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Clinical Trial Summary

Background:

- Ryanodine receptor type 1-related myopathies (RYR1-RM) are the most common non-dystrophic muscle diseases that people are born with in the U.S. They affect development, muscles, and walking. Researchers want to test a new drug to help people with these diseases.

Objectives:

- To see if the drug N-acetylcysteine decreases muscle damage in people with RYR1-RM. To see if it improves their exercise tolerance.

Eligibility:

- People age 7 and older with a confirmed genetic diagnosis of RYR1 or a clinical diagnosis of RYR1 and a family member with a confirmed genetic diagnosis.

Design:

- Participants will be screened with a checklist of criteria. Adult participants may have a muscle biopsy. A needle will remove a tiny piece of muscle in the lower leg.

- Study visits will take several days.

- Visit 1:

- Medical history

- Physical exam

- Blood, urine, and saliva tests

- Questions about symptoms and quality of life

- Heart, lung, and walking tests

- Muscle Oxygenation Capacity Test. A blood pressure cuff around the thigh will be tightened for up to 10 minutes.

- Biodex testing, stretching the leg against resistance

- Muscle ultrasounds. A probe will be moved over the skin.

- Participants may be photographed or videotaped during procedures.

- They may have a muscle biopsy.

- Six months later, visit 2 will repeat visit 1. Participants will start taking the study drug dissolved in water or placebo three times a day for 6 months.

- Participants will stay at NIH for 2 days after starting the study drug.

- Participants will be contacted by phone during the study to monitor side effects

- Six months after starting the study drug, study visit 3 will repeat some or all of visit 1.


Clinical Trial Description

Although genetic disorders of muscle that present at birth are rare, RYR1-related myopathies comprise the most common non-dystrophic congenital myopathy in the United States, with a prevalence of approximately 1/90,000 people (Amburgey et al, 2011). Causative mutations in the ryanodine receptor gene of skeletal muscle, RYR1, have been found in several myopathy subtypes, including central core disease and centronuclear myopathy. These mutations result in defective excitation-contraction coupling and increased mitochondrial oxidative stress. Most patients present in childhood with delayed motor milestones, extremity muscle weakness, impaired ambulation, joint contractures, progressive scoliosis, and in some cases eye movement paralysis, respiratory failure, or susceptibility to malignant hyperthermia, an allelic condition. Despite these important morbidities and the risk of early mortality, no treatments exist to date.

RYR1 encodes a homotetrameric transmembrane ion channel, RyR1, which resides on the terminal sarcoplasmic reticulum in close proximity to the T-tubule. By releasing calcium from the sarcoplasmic reticulum into the cytosol in response to muscle fiber stimulation by the motor neuron at the neuromuscular junction, it mediates excitation-contraction coupling and functions as a regulator of cellular calcium concentrations and redox homeostasis. Dowling et al. (2012) recently elucidated the latter mechanism in zebrafish and patient myotubes, showing that RYR1 mutations result in increased oxidative stress and that this is rescued in both models by treatment with N-acetylcysteine (NAC), a known anti-oxidant. NAC functions as a precursor of glutathione, an endogenous antioxidant that becomes deficient during oxidative stress. This was substantiated by a cystic fibrosis clinical trial in which low glutathione levels in neutrophils undergoing oxidative stress significantly increased with NAC administration.

Dowling et al. (2012) found significant changes post NAC treatment including increased travel distance (endurance) in zebrafish and complete protection from cell death induced by experimentally increasing oxidative stress in myotubes. Thus NAC was a successful treatment in both ex vivo and in vivo model systems. Based on these results, we plan to perform a randomized, double-blinded, placebo controlled clinical trial of NAC in a subgroup of RYR1-related myopathy patients as the first pathophysiologically based treatment for this devastating disorder.

The objectives of the study are to determine if NAC reduces oxidative stress, fatigability, and fatigue in a study population of patients with RYR1-RM. The study population includes both males and females 7 years of age and older. The study design has two phases. The first 6-month phase will be used to validate the selected outcome measures in RYR1 congenital myopathy. The second 6-month phase is a randomized, double-blinded, placebo controlled drug intervention trial. The primary outcome measures are blood glutathione for oxidative stress and six minute walk test for fatigability. Healthy volunteers will be evaluated to determine normal values of biomarkers, muscle ultrasound, and near infrared spectroscopy in this rare disease, in order to develop a comparison between healthy and RYR1-RM individuals. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02362425
Study type Interventional
Source National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 1/Phase 2
Start date February 12, 2015
Completion date May 30, 2018

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