Parkinson's Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomised, Double Blind, Placebo Controlled, Single Centre, 60 Week Trial of Exenatide Once Weekly for the Treatment of Moderate Severity Parkinson's Disease
This study is a clinical trial in patients with Parkinson's disease, of a drug called Exenatide which is already licensed for the treatment of patients with Type 2 Diabetes. There have been several groups that have confirmed that Exenatide has beneficial effects on nerve cells when tested in the laboratory, that raises the possibility that Exenatide may slow down or stop the degenerative process of Parkinson's disease. In an open label trial in patients with Parkinson's disease who self administered the drug for 1 year, we have previously shown that the drug is well tolerated and shows encouraging effects on the movement and non-movement aspects of the disease, even 2 months after patients stopped administering the drug. The next step is therefore to formally evaluate whether Exenatide really is a potential "neuroprotective" drug, i.e. stops the nerve cells dying in Parkinson's disease, by conducting a double blind, placebo controlled trial.
This trial aims to generate further data to explore whether 48 weeks exposure to Exenatide
has an advantage over placebo based on a standard validated assessment of Parkinson's
disease severity (the MDS UPDRS part 3 motor subscale). This will be measured during the
"practically defined OFF medication state" i.e. after patients have withheld their
conventional PD medication overnight. The hypothesis is that Exenatide will be associated
with reduced MDS UPDRS part 3 scores at the study end.
To further examine the safety and tolerability of 48 weeks exposure to Exenatide in patients
with moderate severity PD.
To collect Pharmacokinetic data regarding the degree of penetration of Exenatide across the
blood brain barrier. We hypothesise that any central effects of Exenatide will be mediated
through penetration of Exenatide across the blood brain barrier. Data obtained from rodents
suggests that blood brain barrier penetration is excellent.
We propose to use a simple parallel group randomised controlled trial design.
No double blind data to support the use of Exenatide are currently available therefore
equipoise exists. The null hypothesis is that Exenatide (as Bydureon) has no effect on
disease progression.
Initial identification of potential participants- patients attending their routine follow up
appointments will be informed about the trial by their neurologist and given a participant
information sheet.
Participants who wish to be considered for inclusion in the trial will be screened for
eligibility at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, according to inclusion
and exclusion criteria. A narrative of what trial participation entails together with the
participant information sheet will be used to educate potential participants. Each patient
will be aware that they have a 50% chance of being allocated active drug or placebo. They
will confirm their willingness to attend the clinic after an overnight period without their
conventional PD medication. As part of the informed consent, the contact details of the
research team will be given to each patient.
Written informed consent will be obtained from each patient prior to enrollment into the
trial. All potential patients will be properly informed as to the purposes of the trial and
the potential risks/ benefits known, or that can be reasonably predicted or expected, by an
Investigator trained in Good Clinical Practice. The investigator will retain the original
copy of the Informed Consent Form signed by the patient, a duplicate will be given to the
patient, and a third copy will be filed in the patient's hospital notes. Only the consent
form approved by the relevant trial ethics committee will be used.
Randomisation Eligible consenting patients will be randomly allocated into 2 groups to
receive either; Bydureon 2mg subcutaneous injection once weekly for 48 weeks n=30, or
Bydureon placebo subcutaneous injection once weekly for 48 weeks n=30. Randomisation lists
will be sufficiently long to enable continued randomisation should any patients drop out
within the first 12 weeks of the study (prior to the first follow up visit).
Withdrawal of medications All patients will continue to have optimal conventional PD
medication administered throughout the trial period with the exception of "off medication
assessments to be performed at 0,12,24,26,48 and 60 weeks.
Detailed evaluations of all patients will take place at these time points at the National
Hospital for Neurology & Neurosurgery (NHNN).
At each assessment the patient will attend the research clinic after an overnight withdrawal
from their conventional PD medications to allow an objective measurement of their PD
disability. Patients unable to tolerate being off medication will not undergo randomisation.
Blood tests will be performed at each visit. At baseline, Blood tests will include full
blood count, urea and electrolytes, liver function tests, thyroid function tests, glucose,
HBA1c, amylase and saved serum. At follow up visits, urea and electrolytes, thyroid
function, serum amylase will be checked and serum will be stored. These samples are to check
both safety and to allow measurement of Exenatide levels to be performed after trial
completion.
Urine tests A urine sample will be collected at each visit to allow measurement of exenatide
levels after trial completion.
A pregnancy test will also be performed for females of child bearing potential at the
baseline visit.
Clinical scales Clinical assessments will be performed at each visit using validated scales
to assess movement and non movement aspects of PD. Vital signs and weight will be measured
at each visit.
The Movement Disorder Society Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (MDS UPDRS).
Part 3 of this scale (motor subscore) will be scored in the absence and presence of
conventional PD medication. Part 1,2 & 4 of the scale will also be evaluated in the presence
of conventional PD medication (ON state) to evaluate any change in some of the non-motor
symptoms of PD, activities of daily living and the complications of chronic PD treatment.
Unified Dyskinesia Rating scale. This is considered to be the most useful and objective way
of quantifying dyskinesia severity.
3 day Hauser diary of PD state (Time- On, Off, Troublesome Dyskinesia, Non-troublesome
dyskinesia, Asleep). Diary data allows quantification of the amount of time during a 7 day
period that patients spend in the varying states of movement ability. Patients will bring
with them diaries to quantify their PD control for the preceding 3 days.
Mattis Dementia Rating scale (DRS-2). This scale is a validated global measure of cognitive
ability.
Montgomery and Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS). This scale allows for physician
quantification of Depression severity.
The PDQ39 (Parkinson's disease questionnaire-39). This is the standard disease specific
measure of quality of life in PD comprising 39 questions. It has been extensively validated
in previous studies.
Non-Motor Symptoms (NMS) severity scale. This validated scale is a tool to collect data on
the frequency and severity of 30 non-motor symptoms sometimes experienced by PD patients.
EQ5D (a standardised instrument for use as a measure of health outcome). This is a simple 5
question form and visual analogue scale that allows calculation of quality adjusted life
years (QALY) to enable health economic analyses to be performed
Timed motor tests Patients will be asked to perform a Sit-stand-walk timed test and timed
keyboard taps with left and right hand separately, in both the OFF medication and ON
medication condition.
The timed Sit-stand-walk test will incorporate time taken from seated position to stand and
walk 10 metres, turn and return to original seated position.
Timed keyboard taps will use online website Braintaptest.com to quantify number of alternate
taps from key "S" to key ";" using a conventional QWERTY (keyboard layout) keyboard in a 30
second period with each hand in turn. The software is validated and records number of key
strokes, dwell time, accuracy & rhythmicity in an automated fashion, is freely available
online, allows for coded repeatable assessments which are pseudo-anonymised, and date/time
stamped.
Lumbar puncture A lumbar puncture will be performed at 12 weeks and 48 weeks to allow
measurement of exenatide levels after trial completion.
DaTSCAN A nuclear medicine scan (DaTSCAN) will be performed at baseline and at the final
visit.
Teaching injections Patients will be taught how to self administer injections using online
teaching video with support of trained member of the trial team.
Concomitant treatments Trial participants will be permitted to use any licensed PD
medication throughout the course of the trial that is recommended by their referring
neurologist.
Analyses Adverse events will be reviewed at quarterly trial management group (TMG) meetings
and 6 monthly independent Data Monitoring committee (iDMC) meetings. An interim analysis
will be performed when the last patient has reached 24 weeks follow up and results presented
to the iDMC who will make recommendations to the TMG.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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