Lead Exposure Clinical Trial
Official title:
Treatment of Lead-Exposed Children (TLC) Trial
The Treatment of Lead-Exposed Children (TLC) clinical trial compared the effect of lead chelation with succimer to placebo therapy. TLC was a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial with sites in Cincinnati and Columbus, Ohio, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Baltimore, Maryland and Newark, New Jersey. The study was designed to test outcomes in IQ, neuropsychological function, behavior, physical growth and blood pressure three years after initiation of treatment. Enrollment was conducted between 1994 and 1997, with completion of the initial three-year follow-up in 2000.
At TLC enrollment, the children were between 12 and 33 months of age with baseline blood lead
levels (PbB) between 20 and 44 microg/dl. Of 1,854 referred children who were screened for
eligibility, 780 were randomized to the active drug (oral succimer) and placebo groups,
stratified by clinical center, body surface area, blood lead level and language spoken at
home; only the New Jersey Clinical Center enrolled Spanish-speaking participants. Up to three
26-day courses of succimer or placebo therapy were administered depending on response to
treatment in those who were given the active drug. Eighty-nine percent of children had
finished treatment by six months, with all children finishing by 13 months after
randomization. Residential lead clean-up and nutritional supplementation with multivitamins
and minerals were provided to all study children, irrespective of treatment group. Children
were followed for three years, with regular physical exams, psychological and developmental
testing, and measurement of lead concentration in venous blood. Treatment and follow up are
closed for this trial; it is open for scientific analysis and report writing only.
Although succimer lowered blood lead levels much more effectively than placebo, there was no
difference between the two groups on any of the psychological tests at three years post
randomization, when most children were about five years old. Follow up of TLC children
continued into school age. At age seven, 647 of 780 subjects remained in the study. Children
were tested at age seven and again at seven and a half on standardized neuropsychological
batteries that tap cognition, behavior, learning and memory, attention, and neuromotor
skills. While chelation therapy with succimer had lowered average blood lead levels for
approximately six months, it resulted in no benefit in cognitive, behavioral and neuromotor
endpoints when measured at school ages in these children. These additional follow-up data
confirm our previous finding that the TLC regimen of chelation therapy is not associated with
neurodevelopmental benefits in children with blood lead levels between 20 and 44 microg/dL.
;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Completed |
NCT04138693 -
G-PUR® for Reduced Lead Bioavailability
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT00283647 -
MR Assessment of Brain Function Altered by Lead Exposure
|
N/A | |
Enrolling by invitation |
NCT05887934 -
Bone-Lead Level Associations With Brain and Mental Health
|