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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02587715
Other study ID # PRT/NOVO/2015/001
Secondary ID
Status Recruiting
Phase Phase 1/Phase 2
First received October 26, 2015
Last updated October 27, 2015
Start date February 2015
Est. completion date February 2017

Study information

Verified date October 2015
Source Novo Cellular Medicine Institute LLP
Contact Dr. Senthil Thyagarajan, PhD
Phone +91 8554982236
Email drsenthil@novomedinstitute.org
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority Trinidad and Tobago : Ministry of Health
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

STUDY OBJECTIVES:

Primary Objective: Assessment of treatment safety based on incidence of any treatment emergent/treatment associated adverse events prior to discharge and at 1, 3, 6 and 12 months post treatment.

Secondary objective: Assessment of efficacy at baseline, prior to discharge, 1 month, 3 months, 6 months and 12 months after treatment based on the following: EDSS and 29-item Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale (MSIS-29), MS Functional Composite (MSFC) consisting of (1) Timed 25-Foot Walk, (2) 9 Hole Peg Test, and (3) Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test and gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)


Description:

STUDY TREATMENT:

Investigational therapy product: Wharton Jelly derived allogeneic MSCs.

Method of administration and dose: Super selective intravenous administration of 50 million Allogeneic Human Umbilical Cord Tissue-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells (UC-MSC) and intrathecal administration of UC-MSCs in dose of 100 million along with liberation therapy (when associated with CCSVI).

SAFETY AND EFFICACY EVALUATION:

The proposed study will assess safety and primary and secondary efficacy endpoints after super selective intravenous and intrathecal administration of allogeneic umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells (UC-MSC) in 69 patients with Relapsing Remitting Multiple Sclerosis.

Safety Evaluation:

Assessment of treatment safety based on incidence of any treatment emergent/treatment associated adverse events prior to discharge and at 1, 3, 6 and 12 months post treatment.

Efficacy evaluation:

Clinical evaluations, including EDSS and 29-item Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale (MSIS-29) will be performed at baseline before stem cell mobilization, prior to discharge at 1, 3, 6 and 12 months after stem cell therapy.

The MS Functional Composite (MSFC) consists of the (a) Timed 25-Foot Walk, (b) 9 Hole Peg Test, and (c) Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test will be performed at baseline before stem cell mobilization and at 12 months after stem cell therapy.

Gadolinium enhanced MRI scans of the brain will be performed at baseline before therapy and then 12 months after stem cell therapy. Follow-up scans will be performed on the same type of scanner used at baseline. Scans will be analyzed centrally. The 'baseline MRI scan' will be the reference for brain volume changes.

DATA COLLECTION AND STATISTICAL ANALYSIS:

Descriptive analyses of the adverse events will be performed. Proportion of adverse events at each visit will be calculated using frequency distribution. The frequency, severity, timing and the potential relationship to the intervention will be assessed in order to characterize the safety of the intervention.

The probability of overall event-free survival (as well as progression-free, relapse-free, or MRI event-free survival) at baseline through 1 year will be calculated. The end point of progression is defined as increased Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) score greater than 0.5 from baseline. Analyses will be conducted using Kaplan-Meier estimates with Wald-type 90% CIs based on Greenwood's formula for SE.

Descriptive analyses of all primary and secondary efficacy endpoints will be performed using descriptive statistics. Proportion of patients with clinically significant change in this efficacy measurement scales (EDSS, MSIS, MSFC, MSFC-25 foot walking test, MSFC-Nine Hole Peg Test, MSFC-Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test) and change in gadolinium enhancing lesions, new T2 lesions from previous visit will be presented as a proportion.

The percentage of change in brain volume will be calculated from screening and analyzed by end point status at month 12 with an exact Wilcoxon rank sum test using mean scores when the results are identical.The null hypothesis tests whether the median percentage of change in brain volume among participants who met the endpoint by month 12 is equal to the median of those who have not met the end point by month 12.

Other primary and secondary efficacy endpoints (EDSS, MSIS, MSFC, MSFC-25 foot walking test, MSFC-Nine Hole Peg Test, MSFC-Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test) will be analyzed using a Wilcoxon signed rank test. Change from baseline outcomes for all the endpoints will be calculated for each patient who underwent stem cell transplant as the post transplant value minus the baseline value. The null hypothesis tests whether the median difference from baseline measurement in the values at the month 1, month 3, month 6 and month 12 visits was significantly different from zero,with baseline measurement defined as the screening assessment for the percentage of change in brain volume and the baseline visit for all other end points.

