Spinal Cord Injuries Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Three Month, Open-label, Single-arm Trial Evaluating the Safety and Pharmacokinetics of Oral Lithium in Patients Diagnosed With Chronic Spinal Cord Injury
The current study is a phase I open-label clinical trial to examine plasma levels after oral lithium treatments in 20 subjects with chronic spinal cord injury. The subjects will receive standard doses of oral lithium used in treatment of manic depression. The goal of the trial is to show feasibility and safety of maintaining plasma levels of 0.6 mmol/L to 1.2 mmol/L for six weeks in subjects with chronic spinal cord injury.
Patients with spinal cord injury (SCI) usually have permanent and often devastating
neurological deficits and disability. There has been successful research in a number of
fields that may someday help people with spinal cord injuries.
The planned treatment trials will focus on the effects of oral lithium on neurological
function in people with chronic spinal cord injury and those that have received umbilical
cord blood mononuclear cell transplants to the spinal cord. The interest in these two
treatments derives from recent reports indicating that umbilical cord blood stem cells may
be beneficial for spinal cord injury and that lithium may promote regeneration and recovery
of function after spinal cord injury. Both lithium and umbilical cord blood are widely
available therapies that have long been used to treat diseases in humans.
The current study is a phase I open-label clinical trial to examine plasma levels after oral
lithium treatments in 20 subjects with chronic spinal cord injury. The subjects will receive
standard doses of oral lithium used in treatment of manic depression. The goal of the trial
is to show feasibility and safety of maintaining plasma levels of 0.6 mmol/L to 1.2 mmol/L
for six weeks in subjects with chronic spinal cord injury.
Lithium attracted much attention as a potential neuroregenerative therapy based on
experiments in animal models of SCI in 2004. However, toxic levels of lithium (>1.5 mmol/L)
are close to the effective levels (0.6 - 1.2 mmol/L). At toxic levels, patients may become
confused and lethargic, have diarrhea, upset stomach, and develop tremors, ataxia,
dysarthria, and nystagmus. Lithium toxicity may be compounded by sodium depletion or
diuretics (thiazides) that inhibit kidney sodium upgrade and ACE inhibitors. Plasma levels
also depend on fluid input/output. Therefore, care will be taken to titrate the dose and to
test plasma levels of the drug at the beginning, at day 2, 7, and week 6 during the
treatment period.
Acute toxicity usually produces relatively mild symptoms. Chronic lithium toxicity may lead
to more severe neurotoxic symptoms. However, these symptoms usually develop after 3-5 years
of treatment.
Data obtained from this study will be used to develop future chronic spinal cord injury
clinical studies: (1) randomized controlled trials with lithium versus placebo; and (2)
randomized controlled trials comparing effects of lithium and placebo on subjects who have
received umbilical cord blood mononuclear cell transplants to the spinal cord.
;
Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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