View clinical trials related to Multiple Sclerosis.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to evaluate the clinical efficacy and the optimal way of administration of autologous mesenchymal bone marrow stem cells (MSC) compering intravenous injection and intrathecal injection vs. placebo, in active-progressive Multiple Sclerosis patients.
The primary objective of the study is to evaluate relapse activity, as measured by the proportion of participants relapsed at 12 months, in participants with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) who transition from Tysabri (BG00002) to Tecfidera (BG00012) in the real-world setting. The secondary objective is to further evaluate relapse activity, defined as annualized relapse rate (ARR), hospitalization and intravenous corticosteroid use, during the first year of Tecfidera treatment following transition from Tysabri treatment.
The purpose of this study is to investigate the capacity of a 6-week treatment with neuromuscular electrical stimulation to improve walking in individuals whose mobility has been compromised by multiple sclerosis.
Phase 4, single center, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. Fifty (50) patients with MacDonald criteria (2005) multiple sclerosis will undergo active motor training as per the NeuroGym protocol, consisting of 3 sessions of 1 hour per week for a period of 6 weeks (total of 18 sessions). Half of the patients will be randomized to receive prolonged-release fampridine 10 mg BID as per label, and the other half will receive a placebo BID. All patients will continue to take their medication (fampridine or placebo) during a subsequent observational period of 8 weeks. Patients will be evaluated at times -4, 0, 6 and 14 weeks. Study Objectives: Primary: To demonstrate that MS subjects treated with prolonged-release fampridine 10mg BID will show greater benefit from active motor training as compared with subjects treated with placebo in terms of incidence of responders, degree of response, and duration of response. Secondary: To demonstrate that MS subjects treated with prolonged-release fampridine 10mg BID will show greater benefit from active motor training as compared with subjects treated with placebo in terms of quality of life measures.
Prolonged-release fampridine (SR-fampridine) can improving walking capacity in approximately 40% of MS patients suffering from this by overcoming partly or total conduction block due to demyelination. Resistance training has been shown to provide the same kind of benefits for patients by targeting the muscular component of the motor unit. Thus by combining the two it is likely to see an synergistic effect. This trial is designed as a double blind, randomized placebo controlled trial with subsequent cross-over. Participants in the two arms will go through the same progressive training program targets at the lower limbs. For 24 weeks one group receives SR-fampridine and the other receives placebo. in the the end there is another four weeks of training after cross-over has been performed.
Most experts in the field consider Multiple Sclerosis as the main auto immune disease of the central nervous system. In spite of many works, the data in the literature concerning the antigens targeted by the CD8+ T-Cell response are still contradictory and insufficient.
The primary objective is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of natalizumab (BG00002, Tysabri®) in the study population (Russian participants with relapsing remitting multiple sclerosis). The secondary objectives are to look at evaluation of severity of relapse, hospitalization and steroid use requirement; Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS), functional tests, quality of life self-assessment questionnaires including the short form health survey self-assessment questionnaire (SF-36) and multiple sclerosis impact scale 29 (MSIS-29), evidence of MRI disease activity, participants free of disease activity (clinical activity and/MRI activity) and anti JC Virus (JCV) antibody evaluation.
To evaluate the usability of positron emission tomography imaging as a novel outcome measure in multiple sclerosis studies
This study will determine whether in RRMS patients receiving Gilenya there is a link between disease progression and biologic markers.
The primary objective of the study is to evaluate the safety of natalizumab use in the pediatric multiple sclerosis (MS) population.