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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT04918251
Other study ID # CRFSJ00170
Secondary ID CRFSJ00171
Status Recruiting
Phase
First received
Last updated
Start date September 2012
Est. completion date April 2023

Study information

Verified date June 2021
Source University of Dublin, Trinity College
Contact Orla Hardiman, BSc MB BCh BAO MD FRCPI FAAN
Phone +353 1 896 4497
Email hardimao@tcd.ie
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Observational

Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this observational study is to improve understanding of the biology of why ALS, MS and FTD have different effects on different people and facilitate better measurement of the disease in future drug testing. To do this, brain and spinal cord neural network functionality will be measured over time, in addition to profiling of movement and non-movement symptoms, in large groups of patients, as well as in a population-based sample of the healthy population. Patterns of dysfunction which relate to patients' diagnosis and coinciding and future symptoms which align with categories of patients with similar prognoses will be investigated and their ability to predict incident patients' symptoms in future will be measured.


Description:

The aim of this project is to characterize spatiotemporal patterns of central nervous system dysfunction that correlate with clinical features of ALS, MS and FTD, to provide non-invasive electrophysiological measurements that can be used in a clinical setting to inform stratification of patients in clinical trials, and to provide data driven diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers and objective clinical trial outcome measures. Such dysfunction will be investigated by recording single- and paired-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS)-associated electromyography (EMG) during rest and by recording electroencephalography (EEG) during rest and during cognitive-motor tasks.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Recruiting
Enrollment 400
Est. completion date April 2023
Est. primary completion date February 2023
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion criteria: - Age >18 years and able to give informed written or verbal (in the presence of two witnesses) consent. - In the case of non-control subjects, a clinical diagnosis of: (i) Probable frontotemporal dementia (FTD) including behavioural variant FTD, semantic dementia or primary progressive aphasia) with supportive brain imaging or known FTD causing genetic mutation (ii) Multiple sclerosis (MS) according to the McDonald criteria (Polman et al., 2011) or (iii) Possible, probable or definite amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) according to the El Escorial Criteria Revised (Brooks et al. 2000) Exclusion criteria: - Any diagnosed neurological/muscular disease other than ALS, MS or FTD - Use of neuro- or myo-modulatory medications except riluzole - Inability to participate due to disease-related motor symptoms (e.g. inability to sit for the required time or click the mouse to respond) - Upper body metallic implants - History of seizure disorders in the participant or immediate family members - Anxiety-induced fainting - Regular migraine - Evidence of significant respiratory insufficiency - Sleep time >2 hours below normal and/or alcohol consumption the night before data collection (in which case, recording session will be rescheduled).

Study Design


Intervention

Procedure:
128 electrode electroencephalography (EEG)
128 electrode EEG will be non-invasively recorded from electrodes placed in a montage over the scalp while the participant is resting or performing tasks designed to engage specific cortical motor networks of interest (cognitive, behavioural, motor and sensory)
Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS)
Single and paired pulse TMS protocol will be delivered while surface bipolar EMG is recorded over hand muscles to interrogate corticospinal tract function and cortical motor network component functions

Locations

Country Name City State
Ireland Academic Unit of Neurology, Trinity College Dublin, The University of Dublin Dublin Leinster

Sponsors (7)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Dublin, Trinity College ALS Association, USA, Health Research Board, IE, Irish Research Council, IE, Motor Neurone Disease Association, UK, Research Motor Neurone, IE, Thierry Latran Foundation, FR

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Ireland, 

References & Publications (7)

Dukic S, McMackin R, Buxo T, Fasano A, Chipika R, Pinto-Grau M, Costello E, Schuster C, Hammond M, Heverin M, Coffey A, Broderick M, Iyer PM, Mohr K, Gavin B, Pender N, Bede P, Muthuraman M, Lalor EC, Hardiman O, Nasseroleslami B. Patterned functional net — View Citation

Iyer PM, Egan C, Pinto-Grau M, Burke T, Elamin M, Nasseroleslami B, Pender N, Lalor EC, Hardiman O. Functional Connectivity Changes in Resting-State EEG as Potential Biomarker for Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis. PLoS One. 2015 Jun 19;10(6):e0128682. doi: 1 — View Citation

Iyer PM, Mohr K, Broderick M, Gavin B, Burke T, Bede P, Pinto-Grau M, Pender NP, McLaughlin R, Vajda A, Heverin M, Lalor EC, Hardiman O, Nasseroleslami B. Mismatch Negativity as an Indicator of Cognitive Sub-Domain Dysfunction in Amyotrophic Lateral Scler — View Citation

McMackin R, Dukic S, Broderick M, Iyer PM, Pinto-Grau M, Mohr K, Chipika R, Coffey A, Buxo T, Schuster C, Gavin B, Heverin M, Bede P, Pender N, Lalor EC, Muthuraman M, Hardiman O, Nasseroleslami B. Dysfunction of attention switching networks in amyotrophi — View Citation

McMackin R, Dukic S, Costello E, Pinto-Grau M, Fasano A, Buxo T, Heverin M, Reilly R, Muthuraman M, Pender N, Hardiman O, Nasseroleslami B. Localization of Brain Networks Engaged by the Sustained Attention to Response Task Provides Quantitative Markers of — View Citation

McMackin R, Dukic S, Costello E, Pinto-Grau M, Keenan O, Fasano A, Buxo T, Heverin M, Reilly RB, Pender N, Hardiman O, Nasseroleslami B. Sustained attention to response task-related beta oscillations relate to performance and provide a functional biomarke — View Citation

Nasseroleslami B, Dukic S, Broderick M, Mohr K, Schuster C, Gavin B, McLaughlin R, Heverin M, Vajda A, Iyer PM, Pender N, Bede P, Lalor EC, Hardiman O. Characteristic Increases in EEG Connectivity Correlate With Changes of Structural MRI in Amyotrophic La — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Diagnosis-related difference in EEG or TMS measurements Differences in single or paired pulse TMS measures or time and/or frequency domain EEG characteristics between those within each patient cohort and controls Baseline recording
Primary Prognosis-related EEG or TMS measurements Patient cohort single or paired pulse TMS measures or time and/or frequency domain EEG characteristics which show significant correlation to cognitive, behavioural, motor and/or sensory task performance, to disease duration or to survival time Baseline recording
Primary Diagnosis-related changes in EEG or TMS measurements Differences in rate of change (slope) across time of single or paired pulse TMS measures or time and/or frequency domain EEG characteristics between those within each patient cohort relative to controls Baseline to final visit assessed up to 2 years after baseline
Primary Prognosis-related changes in EEG or TMS measurements Rates of change (slope) across time of patient cohort single or paired pulse TMS measures or time and/or frequency domain EEG characteristics which show significant correlation to cognitive, behavioural, motor and/or sensory task performance, to disease duration or to survival time Baseline to final visit assessed up to 2 years after baseline
Secondary Diagnosis-specific changes in EEG or TMS measurements Differences in rate of change (slope) across time of single or paired pulse TMS measures or time and/or frequency domain EEG characteristics between patient cohorts Baseline to final visit assessed up to 2 years after baseline
Secondary Diagnosis-specific difference in EEG or TMS measurements Differences in single or paired pulse TMS measures or time and/or frequency domain EEG characteristics between patient cohorts Baseline recording
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