Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05910619 |
Other study ID # |
IRB202300156 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
February 16, 2024 |
Est. completion date |
July 7, 2025 |
Study information
Verified date |
November 2023 |
Source |
University of Florida |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
This study will investigate transcranial pulse stimulation (TPS) as a method of enhancing
cognitive and neural function. The study team will apply this low intensity, magnetically
pulse technology to key brain regions in a randomized, sham-controlled trial (RCT). The study
will determine the magnitude of changes in cognitive function and brain function and
structure between a pre- and post-stimulation among 10 typically-aging older adults and 10
patients with mild dementia.
Description:
The current study will investigate the use of the NEUROLITH TPS (transcranial pulse
stimulation) generator device (Storz Medical AG, Tägerwilen, Switzerland) for enhancing
cognitive and neural function in older adults with and without mild Alzheimer's disease (AD).
This will be achieved by applying a novel, low intensity, magnetically pulsed technology to
key brain regions and networks in a randomized, sham-controlled trial (RCT). The pilot RCT
will be conducted to determine the magnitude of changes in cognitive function and brain
function and structure between a pre- and post-stimulation using a 2x2 sham-controlled design
in which 10 typically-aging older adults and 10 patients with mild AD will be randomized to
receive either sham TPS or active TPS. All participants will undergo pre-intervention
multi-modal MRI, blood draw, and neurocognitive evaluation followed by thrice-weekly TPS
(sham or active) for two weeks total, followed by a post-intervention MRI, blood draw, and
neurocognitive evaluation. The total duration of the study is expected to be around four
weeks, where each participant will undergo a screening/eligibility visit, baseline visit with
MRI and neurocognitive testing, 6 intervention visits, a post-intervention MRI and
neurocognitive testing visit after the final stimulation session for a total of about 9
in-person visits. The final week of the study is a no-contact period in which the participant
will be called approximately seven days after their final stimulation session to ensure no
adverse events have occurred. The team will also contact participants quarterly for one year
after the final session to complete a five minute phone survey.
The central hypothesis of this proposal is that TPS will increase cortical thickness,
cerebral blood flow, neurite orientation and dispersion, and functional connectivity in
targeted regions and their associated networks. Further, we hypothesize that these changes
will translate to improvements in neurocognitive function more than that seen in the sham
intervention, which is likely to occur due to practice effects alone.
The objectives of this study are to:
Aim 1. Determine whether application of TPS is associated with neurocognitive improvement
H1.1. For both typically-aging older adults and patients with mild AD, active TPS will result
in greater neurocognitive gains than sham TPS on a primary outcome measure of global
cognition obtained from the ADAS-Cog-plus battery.
H1.2. Neurocognitive gains on the recall memory measures in active TPS will be greater for
patients with mild AD compared to typically-aging older adults.
Aim 2. Determine whether TPS leads to improvements in functional (rsfMRI, ASL) and structural
brain changes (NODDI).
H2.1. Active TPS targeting the AD-relevant regions and networks will potentiate increased
connectivity in attention and working memory related (dorsolateral prefrontal cortex) brain
systems, reflecting increased neural efficiency, while sham TPS will not.
H2.2. Active TPS will result in increased cerebral blood flow in targeted regions compared to
sham TPS as measured by change in arterial spin labeling (ASL) metrics.
H2.3. White matter integrity will remain stable in the active TPS condition, with stable
neurite density and neurite orientation dispersion occurring in targeted regions.
Aim 3. Evaluate which baseline neuroimaging characteristics best predict treatment response
H3.1. In both typically aging older adults and mild AD, baseline within-network connectivity
of the default mode network will be positively associated with change in a secondary outcome
measure of executive function (NIH Examiner) for those randomized to active TPS, but not in
sham TPS.
H3.2. In mild AD, average baseline neurite density within the white matter of the targeted
regions will be positively associated with change in ADAS-Cog-plus total score after active
TPS.
Exploratory Aim. Determine whether the intervention results in a clinically meaningful change
in blood (plasma) based AD-related biomarkers.