Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Active, not recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT03324035 |
Other study ID # |
AmyNeLe |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Active, not recruiting |
Phase |
Phase 3
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
March 1, 2017 |
Est. completion date |
August 1, 2022 |
Study information
Verified date |
February 2022 |
Source |
University of Sao Paulo |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Despite large efforts to eradicate leprosy, this curable mycobacterial infection still
affects 250,000 new individuals annually. Half of the globe's leprosy patients live in Brazil
and India. In 2013, 33,033 new leprosy cases diagnosed in Brazil, with an average incidence
of 1.05 cases / 10 000 inhabitants. Recently a new concept of care after cure has called
attention for severe pain in previously treated patients, particularly, neuropathic pain.
Even so, until now no single drug has been studied for the treatment of pain in this
patients, and the use of drugs is based on the study of other diseases. We designed the first
placebo-controlled, double blinded randomized trial in the use of flexible-dose amitriptyline
(tricyclic antidepressant) for the treatment of neuropathic pain related to leprosy
Description:
Despite large efforts to eradicate leprosy, this curable mycobacterial infection still
affects 250,000 new individuals annually. Half of the globe's leprosy patients live in Brazil
and India. In 2013, 33,033 new leprosy cases diagnosed in Brazil, with an average incidence
of 1.05 cases / 10 000 inhabitants. Most new cases occur in economically restricted regions
of the world, but because at least 5% of the general population is genetically susceptible to
the causative agent, new cases may occur anywhere worldwide. This is especially true in times
of high human geographic dislocation. Thus, leprosy should rank among the differential
diagnosis list of general practitioners and specialists treating skin and peripheral nerve
disorders even in non-endemic areas.
Mycobacterium leprae is an obligatory intracellular bacterium that invades macrophages and
Schwann cells. Although myelinating Schwann cells are relatively resistant to invasion,
viable M. leprae cause marked myelin destruction and lead to secondary neuronal phenotypic
changes, degeneration, and nerve dysfunction.
Leprosy patients have historically been characterized by cutaneous insensibility in body
areas of deformity, and the presence of pain in these patients has been neglected for a long
time. It has only been recently acknowledged that leprosy can be associated with pain in
general and neuropathic pain in particular. Leprosy patients frequently experience neuropathy
in wide areas of the body, which may or may not present with pain. When pain exists, it may
be acute or chronic, neuropathic or inflammatory. Leprosy has different clinical
presentations (according to the host's innate immune response) that range from localized skin
lesions and adjacent intra-epidermal nerve fiber injury to widespread neuropathy distributed
in large areas of low body-surface temperature. Neuropathic pain in leprosy may affect 11-22%
of patients, and up to 56% of those with chronic pain. Importantly, more than 85% of patients
with leprosy-related neuropathic pain developed it after the end of the antimicrobial
treatment period. This means that the majority of patients who developed neuropathic pain did
so after they were formally cured of the disease, and, in many cases, discharged from medical
assistance. Therefore, pain in leprosy can also be inserted as part of the "care after cure"
program initiative, along with stigma, deformity and incapacity management strategies.
In recent years several easy-to use screening tools have been developed to screen for
neuropathic pain in leprosy patients, such as the douleur neuropathique-4 (DN-4) and others.
These tools allow for the rapid (usually 20 seconds to administer) and reliable (high
sensitivity) assessment of pain in leprosy patients.
Additionally, very few reports have described he effects of treatment used for neuropathic
pain in these patients, and no clinical trials have been conducted for this specific
condition to date. One could argue that leprosy patients with neuropathic pain should respond
to usual drugs such as tricyclic antidepressants and anticonvulsants (and they usually do),
but the selection of the appropriate treatment regimen, the proper timing of treatment
initiation and the most cost-effective drug is not an obvious task. Also, and very important,
the lack of formal evidence-based data attesting the efficacy of tricyclics and
anticonvulsants for the treatment of leprosy associated neuropathic pain hampers further a
wider availability of these drugs in economically-restricted areas. All these limitations can
be overcome if the current scientific interest in pain in leprosy is maintained and the
present high-level research in the area continues to grow similarly to the previous decades.
Here we designed the first placebo-controlled, double blinded randomized trial in the use of
flexible-dose amitriptyline (tricyclic antidepressant) for the treatment of neuropathic pain
related to leprosy. This study is currently approved by our local Ethics Review Board (CAAE:
45393415.9.0000.0068) and has stared the recruitment phase on March 2017.
Recruitment time will be extended by 12 months due to dropouts related to the Covid pandemic.
We have had dropouts due to a few patients developing covid and also due to patients having
fear to become infected while attending hospital visits."