Postpoliomyelitis Syndrome Clinical Trial
Official title:
Modafinil in the Treatment of Fatigue in Post-Polio Syndrome
This study, conducted at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center, the National Rehabilitation
Hospital, and the National Institutes of Health, will examine whether the drug Modafinil can
decrease fatigue in patients with post-polio syndrome. Many people who have had polio
develop weakness and severe fatigue several years after their recovery from the acute
disease. Modafinil is approved by the Food and Drug Administration to improve wakefulness in
patients with narcolepsy (disease in which patients have excessive daytime sleepiness) and
has been used to treat patients with fatigue related to other medical conditions, such as
multiple sclerosis. This study will compare the effects of two doses of Modafinil and of a
placebo (a pill with no active ingredient) on fatigue in patients with post-polio syndrome.
Patients who develop fatigue, weakness, muscle pain or atrophy, and functional loss at least
15 years after recovering from polio and whose symptoms cannot be attributed to another
cause may be eligible for this study. Candidates will be screened with a medical history,
physical and neurological examinations, fatigue rating scales, electrocardiogram, blood and
urine tests, drowsiness and depression evaluations, and an electroymogram (EMG) to diagnose
nerve or muscle problems. For the EMG, electrodes (small metal discs) are taped to the skin
and a needle is inserted into a muscle to record the electrical activity.
Candidates will also undergo a sleep study to exclude abnormal sleep patterns as the cause
of the fatigue. For this study, patients stay overnight at the NIH hospital. Electrodes are
placed on the throat, on a finger, and on the chest (for an electrocardiogram), and a
respiratory belt is placed around the chest-abdomen area. During sleep (from 10:30 p.m. to 6
a.m.), brain waves, eye and leg movements, muscle tone, respiration, and heart rate are
recorded. Beginning at 8 a.m. the following morning, the patient takes 20-minute naps to
measure the level of daytime sleepiness, using a recording technique similar to that of the
all-night study. When five naps are completed, the sleep study ends. Candidates may also
undergo a lumbar puncture (spinal tap) to check for certain chemicals in the spinal fluid
that might be related to fatigue and to look for possible causes of post-polio syndrome.
This procedure is optional. For the lumbar puncture, a local anesthetic is given and a
needle is inserted in the space between the bones in the lower back where the cerebrospinal
fluid circulates below the spinal cord. A small amount of fluid is collected through the
needle.
Patients enrolled in the study will complete a sleep diary during the entire study period.
They will be randomly assigned to one of two treatment groups-Modafinil or placebo-for 6
weeks, followed by a 2-week washout period with no medication, and then a crossover phase,
in which patients who took Modafinil for the first 6 weeks now take placebo, and those who
took placebo now take Modafinil.
At the first study visit, patients will be given a supply of study medication and have blood
drawn. They will take one pill twice a day during both study phases. In both study phases,
evaluations will be done 3 and 6 weeks after starting the medication. The evaluations
include filling out the same forms completed at the screening visit, a review of drug side
effects, and a review of medical problems since the last study visit. At the 6-week visit,
blood is also drawn.
The main objective of this study is to determine if the drug Modafinil is effective in the treatment of fatigue in patients with post-polio syndrome (PPS). PPS is a motor neuron disease experience by more than 400,000 Americans, characterized by new weakness and intense fatigue. The cause of fatigue, the most common and disabiling symptom in these patients, is unknown and there is no effective treatment. In the present study, selected PPS patients will be randomized to receive two different doses of Modafinil or placebo. After six weeks, the patients will enter a two-week wash out period, and then will be crossed over to the other arm. The sample size has been powered to reflect a significant difference in the scales of fatigue. Secondary exploratory studies will include investigation of sleep patterns as a cause contributing to fatigue and a search for upregulation of fatigue-associated cytokines in the patient's serum and CSF. ;
Primary Purpose: Treatment
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