Syndrome.

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NCT ID: NCT06280755 Not yet recruiting - Multiple Sclerosis Clinical Trials

Clinical Impact Through AI-assisted MS Care - A Retrospective Multi-center Observational Study.

RECLAIM
Start date: March 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The RECLAIM study aims to gather a centralized and harmonized dataset, enabling the secondary use of data for building AI-based models that will support diagnosis and prognosis of individual Multiple Sclerosis patient's disease course and treatment response in a real-world setting. Additionally, the data will be used to generate further insights on Multiple Sclerosis progression as well as to develop the tools to monitor this progression.

NCT ID: NCT06274671 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Clinically Isolated Syndrome

Glymphatic MRI in Clinically Isolated Syndrome

Start date: March 1, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The brain possesses a system to get rid of unwanted substances, named Glymphatic System (GS). When this system is faulty, these accumulate, there is local inflammation, and progressive death of the cells. This occurs in neurological diseases including Parkinson's, or Alzheimer's. Inflammation and progressive death of the cells are also present in another neurological disorder, named Multiple Sclerosis (MS). Doctors think that GS dysfunction plays a role in MS too. In this research therefore, the aim is to study whether it drives inflammation, and disease progression in MS patients. The researchers have developed a new way to find signs of alteration of the GS using a scan named Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) and will use it in a pilot study on patients with a condition named Clinically Isolated Syndrome (CIS), which often represents the very beginning of MS. It would therefore be demonstrated that the GS is a new mechanism of disease in CIS, which may associate with the symptoms, or the alterations in the levels of some substances in the blood suggestive of brain cells damage. Should this study be successful, this would provide preliminary evidence to perform a larger research study to assess if GS dysfunction drives the progression of MS.