Degeneration Disc Intervertebral Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effect of Abaloparatide on Lumbar Disc Degeneration
Low back pain is a major public health issue as the leading cause of disability globally. Degeneration of intervertebral disc (IVD) disorder is once source of low back pain. Current treatment options for low back pain secondary to degeneration of intervertebral disc include conservative care, steroid injections, prescription pain medications, physical therapy, or surgery, such as discectomy or laminectomy. Treatments focus on addressing manifested symptoms rather than functional causes, and symptomatic treatment of discogenic low back pain is less than ideal. The investigators have recently found that parathyroid hormone (PTH) effectively attenuates disc degeneration in aged mice. This clinical trial will test if 3-months of daily PTH-related protein (PTHrP), abaloparatide will improve pain, function, and disc health in people with low back pain secondary to lumbar disc degeneration.
The investigators will perform a randomized, double blind, placebo controlled proof-of-concept Phase 2 clinical trial of the effect of abaloparatide for the treatment of lumbar degenerative disc disease. Adults with clinically significant lumbar degenerative disc disease who meet inclusion and exclusion criteria and sign informed consent with be randomized in a 2:1 ratio to study drug:placebo. The study team physicians will review pertinent laboratory data, medication history, and problem lists in the potential research participant's medical record to ensure eligibility for the study. The investigators will also contact the potential research participants by telephone to explain the study in further detail and elicit information not available in the medical record that would affect the potential participant's eligibility to participate in the study. Potential research participants who meet the study criteria and are interested in participating in the study will have an appointment arranged at the Johns Hopkins Orthopedic Clinic. At the study visit, a study team physician and research coordinator will review the study and consent the research participants. Research participants who provide informed consent will have age, sex, and ethnicity recorded, undergo a focused history and physical exam, and have any necessary blood samples collected for inclusion/exclusion criteria. The focused history will include the age of onset of symptoms, age at diagnosis of degenerative disc disease, mechanism of injury, treatments utilized, and the research participant's current perception of his or her disease control. The focused physical exam will include inspection and palpation of the affected sites to assess for pain and mobility of the spine. Research participants will be asked to rate current pain attributed to degenerative disc disease on a Likert scale pain level and asked to fill out the Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) and Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS-29) and have spinal x-rays and an MRI of the lumbar spine obtained. One hundred nine people who meet the study criteria and provide informed consent will be randomly assigned to 2 groups (abaloparatide:placebo) in a 2:1 fashion (n=73 abaloparatide; 36 placebo). Participants will be taught how to self-administer a injection of the study drug. Participants and the study doctor will not know if the participant is receiving abaloparatide or placebo as the study drug. Participants will inject the study drug daily for 3 months. Blood and urine samples will be collected 2 weeks after study initiation to evaluate clinical safety. Physical exams, health questionnaires, and MRI scans will be performed at 3-, 6-, and 12-month follow-up visits. The trial will be blinded for all the investigators acquiring and analyzing the data. ;