To calculate MSFC, results from each of the 3 components will be transformed into a z score and averaged to yield a composite for each patient at each timepoint. The z scores that compose the MSFC score will be calculated using the reference population from the National Multiple Sclerosis Society Task Force database.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Recruiting
Enrollment 69
Est. completion date February 2017
Est. primary completion date February 2017
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender Both
Age group 18 Years to 60 Years
Eligibility Main inclusion criteria: Males and Females between age 18 and 60 years with confirmed diagnosis of Relapsing Remitting Multiple Sclerosis made by a neurology expert/MS expert with lesions demonstrated on brain MRI that are consistent with MS and having an EDSS (Kurtzke Expanded Disability Status Scale) score between 3.5 & 6

Inclusion Criteria:

- Males and Females between age 18 and 60 years

- Diagnosis of Relapsing Remitting Multiple Sclerosis made by a neurology expert/MS expert with lesions demonstrated on brain MRI that are consistent with MS

- Duration of disease: >5 years

- Having an EDSS (Kurtzke Expanded Disability Status Scale) score between 3.5 & 6

- History of 2 or more relapses within last 2 years with increase in EDSS scale of > 0.5 sustained for > 4 weeks

- Failure to respond or intolerance to the currently available Multiple Sclerosis (MS) immunomodulatory treatments): the lack of response to these treatments will be determined/defined by history of 2 or more relapses within last 2 years with increase in EDSS scale of > 0.5 sustained for > 4 weeks

- Must have proof of health insurance in country of residence

Exclusion Criteria:

- Primary progressive, secondary progressive or progressive relapsing MS as defined by Lublin and Reingold, 1996. These conditions require the presence of continuous clinical disease worsening over a period of at least 3 months. Subjects with these conditions may also have superimposed relapses but are distinguished from relapsing remitting subjects by the lack of clinically stable periods of clinical improvement.

- Unable to perform Timed 25-Foot Walk, 9 Hole Peg Test (HPT) (with both upper extremities) and Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test (PASAT 3)

- Females who are pregnant or nursing or females of childbearing potential who are unwilling to maintain contraceptive therapy for the duration of the study

- Life expectancy < 6 months due to concomitant illnesses

- Exposure to any investigational drug or procedure within 1 month prior to study entry or enrolled in a concurrent study that may confound results of this study.

- Active infectious disease: For patients who have tested positive, an expert will be consulted as to patient eligibility based on the patient's infectious status

- Any illness which, in the Investigator's judgment, will interfere with the patient's ability to comply with the protocol, compromise patient safety, or interfere with the interpretation of the study results

- Patients on chronic immunosuppressive transplant therapy

- Patients with unstable cardiac status (unstable angina, attack of myocardial infarction within last 6 months, uncontrolled high blood pressure, hypotension, cardiomyopathy)

- Cerebrovascular accident within 6 months prior to study entry

- Patients with poorly controlled diabetes mellitus

- Patients with renal insufficiency (Creatinine> 2.5) or failure

- Known drug or alcohol dependence or any other factors which will interfere with the study conduct or interpretation of the results or who in the opinion of the investigator is not suitable to participate.

- History of cancer (other than non-melanoma skin cancer or in-situ cervical cancer) in the last five years

- Unwilling and/or not able to give written informed consent.

Study Design

Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Biological:
Allogeneic Human Umbilical Cord Tissue-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells
Super selective intravenous administration of 50 million Allogeneic Human Umbilical Cord Tissue-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells (UC-MSC) and intrathecal administration of UC-MSCs in dose of 100 million along with liberation therapy (when associated with CCSVI)
Other:
Liberation therapy


Locations

Country Name City State
Trinidad and Tobago Novo Cellular Medicine Institute San Fernando Trinidad

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Novo Cellular Medicine Institute LLP

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Trinidad and Tobago, 

References & Publications (29)

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Bermel RA, Bakshi R. The measurement and clinical relevance of brain atrophy in multiple sclerosis. Lancet Neurol. 2006 Feb;5(2):158-70. Review. — View Citation

Bjartmar C, Kidd G, Mörk S, Rudick R, Trapp BD. Neurological disability correlates with spinal cord axonal loss and reduced N-acetyl aspartate in chronic multiple sclerosis patients. Ann Neurol. 2000 Dec;48(6):893-901. — View Citation

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Brex PA, Ciccarelli O, O'Riordan JI, Sailer M, Thompson AJ, Miller DH. A longitudinal study of abnormalities on MRI and disability from multiple sclerosis. N Engl J Med. 2002 Jan 17;346(3):158-64. — View Citation

Chitnis T, Tardieu M, Amato MP, Banwell B, Bar-Or A, Ghezzi A, Kornberg A, Krupp LB, Pohl D, Rostasy K, Tenembaum S, Waubant E, Wassmer E. International Pediatric MS Study Group Clinical Trials Summit: meeting report. Neurology. 2013 Mar 19;80(12):1161-8. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0b013e318288694e. — View Citation

