Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Double-Blinded, Placebo-Controlled Study To Assess Hemodynamic Changes, Orthostatic Tolerance, Out-Patient Fatigue And Quality Of Life In Neuropathic And Non-Neuropathic POTS Patients In Response To Adrenoreceptor Agonist And Antagonist
The purpose of this study is to test the hypothesis that patients with non-neuropathic POTS
will have different responsiveness than patients with neuropathic POTS to direct alpha-1
adrenoreceptor agonist therapy (droxidopa) and to non-selective beta-adrenoreceptor
antagonist therapy (atenolol).
The specific goal of this protocol is to investigate the effect of atenolol and droxidopa on
cardiovascular autonomic functions such as cardiovagal control, sympathetic nerve activity,
and sympathetic vascular transduction, systemic hemodynamic response to orthostatic stress
and on the quality of life in neuropathic and non-neuropathic patients with postural
tachycardia syndrome (POTS).
Standardized tests are used to assess cardiovagal control function, sympathetic nerve
activity, sympathetic vascular transduction, systemic hemodynamic response to head-up tilt
test and standardized questionnaires to assess the quality of life in patients with POTS.
The cardiovagal, sympathetic and hemodynamic measurements are performed after and during
drug administration. To control the effect of medications placebo is used on separate
testing visits. The order of drugs and placebo is randomized.
The pathophysiological basis of postural tachycardia syndrome (POTS) is not well elucidated.
The most widely recognized primary cause of POTS is a "restricted" or "selective" peripheral
neuropathy - neuropathic POTS. Several lines of evidence point to a restricted peripheral
neuropathy, specifically sympathetic denervation in the lower hemibody, as a cause of POTS.
These include venous denervation, impaired distal sudomotor dysfunction, lower
norepinephrine spillover in the legs than the arms. However, not all POTS patients have
peripheral neuropathy. Proposed pathogenic etiologies for non-neuropathic POTS include
deconditioning, low-grade inflammation and oxidative stress. Neuropathic POTS is present in
33% of patients while non-neuropathic POTS is present in 67% of patients.
The most frequent neuropathic feature in the neuropathic POTS group is decreased sweat
output measured by quantitative sudomotor axon reflex test. Headache and gastrointestinal
symptoms (such as abdominal pain, bloating, nausea and constipation) are also more prevalent
in the neuropathic than in the non-neuropathic POTS group, suggesting more global
differences between the two populations.
In relation to the ambiguous pathophysiological basis, there is no definitive treatment for
POTS. There are reports of improvements in hemodynamic measures and symptoms of orthostatic
tolerance with pharmacologic agents that include intravenous saline, intravenous
phenylephrine, midodrine, octreotide, erythropoietin, pyridostigmine, and betablockade. The
therapy is however frequently disappointing. Furthermore, there are no reported long-term
studies of medications to treat POTS and there are no reports of the effects of any
intervention on fatigue or quality of life.
The most widely used agents to treat POTS, the alpha-adrenoreceptor agonist midodrine, and
the beta blockers, paradoxically have agonistic and antagonistic effects on the autonomic
nervous system. Responses to these drugs are inconsistent and there are no delineated
predictors of the response in POTS patients.
The comparison of therapeutic interventions in this protocol are based on the rationale that
while alpha-adrenoreceptor agonists are thought to be more effective in neuropathic POTS - a
disorder characterized by a compensatory increase in sympathetic outflow in which
sympatholysis may be counterproductive, beta-adrenoreceptor antagonists are thought to be
more effective in non-neuropathic POTS - a disorder that could be characterized by increased
central sympathetic outflow due to impaired sympathetic inhibition.
This protocol uses droxidopa, which is converted to direct adrenoreceptor agonist,
norepinephrine. The protocol also uses beta-adrenoreceptor antagonist, the non-selective
atenolol.
This is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, cross-over experimental study with
three trial arms, according to the two medications (droxidopa and atenolol) and the placebo.
The trial is performed in the Center for Autonomic and Peripheral Nerve Disorders at the
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.
The study consists of 10 visits:
- screening visit,
- testing days to define drug sensitivity
- classification day
- autonomic testing visits
- follow-up visits
Screening visit (Visit 1) includes
- Consenting procedure
- Review of medical history
- Review of all current medications, prescription and over the counter
- Physical and neurological examinations
- Measure height, weight, temperature and vital signs
- 12-lead ECG
- Baseline autonomic tests
- Blood labs
- Serum pregnancy testing for women of childbearing potential
- Patients are able to take PO medications
Drug Sensitivity Visit (Visit 2 and 3) On the first visit, patients receive one 100 mg
droxidopa while on the second visit patients receive one 300 mg test dose of droxidopa to
define their response to the drug. The drug administration is preceded and followed by heart
rate and blood pressure measurements and side effect monitoring. The two consecutive visits
are made within a period of 3 days. The goal of sensitivity visit is to determine if a
patient has any sign of denervation supersensitivity in response to droxidopa. The patient
is considered to have denervation supersensitivity if systolic blood pressure is greater
than 180 mmHg or diastolic blood pressure is greater than 110 mmHg after 3 minutes of
standing or after 5 minutes of sitting or the patient is unable to tolerate the side effects
believed to be related to the drug.
Patient classification visit (Visit 4) includes
- Quantitative Direct and Indirect testing of Sudomotor Function (QDIRT)
- Quantitative Sudomotor Axon Reflex Testing (QSART)
- Quantitative Sensory Testing (QST)
- Punch skin biopsy
- Questionnaires (Chronic Fatigue Screening Form, Fatigue Severity Scale, Chalder Fatigue
Questionnaire, etc., see Questionnaires section)
Autonomic Evaluation Visits (Visit 5, 7 and 9) include
- Urine pregnancy test for women of child-bearing potential
- Setup and instrumentation
- Blood draw for hormones and catecholamines (Visit 5 only)
- Microneurography procedure
- Drug/placebo administration
- Deep breathing test
- Paced breathing test
- Modified Oxford test
- Sympathetic transduction
- Static exercise
- Tilt table test
Primary outcome measure of autonomic evaluation visit is maximum postural tachycardia while
secondary outcome measure of autonomic evaluation visit are blood pressure, heart rate,
vascular resistance, muscle sympathetic nerve activity.
Follow-up testing visits (Visit 6, 8 and 10) include
- Medical history
- Physical examination
- Vital signs
- EKG
- Blood pressure measurement
- Tilt table test
Primary outcome measure of follow-up testing visits is the fatigue score on the Chalder
Fatigue questionnaire while secondary outcome measures of follow-up testing visits are the
scores on the physical functioning subscale of the SF-36 questionnaire, 7 item patient
global impression of change, the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scales, the Checklist
Individual Strength (CIS), Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory (MFI), the Fatigue Severity
Scale, the EuroQOL, the HADS and anxiety scores. The Orthostatic Intolerance Questionnaire -
a unique validated questionnaire is used to assess orthostatic intolerance symptoms and
quality of life-related to orthostatic intolerance.
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