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Clinical Trial Summary

In multiple sclerosis (MS) cells of the immune system attack the brain causing tissue damage. In secondary progressive MS (SPMS) these repeated immune attacks have stopped but despite this new damage continues to appear. TSPO is a protein found in the brain and cells of the immune system, whose levels increase during MS. The investigators would like to know whether drugs that bind TSPO could dampen the immune responses in patients with SPMS. The investigators will be testing two drugs that affect TSPO; etifoxine and XBD173. Subjects with SPMS will be recruited from neurology clinics at hospitals associated with Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust. Healthy volunteers will also be recruited in order to provide a comparison to these patients. The volunteers recruited will be invited to the clinical research facility (CRF) at Hammersmith Hospital. The volunteers will take one of the two drugs every day for 7 days. The researchers will perform blood tests before the first dose and after the last dose to investigate the effects of the drugs, including the expression of genes and immune cell activity. This will allow the researchers to explore which of the two drugs produces the greatest changes in the amount of TSPO in the blood in MS patients relative to healthy controls.


Clinical Trial Description

The 18 kiloDalton Translocator Protein (TSPO) is a mitochondrial protein highly expressed in myeloid cells. While the full range of its functions are unknown, preclinical and in vitro studies provide suggestive evidence that TSPO ligands alter TSPO protein function to bias monocytes/macrophages and microglia towards reparative phenotypes. XBD173 and etifoxine are two TSPO ligands and represent two distinct chemotypes. Etifoxine is a benzoxaine, licenced in France (although not the UK) for the treatment of anxiety. XBD173 (Emapunil) is a phenylpurine that has recently been investigated for the treatment of anxiety, but is not licensed. The aim of this experimental medicine study is to test the hypothesis in humans that functional changes effected by TSPO can induce pro-inflammatory monocytes/macrophages and microglia to adopt a reparative phenotype. People with multiple sclerosis (MS) will be enrolled in this study because monocytes from MS patients have a chronic pro-inflammatory phenotype. Healthy volunteers (HVs) will also be enrolled to determine whether TSPO mediated effects are immune state dependant. The primary objective of this study is to determine the effects of TSPO ligand binding on monocyte/macrophage phenotype in humans. The secondary objectives are: a To characterise immunological responses in blood plasma and in circulating immune cell subsets of healthy volunteers and people with SPMS after TSPO functional changes induced by challenge ligand binding. b To explore the potential dependence of these pharmacodynamic responses on variation at rs6971 (a common polymorphism influencing ligand binding affinities in the TSPO protein) in the TSPO gene. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03850301
Study type Interventional
Source Imperial College London
Contact David Owen, PhD
Phone 07801140800
Email d.owen@imperial.ac.uk
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date January 1, 2018
Completion date January 31, 2025

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