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Clinical Trial Summary

This study seeks to investigate whether early exercise efforts can expand the use of exercise in Multiple sclerosis (MS), from symptom treatment only, to early supplementary disease-modifying treatment. The study will be conducted in a randomized and controlled manner, with single blinding. Participants will be allocated to either a systematic aerobic exercise intervention or an educational programme on exercise and physical activity. Both interventions will last 1 year, and involve a 1 year follow-up period. It is hypothesized that early exercise efforts can modify the disease activity and disability progression.


Clinical Trial Description

Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is an autoimmune and neurodegenerative disease in the central nervous system (CNS), characterized by a complex pathogenesis and heterogeneous symptoms. The histopathological hallmark of the disease is sclerotic lesions. These inflammatory lesions manifests as disabling relapses, and the number of relapses in the first few years after disease onset is associated with progression of disability, with a higher number of relapses leading to a more rapid progression. In addition, diffuse neurodegeneration seems to occur early in the disease, and even though it is not always clinically evident it is associated with disease progression. A reduction in relapse rate and neurodegeneration early in the MS disease course may slow the progression of disabilities and can possibly reduce overall disease burden. For the individual person with MS (pwMS) a reduction in overall disease burden will often improve quality of life, and since MS is a lifelong disease this is of great interest. Preventing disability in pwMS is also highly relevant in a societal perspective, as it lowers the large costs associated with increased disability. As a consequence, the importance of early treatment have been emphasized. Treatment of MS have seen great advances in the recent years, resulting in an increasing number of available disease-modifying treatments (DMT). Despite the fact that the current DMTs favourable alter a number of clinical outcomes and the course of the disease, it is still a serious and deteriorating condition with significant disease activity, impaired neurological functions and thus progression of disabilities. New and supplemental treatment strategies are therefore still warranted, and exercise have gained attention as a safe and tolerable rehabilitation strategy. Recently, exercise furthermore have gained substantial attention, as the first indications of neuroprotective and disease-modifying effects of exercise has been published. However, despite the focus on early treatment in medical DMTs no studies have investigated the effects of exercise as a supplemental treatment strategy early in the disease course of MS. Consequently, the purpose of this study is to investigate the effects of early exercise efforts on disease activity and disability progression. In a sub-group the effects will furthermore be investigated on brain volume, specific brain regions, and inflammation. It is hypothesized that early exercise efforts can modify the disease activity and disability progression, by reducing the relapse rate, the progression of Multiple Sclerosis Functional Composite (MSFC) and Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) scores. The rate of brain atrophy and the lesion load, obtained by MRI scans, is also hypothesized to be reduced. This is expected to be due to an exercise-induced reduction in inflammation. The study will be a randomised and controlled study with randomisation to either an systematic aerobic exercise intervention or an educational programme on exercise and physical activity. Both interventions are in addition to standard treatment, and will last 1 year. The exercise intervention will consist of 2 supervised exercise sessions per week in the complete duration of the study, while the standard treatment plus exercise education program will consist of 4 educational sessions on the health benefits associated with exercise and physical activity held every third month throughout the intervention period. The training in the exercise group will be aerobic exercise (running, cycling, rowing or on a cross-trainer) planned by exercise physiologists and performed in a progressive manner. To allow handling of a large number of participants, who is also geographically spread, the exercise intervention will be locally anchored, but at the same time supervised by student employees from Section for Sports Science and controlled by internet- and telephonic communication. In addition to the two intervention groups, data from The Danish MS registry will serve as population based standard treatment control data. All groups will be followed up 1 year after cessation of the interventions. To set the estimated number of participants a two-sample two-sided power calculation has been conducted. The basis for this calculation is an report from Tallner et al. who have shown a difference in relapse rate during a two-year period (equal to our 1 year intervention, and 1 year follow-up) of 0.65 relapses between physically active and physically inactive MS patients (active: 0.95 +/- 0.97 relapses in 2 years ; inactive: 1.60 +/- 1.64 relapses in 2 years). 83 patients with MS should be enrolled in each intervention group (a 20% drop-out rate has been included). Newly published data on the brain atrophy in percentage of total brain volume after 24 weeks of resistance training have been the basis for a similar calculation of the number of participants in the sub-group, from whom MRI-scans and blood samples will be obtained. 41 participants from each intervention group should form this sub-group. MS is a complex disease with heterogenous symptoms, and by combining the disciplines of exercise physiology, neurology and radiology this study can be the first long-term and large-scale exercise study to investigate the possible neuroprotective and disease-modifying effects of exercise when initiated early in the disease course of MS. Consequently, this project has the potential to change present clinical practice and generate further attention to exercise, not only as symptom treatment, but also as an supplemental disease-modifying treatment strategy early in the course of MS. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03322761
Study type Interventional
Source University of Aarhus
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date April 1, 2018
Completion date December 31, 2021

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