View clinical trials related to Multiple Sclerosis.
Filter by:This is a prospective study that will explore the mechanisms of efficacy of dimethyl fumarate (DMF) treatment in multiple sclerosis (MS). Investigators will enroll relapsing MS patients who are beginning therapy with DMF into a one-year longitudinal study in which blood and spinal fluid analyses, imaging and clinical studies will be performed to identify and measure changes associated with DMF therapy.
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic, inflammatory, debilitating disease that causes destruction of central nervous system (CNS) myelin, with varying degrees of axonal damage. It mainly affects young adults and is twice as common in women as in men (1). Studies published from the 1990s brought animal models and theoretical considerations of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) being useful in the prevention and treatment of autoimmune diseases, with clinical responses in some patients, suggesting that high-dose chemotherapy followed by HSCT rescue could "reset" the immunological changes through the control of autoreactive clones, followed by immunological tolerance after immune reconstitution (2); this led to the conclusion that HSCT may be a viable therapeutic option for MS (1-6). Autologous HSCT have been done in patients with MS since 1996 and more than 700 HSCTs have been performed around the world (1-6). Most patients have been treated in small trials or in multicenter studies. In retrospective analyzes, a progression-free survival of more than five years after transplant has been observed, the neurological outcomes being considerably more favorable in patients with the relapsing-remitting type and/or those who showed an inflammatory pattern in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) during the pre-transplant screening. Reports of good results, particularly in the aggressive forms of MS reinforce the effectiveness HSCT in MS patients with prominent inflammatory activity. The risk of transplant related mortality in HSCT for MS was conventionally considered very high but has declined since 2001 to 1.3% (2-6), this probably being the result of the changes in the conditioning regimens, thus reducing toxicity. Recent data, with more than 700 autologous transplants for MS in Europe, showed an overall survival of 92% in five years and a progression-free survival of 46%, the main cause of mortality and morbidity being the recurrence of the autoimmune disease (2-6). The consensus provides an indication of HSCT in patients with progressive MS unresponsive to conventional therapy and Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) (1) between 3.0 and 6.0. The forms of the disease that might benefit from transplantation are: relapsing remitting, primary or secondary progressive, and the "malignant" form, provided there is evidence of inflammatory activity at the time of transplant indication.
Objective: Evaluate the effects of Progressive Muscle Relaxation on sleep quality and on stress and depression levels of individuals with multiple sclerosis.
This observational study investigates the efficacy and safety of immunoadsorption versus plasmapheresis in 60 patients with relapse in Multiple Sclerosis and Clinically isolated syndrome who do not fully recover after a high doses of intravenous corticosteroids.
The investigators will conduct at NorthShore University HealthSystem pragmatic trials using the EMR for 10 common neurological disorders. They will demonstrate the feasibility of subgroup based adaptive assignment of treatments, electronic consenting, and outcomes data capture at the point of care using the EMR. They will identify the most effective treatments for common neurological disorders and seek replication by the NPBRN.
The primary purpose of this single center, randomized, open label study in relapsing Multiple Sclerosis (MS) patients on PLEGRIDY (peginterferon beta-1a) is to assess the effect of Preparation H (phenylephrine) Maximum Strength Cream compared to no topical treatment of injection site erythema after PLEGRIDY injection.
The main objective of this study is to measure effectiveness at 6 months of personalized dietary advice versus dietary counseling via delivery of a standard advice sheet for optimizing dietary calcium intake (assessed by a food survey based on CIQUAL* data) in MS patients with ambulatory monitoring. *CIQUAL Data: Table of nutritional food composition available on the ANSES (National Agency for Sanitary Security of Food, Environment and Labour) website, published by the Observatory of the Nutritional Quality of Foods. This table includes 1,500 sheets of 58 nutritional components. The data is integrated into the software for calculating ingesta (DATAMEAL) at the Nîmes University Hospital.
The primary objective of this feasibility study is to evaluate the functionality (e.g., as defined by the primary endpoints) of the fully integrated Multiple Sclerosis Performance Test (MSPT) device, when used by unsupervised participants with MS, or related conditions, with a broad range of disability, in multi-clinical-care environments. Secondary objectives include: Participant perception of usability of device; Participant satisfaction with the device; Ascertain the impact of different clinical environments on device usability; Ascertain impact of assistive devices in usability of device; Ascertain functionality of Bluetooth remote as compared with manual timing.
The purpose of the project is to investigate how aerobic exercise affects brain volume, specific brain regions, neurotrophins and cognition in patients with multiple sclerosis. The study will be a single blinded randomized controlled trial with a 6 months intervention. It is hypothesized that aerobic exercise can slow down brain atrophy, increase the size of hippocampus, upregulate the secretion of neurotrophins and improve cognitive performance in people with multiple sclerosis.
The purpose of this study is to provide confirmatory evidence of the safety and efficacy of two Dysport® doses (600 units [U] and 800 U), compared to placebo in reducing urinary incontinence (UI) in adult subjects treated for neurogenic detrusor overactivity (NDO) due to spinal cord injury (SCI) or multiple sclerosis (MS).