Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02673996
Other study ID # REB15-2434
Secondary ID MOP142426
Status Recruiting
Phase
First received
Last updated
Start date January 2016
Est. completion date December 2025

Study information

Verified date May 2024
Source University of Calgary
Contact Satish R Raj, MD, MSCI
Phone 403-210-6152
Email autonomic.research@ucalgary.ca
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Observational

Clinical Trial Summary

Objective: In this pilot study, we will test the hypothesis that patients with POTS (age 18-60 years) will have a higher percentage of functional antibodies to adrenergic receptors compared with control subjects without POTS.


Description:

Background & Rationale: Postural Tachycardia Syndrome (POTS) is a chronic state of orthostatic tachycardia (> 30 bpm increment from lying to standing) and typical symptoms that are worse on standing, and are relieved by lying down. Typical orthostatic symptoms include palpitation, lightheadedness, chest pains, dyspnea, tremulousness, blurred vision and mental clouding. POTS often occurs in younger individuals with a female predominance (4-5 fold). Using the RAND36 quality of life (QOL) tool, we showed that POTS patients had lower quality of life (QOL) scores than healthy subjects for both physical (26±9 vs. 54±6; P<0.0001) and mental health domains (43±11 vs. 52±10; P<0.0001). These QOL scores are similar to scores for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and congestive heart failure. In collaboration with the Kem/Yu lab (Oklahoma University), the investigators sought to determine whether POTS patients had functionally significant adrenergic receptor (AR) Abs. Samples from 14 POTS patients (included 7 blinded, well-characterized samples from Vanderbilt) and 10 healthy control subjects. Using the rat cremaster artery assay, the sera/immunoglobulin (IgG) of the POTS patients demonstrated significantly greater arteriolar contractile activity (69±3% of baseline vessel diameter) compared to the control subjects (91±1% of baseline; P<0.001). This contractility was suppressed with prazosin, an α1-AR blocker. With the addition of POTS sera, the phenylephrine dose-response curve was shifted to the right. In other words, a higher dose of phenylephrine was required to achieve the same degree of vasoconstriction, suggests that the α1-AR Ab is actually a partial-agonist/antagonist. Using a cell-based cyclic AMP (cAMP) reporter assay, all POTS sera had dose-dependent β1-AR activation (max: +30±3% from buffer baseline) compared to control sera (-1±2% from buffer baseline; P<0.001), and 7/14 POTS patients (but no control subjects) had elevated β2-AR activation. The excessive β1-AR activation could be blocked with propranolol. With the addition of POTS sera, the isoproterenol dose-response curve was shifted to the left (a lower isoproterenol dose was required to achieve the same receptor activation in the presence of the POTS sera). These data suggest that the β1-AR Ab is actually a straight agonist. Big Picture: While exciting, these data are obtained from only 14 POTS patients. In this protocol (Aim#1; REB15-2434), the investigators will study a larger cohort of POTS patients and control subjects in order to have a better sense of the true prevalence of these antibodies, to determine their association with other autoimmune illnesses, and to see if they relate to the patient-reported onset of illness. In addition to this, the investigators seek to see whether this is physiologically significant in intact humans in vivo (Aim#2). The investigators propose to perform dose response studies for phenylephrine and isoproterenol in POTS patients and control subjects with blood pressure (BP) and heart rate (HR) as the output metric and will then determine if these are different between POTS patients and control subjects and, more importantly, based on the auto-antibody in vitro activity. Specifically, the investigators will give a series of injections of small doses of phenylephrine while monitoring their HR and continuous BP. After each injection, the investigators will note the peak BP increase and will monitor the patient until the BP returns to baseline. The investigators will give incrementally larger doses until the endpoint is achieved. The endpoint is the lowest test dose of phenylephrine that will increase the systolic BP by >25 mmHg (PHE-PD25). the investigators will then repeat the same process with small doses of isoproterenol with the same monitoring. After each injection, the investigators will note the peak HR increase and will monitor the patient until the HR returns to baseline. The investigators will give incrementally larger doses until the endpoint is achieved. The endpoint is the lowest test dose of isoproterenol that will increase the HR by >25 bpm (ISO-PD25).


