Traumatic Brain Injury Clinical Trial
Official title:
Early Treatment of Paroxysmal Dysautonomia and Hypertonia for Severe Brain Injured Patients by Intrathecal Baclofen Therapy
Within the framework of a prospective double-blind and randomized study evaluating the efficacy of continuous intrathecal baclofen therapy (CIBT) on paroxysmal dysautonomia (main objective) and hypertonia, recovery and tolerance (secondary objectives) during the initial recovery phase of severe head injury, continuous intrathecal baclofen infusion will be delivered. The first week of study is double-blind: the first of two parallel groups receives CIBT and the second group receives placebo. The main outcome (number of neurovegetative episodes) is assessed at the end of first week. The second week of study is open labeled: active treatment is continued in the first group and the second group starts active CIBT treatment. The third week of study, treatment is stopped in both groups.
Background. Severe brain trauma and especially serious brain lesions inducing coma lead to
many cases of disability. A large number of these patients (about 30%) present
neurovegetative and hypertonic episodes that are associated to a bad vital prognosis and the
degree of disability. Several teams including two in France have reported the efficacy of
intrathecal baclofen on such neurovegetative episodes that to date have not been able to be
treated efficiently.
Objectives. The main objective of this trial is to assess the efficacy of infused
intrathecal baclofen on the number of neurovegetative episodes in seriously brain-injured
patients. The secondary aims are to evaluate the efficacy of the treatment on hypertonia, to
assess changes in waking and treatment safety.
Study design. Double-blind randomized trial on two parallel groups. The second part of the
study is open label: both groups receive the experimental treatment.
Intervention
Experimental group: continuous progressive dose of intrathecal baclofen for one week;
constant dose of baclofen during the second week receives at a dose determined after the
first week. Treatment is stopped after two weeks, but patients are assessed until the end of
the third week.
Control group: intrathecal placebo for one week; progressive dose of intrathecal baclofen
during the second week. Treatment is stopped after two weeks, but patients are assessed
until the end of the third week.
Outcomes. The main outcome is the number of neurovegetative episodes in the last 48 hours of
the first week of treatment. Secondary outcomes are hypertonia as measured by the Ashworth
scale on D2 to D5 of all three weeks. Waking will be assessed by the WHIM scale on D5 each
week. Adverse events are assessed throughout the 3 weeks of study.
Eligibility criteria. Inclusion criteria are focal or diffuse encephalic lesions leading to
coma (Glasgow score <8), age 18 years or over, in waking phase (spontaneous eye-opening)
since at least one month and less than six months, severe hypertonia of the lower members
(mean Ashworth score >= 3) with neurovegetative episodes (at least 10 in 48 hours) and/or
decortication after failure of treatment per os (clonidine, beta-blocker, baclofen per os).
Non inclusion criteria are surgical, anesthetic or allergic contraindication to baclofen,
uncontrolled sepsis directly threatening the implanted device or associated medullary
trauma.
Expected results. Throughout the trial the patients will be hospitalized in the
neurosurgical or neurological intensive care departments. Expected results are a very clear
decrease in the number of neurovegetative episodes and a substantial reduction in
hypertonia, at least in the lower limbs. It will also be possible to quantify the
consequences of these improvements on waking.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double-Blind, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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