Frontotemporal Dementia Clinical Trial
Official title:
An Open Pilot Study to Evaluate the Safety and Efficacy of Galantamine in the Treatment of Pick's Disease/Frontotemporal Dementia /Pick Complex
The purpose of this study is to explore the safety and tolerability and the efficacy of
galantamine treatment in subjects with Pick Complex/ Frontotemporal Dementia (PC/FTD). The
safety and tolerability of galantamine therapy will be assessed over the entire treatment
period (26 weeks). The 8 week withdrawal period will be used to confirm the safety of
galantamine withdrawal in this subject group and it impact on any symptom improvement
achieved during the first 18 weeks of galantamine treatment ( symptom improvement would be
expected to stabilize or decline on withdrawal of an effective therapy).
The primary efficacy objective is to explore the effect of galantamine on behavior as
measured by the Frontal Behavioral Inventory during the randomized withdrawal period. In
addition, for subjects with primary progressive aphasia (limited ability for languages), the
effects of galantamine on language will be explored using the Aphasia Quotient of the
Western Aphasia Battery, and for all subjects the Clinical Global Impressions will be used
to explore global change.
Pick Complex (PC) and Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD) are a group of neurodegenerative
dementias, initially characterized by frontotemporal lobar atrophy, that have overlapping
clinical presentations and pathologic findings. Although the pathogenesis of Pick
Complex/Frontotemporal Dementia remains unknown, and the neurotransmitter changes in Pick
Complex/Frontotemporal Dementia are not well characterized, there is evidence for decreased
cholinergic receptor binding in several cortical regions and decreased serotonin binding in
the hypothalamus, frontal cortex, and temporal cortex. Galantamine is a reversible
cholinesterase inhibitor. Recent studies indicate that galantamine is also an allosteric
modulator at nicotinic cholinergic receptor sites. This nicotinic modulation appears to not
only potentiate the response to acetylcholine binding, but also to modulate release of
several other neurotransmitters, including serotonin. This pilot study will explore the
safety and tolerability and efficacy of galantamine 8 mg and 12 mg twice a day treatment in
subjects with Pick Complex/Frontotemporal Dementia. The study comprises an 18 week, open
label, galantamine treatment phase followed by an 8 week, randomized, double blind, placebo
controlled withdrawal phase. The safety and tolerability of galantamine therapy will be
explored during both the open label and randomized withdrawal periods. The 8 week randomized
withdrawal period will be used to confirm the safety of galantamine withdrawal in this
subject group and its impact on possible symptom improvement achieved during the open label
period as a marker for efficacy.
The expectation is that subjects who remain on galantamine for the additional 8 weeks will
continue to improve or will remain stable with regard to their behavior, language,
cognition, and global function, whereas subjects who are assigned to placebo will show a
decline in some of these functions. This approach will allow an assessment of the effects of
galantamine treatment (challenge) and galantamine withdrawal (de-challenge).
This study will involve a maximum of 40 subjects with Pick Complex/Frontotemporal Dementia.
Subjects who meet the inclusion and exclusion criteria will receive galantamine 4 mg twice a
day for 4 weeks followed by 8 mg twice a day for 4 weeks. At 8 weeks, the dose of
galantamine will be maintained at 8 mg or increased to 12 mg twice a day based on
tolerability. At the end of 12 weeks the dose of galantamine will be maintained at 8 or 12
mg twice a day or reduced to 8 mg twice a day, based on tolerability. The dose will be fixed
for the remainder of the open label treatment period. Following 18 weeks of galantamine
treatment, subjects will be randomly assigned (1:1) to continued treatment with galantamine
(at the same dose) or placebo for an additional 8 weeks. Subjects and caregivers will be
contacted by phone during the study and encouraged to contact the site at any time if they
have concerns. If the subject's symptoms appear to be substantially worsening, and the
investigator determines that the subject has deteriorated, he will advise the subject and
caregiver about possible early completion of the study (early escape). Subjects electing
early escape will complete final efficacy and safety assessments, then discontinue study
medication. Once they have completed the study, they will begin the treatment of their
choice in consultation with their physician. Subjects will be seen for assessment at Visit 1
(screening), Visit 2 (baseline), Visits 3 and 4 (12 and 18 weeks after the start of open
label galantamine treatment), and Visit 5 (8 weeks after the start of the double blind
withdrawal period or at early escape) or upon premature discontinuation. The subject and
caregiver will return for an unscheduled visit if, in the judgment of the investigator, the
subject requires clinical assessment between visits.
Subject selection criteria will ensure inclusion of subjects who have a clinical diagnosis
of Pick Complex/Frontotemporal Dementia established by published consensus criteria and
supported by neuroradiologic confirmation. The subjects selected for the study will have a
diagnosis of primary progressive aphasia or frontotemporal dementia.
Safety and tolerability will be monitored by assessment of adverse events,
electrocardiograms, physical examinations, blood pressure, heart rate, weight, and
laboratory tests. Efficacy on symptoms will be explored by measuring changes in the Frontal
Behavioral Inventory (FBI), the Aphasia Quotient (AQ) of the Western Aphasia Battery (WAB),
the Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE), the Mattis Dementia Rating Scale (MDRS), the
Frontal Assessment Battery (FAB), the Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI), the Alzheimer's
Disease Cooperative Study-Activities of Daily Living (ADCS-ADL) Scale, the Clinical Global
Impressions (CGI) Scales of Severity or Change, and subscales of the WAB and FBI. Changes in
the results of neurologic examinations will also be documented.
The descriptive analyses will be performed, no hypotheses are specified for statistical
testing. Safety and efficacy assessments will be summarized. Safety and Efficacy changes
will be calculated from the screening/baseline of the galantamine treatment period to Week
18 (open label galantamine treatment period) and Week 26 (entire study for subjects
randomized to galantamine for the 8 week withdrawal period). Comparisons between the placebo
and galantamine treatment groups will use the changes in safety and efficacy parameters from
Weeks 18 to 26 (the double blind, placebo controlled, randomized withdrawal period). Using a
flexible dosing regimen, subjects will receive galantamine as oral tablets up to 8 or 12 mg
twice per day for 18 weeks. Subjects will then be randomly assigned (1:1) in a double blind
fashion to galantamine at the same dose or to placebo for an additional 8 weeks of
treatment.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double-Blind, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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