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Recruiting
Enrollment 125
Est. completion date December 2025
Est. primary completion date December 31, 2024
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 18 Years to 60 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Patients who have been previously diagnosed with POTS - Control subjects (patients not diagnosed with POTS) - Age between 18 - 60 years - Males and Females (Give that >80% of POTS patients are female, we will attempt to enroll a similar percentage of female control subjects) - Able and willing to provide consent Exclusion Criteria: - Smokers - Overt cause for postural tachycardia, i.e., acute dehydration - Significant cardiovascular, pulmonary, hepatic, or hematological disease by history or prior testing - Highly trained athletes - Subjects with somatization or severe anxiety symptoms will be excluded - Use of drospirenone (a spironolactone analogue) containing oral contraceptive agent - Hypertension defined as supine resting BP>145/95 mmHg off medications or needing antihypertensive medication - Other factors which in the investigator's opinion would prevent the participant from completing the protocol, including poor compliance during previous studies or an unpredictable schedule - Unable to give informed consent

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Drug:
Phenylephrine
incremental small doses of IV phenylephrine to find the dose that transiently raises systolic blood pressure by 25 mmHg
Isoproterenol
incremental small doses of IV isoproterenol to find the dose that transiently raises heart rate by 25 bpm

Locations

Country Name City State
Canada University of Calgary Calgary Alberta

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Calgary

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Canada, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary The proportion of alpha-1 Ab titer positive subjects The primary comparison will be the proportion of Ab titers between POTS patients compared to control subjects. 1 Year (to measure Adrenergic antibody assay)
Secondary Antibody Positivity by Joint Hypermobility Status These comparisons include proportions of POTS patients with +va adrenergic Ab with a co-diagnosis of joint hypermobility syndrome (EDS III) vs without joint hypermobility syndrome (EDS III). 1 Year (to measure Adrenergic antibody assay)
Secondary Antibody Positivity by Clinical Autoimmune Syndromes These comparisons include proportions of POTS patients with +ve adrenergic Ab with a co-diagnosis of a clinical autoimmune disorder vs without a clinical autoimmune disorder. 1 Year (to measure Adrenergic antibody assay)
Secondary Antibody Positivity by Viral Onset of POTS These comparisons include proportions of POTS patients with +ve adrenergic Ab with a viral onset to their POTS vs without a viral onset to their POTS. 1 Year (to measure Adrenergic Antibody assay)
Secondary Isoproterenol HR Increase (PD25) A comparison of the dose of isoproterenol required to acutely increase the Heart Rate by 25 bpm from a pre-injection baseline (as a measure of beta-receptor sensitivity) in antibody positive vs. antibody negative subjects. 1 Year (to measure Adrenergic Antibody assay)
Secondary Phenylephrine Systolic BP Increase (PD25) A comparison of the dose of phenylephrine required to acutely increase the Systolic Blood Pressure by 25 mmHg from a pre-injection baseline (as a measure of alpha-receptor sensitivity) in antibody positive vs. antibody negative subjects. 1 Year (to measure Adrenergic Antibody assay)
Secondary The proportion of beta adrenergic Ab titer positive subjects The primary comparison will be the proportion of Ab titers between POTS patients 1 Year (to measure Adrenergic Antibody assay)
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Active, not recruiting NCT03124355 - Vagal Stimulation in POTS Phase 1
Recruiting NCT04310644 - Autonomic Small Fiber Neuropathy and Ehlers Danlos Syndromes - Prospective Study and Registry
Completed NCT03253120 - Alterations of Attention in POTS Depending on Body Position and Hydration N/A
Completed NCT03919773 - IVIG (Gamunex-C) Treatment Study for POTS Subjects Phase 1/Phase 2
Active, not recruiting NCT01988883 - Modafinil and Cognitive Function in POTS Early Phase 1
Active, not recruiting NCT01000350 - Intravenous (IV) Saline and Exercise in Postural Tachycardia Syndrome (POTS) N/A
Recruiting NCT00409435 - A Study of Pyridostigmine in Postural Tachycardia Syndrome Phase 2
Completed NCT00770484 - Effect of Exercise in OI N/A
Completed NCT00581022 - Objective Sleep Disturbances in Orthostatic Intolerance
Terminated NCT00748228 - Dopamine in Orthostatic Tolerance N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05630040 - VNS for Long-COVID-19 N/A
Recruiting NCT04632134 - Long-term Effects of Transcutaneous Vagal Nerve Stimulation on Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome (POTS) N/A
Completed NCT00685919 - Peripheral Dopamine in Postural Tachycardia Syndrome Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT00061009 - Hypnosis in Autonomic Function N/A
Recruiting NCT05618054 - Periaqueductal Gray-vagus Nerve Interface Malfunction Explain the Natural History With Its Numerous Co-morbidities? N/A
Completed NCT01366963 - Cognitive Dysfunction in Postural Tachycardia Syndrome N/A
Recruiting NCT05107635 - Inappropriate Sinus Tachycardia Registry
Terminated NCT02154009 - Clinical Autonomic Disorders: A Training Protocol
Completed NCT03602482 - Standing Cognition and Co-morbidities of POTS Evaluation N/A
Completed NCT02167412 - EEG Characteristics in Youth POTS and/or Syncope