Cervical Dystonia Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized Controlled Trial Comparing PAllidal and SubThalamic Deep Brain Stimulation for Cervical Dystonia(the PASTS-CD Study)
Cervical dystonia (CD), also known as spasmodic torticollis, is a type of focal dystonia, mainly manifesting as involuntary head turning or tilting, or holding a twisted posture. Although it can be alleviated by injection of botulinum toxin, the effect is temporary so that patients require multiple injections. Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) targeting on globus pallidus internus (GPi) or subthalamic nucleus (STN) has been proved to be a safe and effective strategy for primary cervical dystonia, even for those medically refractory cases. However, the question of which target is better has not been clarified. Therefore, the invstigators design this randomized and controlled trial, aiming to compare the differences between GPi-DBS and STN-DBS for cervical dystonia in the improvement of symptoms , quality of life, mental status, cognitive status, as well as in stimulation parameters and adverse effects. The invstigators hypothesize that STN-DBS will outperform GPi-DBS at short-term follow-up, while the superiority will disappear and the efficacy of the two group will become similar at long-term follow-up.
Status | Not yet recruiting |
Enrollment | 98 |
Est. completion date | November 30, 2026 |
Est. primary completion date | December 30, 2024 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 80 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion criteria 1. Diagnosed as idiopathic or hereditary isolated CD; 2. Severe functional impairment; 3. Oral medication and injection of botulinum toxin become ineffective (> 3 months since last injection), or refuse to adopt botulinum toxin injection; 4. No secondary causes of CD; 5. Age 18-80 years old; 6. Normal neurological examination except for dystonia; 7. Normal brain MRI; 8. The subject or their family members can fully understand the trial and sign the informed consent; 9. Good compliance and willingness to receive regular follow-ups. Exclusion criteria 1. Diagnosed as secondary CD; 2. CD with obvious trunk/limb involvement, or Meige syndrome; 3. History of severe mental disorders, dementia, or epilepsy; 4. Previous dystonia surgery (pallidotomy, thalamotomy, DBS, etc); 5. Accompanied by other neurological diseases (Parkinson's disease, essential tremor, multiple sclerosis, stroke, etc); 6. The patient has or needs other implantable devices (cardiac pacemakers, defibrillators, cochlear implants, spinal cord stimulators, etc); 7. Pregnant women or women who are waiting to become pregnant during the trial; 8. Poor health condition. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
China | Chinese PLA General Hospital | Beijing |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Chinese PLA General Hospital |
China,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change from baseline Toronto Western Spasmodic Torticollis Rating Scale - Severity subscale (TWSTRS-Severity) at 3 months | TWSTRS-Severity subscale can reflect the severity of the dystonia. The total score of TWSTRS-Severity subscale is 35 points. Higher scores indicate more severe symptoms. | Three months postoperatively. | |
Primary | Change from baseline Tsui scale at 3 months | Tsui scale can better reflect the severity of spasmodic torticollis. It consists of four parts, and the total score was calculated by A*B+C+D. The maximum score was 25 points. After treatment, a 0-10% decrease is considered ineffective, a 11%-50% decrease is considered as partial remission, a 51%-80% decrease is considered as obvious remission, and a 81%-100% decrease is considered as complete remission. | Three months postoperatively. | |
Primary | Change from baseline Toronto Western Spasmodic Torticollis Rating Scale - Severity subscale (TWSTRS-Severity) at 6 months | TWSTRS-Severity subscale can reflect the severity of the dystonia. The total score of TWSTRS-Severity subscale is 35 points. Higher scores indicate more severe symptoms. | Six months postoperatively. | |
Primary | Change from baseline Tsui scale at 6 months | Tsui scale can better reflect the severity of spasmodic torticollis. It consists of four parts, and the total score was calculated by A*B+C+D. The maximum score was 25 points. After treatment, a 0-10% decrease is considered ineffective, a 11%-50% decrease is considered as partial remission, a 51%-80% decrease is considered as obvious remission, and a 81%-100% decrease is considered as complete remission. | Six months postoperatively. | |
