Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT02909608 |
Other study ID # |
16-1422 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
October 7, 2016 |
Est. completion date |
April 2, 2020 |
Study information
Verified date |
June 2021 |
Source |
University of Colorado, Denver |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Physical activity is an important factor in understanding how diseases can affect a child.
Decreases in physical activity are sometimes the first thing that happens before a child is
diagnosed with a disease. When a child sees their doctor, that visit reflects a single point
in time. It does not capture how a child feels during the days in between visits to their
doctor. This study plans to use special monitors called actigraphs to collect information
about physical activity in children with a type of disease called pulmonary hypertension.
This study will measure how active these children are and compare their activity to clinical
information and to actigraphy measurements in children without pulmonary hypertension.
Description:
Pediatric pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) (roughly 1-5 cases per 1 million children) is
a severe disorder with high mortality and morbidity, but limited treatment options. Pediatric
PAH is defined the same as that in adults, which is the presence of abnormally high pulmonary
artery pressure. In comparison with adults, pediatric PAH is likely a more severe disorder
with higher mortality and morbidity without treatment. Except for INOmax for persistent
pulmonary hypertension of the newborn, no drug is currently approved in the US to treat
pediatric PAH patients 1-17 years of age. Drug development to treat pediatric PAH is an unmet
public health need for children and a priority for the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
However, studies that address the safety and efficacy of PAH therapies are rare, in part due
to the lack of suitable clinical endpoints and quantitative and qualitative measures of
disease severity.
A major limitation towards enhancing outcomes of children with PAH is the lack of pediatric
efficacy endpoints or surrogate measures that are capable of reproducibly and reliably
reflecting changes in pulmonary arterial pressure in response to a therapeutic intervention
that is being assessed in a pediatric clinical trial. Children are often too young and
developmentally unable to perform standard cardiopulmonary exercise testing and the use of
several metrics are not as accurate for reflecting clinical status in children as in adults,
such as 6 minute walking distance. Additionally, the use of cardiac catheterization to
directly measure pulmonary vascular resistance is invasive, requires anesthesia, and has
additional risks for complications.
Therefore, to address this critical and unmet medical need in children with PAH, we propose
to begin develop a novel, developmentally-appropriate non-invasive endpoint in children
through the use of actigraphy. Actigraphy is a mobile device that directly, reproducibly and
non-invasively measures physical activity, which can be readily assessed in the ambulatory
setting, and may provide a novel, simple and inexpensive approach. Impaired exercise
tolerance is a prominent feature of PAH and contributes significantly to reduced quality of
life. Assessing exercise capacity is an integral part of the clinical evaluation of PAH in
adults and the use of the 6 minute walk distance (6MWD) is the most common primary endpoint
in adult PAH clinical trials. Importantly, the 6MWD test and other existing exercise
performance tests that are readily applied in adult studies are not reliable and applicable
for young children and infants. We propose that actigraphy may provide a novel endpoint for
assessing drug efficacy in children if proven to be strongly predictive and reflect clinical
course and outcomes of children with PAH. If successful, this early study has great potential
for having a significant regulatory impact that will advance the public health mission, as
actigraphy could possibly become an endpoint that would be accepted in pediatrics as a
regulatory standard for PAH clinical trials.
The purpose of the current study is to describe the use of actigraphy in children with PAH
and to determine if correlations exist between actigraphy data and clinical data in children
with PAH.