Coles A. The curious incident of disability in multiple sclerosis trials. Lancet Neurol. 2006 Nov;5(11):899-900. — View Citation

Cutter GR, Baier ML, Rudick RA, Cookfair DL, Fischer JS, Petkau J, Syndulko K, Weinshenker BG, Antel JP, Confavreux C, Ellison GW, Lublin F, Miller AE, Rao SM, Reingold S, Thompson A, Willoughby E. Development of a multiple sclerosis functional composite as a clinical trial outcome measure. Brain. 1999 May;122 ( Pt 5):871-82. — View Citation

Kappos L, Moeri D, Radue EW, Schoetzau A, Schweikert K, Barkhof F, Miller D, Guttmann CR, Weiner HL, Gasperini C, Filippi M. Predictive value of gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging for relapse rate and changes in disability or impairment in multiple sclerosis: a meta-analysis. Gadolinium MRI Meta-analysis Group. Lancet. 1999 Mar 20;353(9157):964-9. — View Citation

Klyushnenkova E, Mosca JD, Zernetkina V, Majumdar MK, Beggs KJ, Simonetti DW, Deans RJ, McIntosh KR. T cell responses to allogeneic human mesenchymal stem cells: immunogenicity, tolerance, and suppression. J Biomed Sci. 2005;12(1):47-57. — View Citation

Kurtzke JF. Historical and clinical perspectives of the expanded disability status scale. Neuroepidemiology. 2008;31(1):1-9. doi: 10.1159/000136645. Epub 2008 Jun 6. Review. — View Citation

Le Blanc K, Frassoni F, Ball L, Locatelli F, Roelofs H, Lewis I, Lanino E, Sundberg B, Bernardo ME, Remberger M, Dini G, Egeler RM, Bacigalupo A, Fibbe W, Ringdén O; Developmental Committee of the European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation. Mesenchymal stem cells for treatment of steroid-resistant, severe, acute graft-versus-host disease: a phase II study. Lancet. 2008 May 10;371(9624):1579-86. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(08)60690-X. — View Citation

Le Blanc K, Rasmusson I, Sundberg B, Götherström C, Hassan M, Uzunel M, Ringdén O. Treatment of severe acute graft-versus-host disease with third party haploidentical mesenchymal stem cells. Lancet. 2004 May 1;363(9419):1439-41. — View Citation

Le Blanc K, Tammik L, Sundberg B, Haynesworth SE, Ringdén O. Mesenchymal stem cells inhibit and stimulate mixed lymphocyte cultures and mitogenic responses independently of the major histocompatibility complex. Scand J Immunol. 2003 Jan;57(1):11-20. — View Citation

Liu X, Zheng P, Wang X, Dai G, Cheng H, Zhang Z, Hua R, Niu X, Shi J, An Y. A preliminary evaluation of efficacy and safety of Wharton's jelly mesenchymal stem cell transplantation in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. Stem Cell Res Ther. 2014 Apr 23 — View Citation

Mikaeili Agah E, Parivar K, Joghataei MT. Therapeutic effect of transplanted human Wharton's jelly stem cell-derived oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (hWJ-MSC-derived OPCs) in an animal model of multiple sclerosis. Mol Neurobiol. 2014 Apr;49(2):625-32. do — View Citation

O'Riordan JI, Gawne Cain M, Coles A, Wang L, Compston DA, Tofts P, Miller DH. T1 hypointense lesion load in secondary progressive multiple sclerosis: a comparison of pre versus post contrast loads and of manual versus semi automated threshold techniques for lesion segmentation. Mult Scler. 1998 Oct;4(5):408-12. — View Citation

Pascual AM, Martínez-Bisbal MC, Boscá I, Valero C, Coret F, Martínez-Granados B, Marti-Bonmati L, Mir A, Celda B, Casanova B. Axonal loss is progressive and partly dissociated from lesion load in early multiple sclerosis. Neurology. 2007 Jul 3;69(1):63-7. — View Citation

Popescu V, Agosta F, Hulst HE, Sluimer IC, Knol DL, Sormani MP, Enzinger C, Ropele S, Alonso J, Sastre-Garriga J, Rovira A, Montalban X, Bodini B, Ciccarelli O, Khaleeli Z, Chard DT, Matthews L, Palace J, Giorgio A, De Stefano N, Eisele P, Gass A, Polman CH, Uitdehaag BM, Messina MJ, Comi G, Filippi M, Barkhof F, Vrenken H; MAGNIMS Study Group. Brain atrophy and lesion load predict long term disability in multiple sclerosis. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2013 Oct;84(10):1082-91. doi: 10.1136/jnnp-2012-304094. Epub 2013 Mar 23. — View Citation