Primary | Change from baseline Toronto Western Spasmodic Torticollis Rating Scale - Severity subscale (TWSTRS-Severity) at 1 year | TWSTRS-Severity subscale can reflect the severity of the dystonia. The total score of TWSTRS-Severity subscale is 35 points. Higher scores indicate more severe symptoms. | One year postoperatively. | |
Primary | Change from baseline Tsui scale at 1 year | Tsui scale can better reflect the severity of spasmodic torticollis. It consists of four parts, and the total score was calculated by A*B+C+D. The maximum score was 25 points. After treatment, a 0-10% decrease is considered ineffective, a 11%-50% decrease is considered as partial remission, a 51%-80% decrease is considered as obvious remission, and a 81%-100% decrease is considered as complete remission. | One year postoperatively. | |
Secondary | Change of Toronto Western Spasmodic Torticollis Rating Scale - Disability subscale (TWSTRS-Disability) | TWSTRS-Disability subscale can reflect the disability of the dystonia. The total score of TWSTRS-Disability subscale is 30 points. Higher scores indicate more compromised living ability. | Three months postoperatively, six months postoperatively, and one year postoperatively. | |
Secondary | Change of Toronto Western Spasmodic Torticollis Rating Scale - Pain subscale (TWSTRS-Pain) | TWSTRS-Pain subscale can reflect the level of the neck pain. The total score of TWSTRS-Pain subscale is 20 points. Higher scores indicate more severe neck pain. | Three months postoperatively, six months postoperatively, and one year postoperatively. | |
Secondary | Change of 36-item Short Form General Health Survey (SF-36) | The SF-36 scale is a comprehensive index that reflects the health status of individuals.This scale has 8 dimensions to evaluate health-related quality of life, namely, physical function (PF), role physical (RP), body pain (BP), general health (GH), vitality (VT), social functioning (SF), role emotional (RE), mental health (MH). Higher score indicates better health status. | Six months postoperatively, and one year postoperatively. | |
Secondary | Change of Hamilton Anxiety Scale (HAMA) | HAMA score can better reflect the severity of anxiety. It is composed of two parts, namely, physical anxiety (item 7-13) and mental anxiety (item 1-6, 14). Total score = 29 points: severe anxiety; Total score =21 points: there must be significant anxiety; Total score =14 points: there must be anxiety; Total score = 7 points: you may have anxiety; Total score < 7 points: there are no symptoms of anxiety. | Six months postoperatively, and one year postoperatively. | |
Secondary | Change of 24-item Hamilton Depression Scale (HAMD) | HAMD score can better reflect the severity of depression. Total score < 7 points: normal; Total score 7-17 points: possible depression; Total score 17-24 points: definitely depression; Total score > 24 points: severe depression. | Six months postoperatively, and one year postoperatively. | |
Secondary | Change of Mini-mental State Examination (MMSE) | MMSE is a screening scale for Alzheimer's disease. It consists of 20 questions with 30 items (30 points), including five aspects: orientation, memory, attention and calculation, recall, language. Total score > 27 points: normal. Total score 21-27 points: mild cognitive impairment; Total score 10-20 points: moderate cognitive impairment; Total score < 9 points: severe cognitive impairment. | Six months postoperatively, and one year postoperatively. | |
Secondary | Change of Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) | MoCA is an assessment tool for mild cognitive impairment. The cognitive domains include attention and concentration, executive function, memory, language, visuospatial skills, abstract thinking, calculation and orientation. The total score is 30 points. A score of =26 points is considered normal. | Six months postoperatively, and one year postoperatively. | |
Secondary | Total electrical energy delivered (TEED) | The formula of TEED is as follows: TEED = Voltage*2*Pulse Width*Frequency/Impedance. The higher the TEED, the shorter the battery life of stimulator. | One year postoperatively. | |
Secondary | Adverse effects | Any adverse event occurring between the beginning time of the trial and the last follow-up. | Up to 1 year postoperatively. |
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