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Rudick R, Antel J, Confavreux C, Cutter G, Ellison G, Fischer J, Lublin F, Miller A, Petkau J, Rao S, Reingold S, Syndulko K, Thompson A, Wallenberg J, Weinshenker B, Willoughby E. Recommendations from the National Multiple Sclerosis Society Clinical Outcomes Assessment Task Force. Ann Neurol. 1997 Sep;42(3):379-82. — View Citation

Rudick RA, Lee JC, Nakamura K, Fisher E. Gray matter atrophy correlates with MS disability progression measured with MSFC but not EDSS. J Neurol Sci. 2009 Jul 15;282(1-2):106-11. doi: 10.1016/j.jns.2008.11.018. Epub 2008 Dec 19. — View Citation

Sormani MP, Arnold DL, De Stefano N. Treatment effect on brain atrophy correlates with treatment effect on disability in multiple sclerosis. Ann Neurol. 2014 Jan;75(1):43-9. doi: 10.1002/ana.24018. Epub 2014 Jan 2. — View Citation

Sormani MP, Bonzano L, Roccatagliata L, Cutter GR, Mancardi GL, Bruzzi P. Magnetic resonance imaging as a potential surrogate for relapses in multiple sclerosis: a meta-analytic approach. Ann Neurol. 2009 Mar;65(3):268-75. doi: 10.1002/ana.21606. — View Citation

Sormani MP, Bruzzi P, Beckmann K, Wagner K, Miller DH, Kappos L, Filippi M; European Study Group on Interferon Beta-1b in Secondary Progressive MS. MRI metrics as surrogate endpoints for EDSS progression in SPMS patients treated with IFN beta-1b. Neurology. 2003 May 13;60(9):1462-6. — View Citation

Sormani MP, Stubinski B, Cornelisse P, Rocak S, Li D, De Stefano N. Magnetic resonance active lesions as individual-level surrogate for relapses in multiple sclerosis. Mult Scler. 2011 May;17(5):541-9. doi: 10.1177/1352458510391837. Epub 2010 Dec 9. — View Citation

Till C, Ghassemi R, Aubert-Broche B, Kerbrat A, Collins DL, Narayanan S, Arnold DL, Desrocher M, Sled JG, Banwell BL. MRI correlates of cognitive impairment in childhood-onset multiple sclerosis. Neuropsychology. 2011 May;25(3):319-32. doi: 10.1037/a0022051. — View Citation

Watson N, Divers R, Kedar R, Mehindru A, Mehindru A, Borlongan MC, Borlongan CV. Discarded Wharton jelly of the human umbilical cord: a viable source for mesenchymal stromal cells. Cytotherapy. 2015 Jan;17(1):18-24. doi: 10.1016/j.jcyt.2014.08.009. Epub 2 — View Citation

Yaldizli Ö, Penner IK, Frontzek K, Naegelin Y, Amann M, Papadopoulou A, Sprenger T, Kuhle J, Calabrese P, Radü EW, Kappos L, Gass A. The relationship between total and regional corpus callosum atrophy, cognitive impairment and fatigue in multiple sclerosis patients. Mult Scler. 2014 Mar;20(3):356-64. doi: 10.1177/1352458513496880. Epub 2013 Aug 19. — View Citation

* Note: There are 29 references in allClick here to view all references

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Proportion of patients with clinical improvement in EDSS score compared to baseline Proportion of patients with clinical improvement in EDSS score compared to baseline.
Clinical improvement is defined as decrease in Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) score greater than 0.5 from baseline.
Up to 12 months Yes
Secondary Proportion of patients with a change in either gadolinium enhancing or new T2-weighted lesions on brain MRI 12 months No
Secondary Proportion of patients with reduction in T2 lesion volume on brain MRI 12 months No
Secondary Proportion of patients with reduction in brain volume on MRI 12 months No
Secondary Proportion of patients with clinical improvement in EDSS score compared to baseline 3 months and 6 months No
Secondary Proportion of patients with clinical improvement in MSIS score compared to baseline 3 months, 6 months and 12 months No
Secondary Proportion of patients with clinical improvement in MSFC score compared to baseline 3 months, 6 months and 12 months No
Secondary Proportion of patients with a change in mobility and leg function as measured by the 25 foot walking test 12 months No
Secondary Proportion of patients with a change in upper extremity function as measured by the Nine Hole Peg Test 12 months No
Secondary Proportion of patients with a change in cognitive function as measured by the Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test (PASAT) 12 months No
Secondary Proportion of patients with reduced number of relapses or freedom from progression of disease 3 months, 6 months and 12 months No
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