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Clinical Trial Summary

A pharmacological treatment to patients with normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH) is missing. The aim is to investigate if acetazolamide given to patients with NPH improves gait function and study the pathophysiological mechanisms leading to reduced symptoms. Patients will be randomized to acetazolamide or placebo and duration of treatment will be from diagnosis to the day of shunt surgery. Target dose is 500 mg/day. Study design is a double-blind randomized controlled trial and the plan is to include 42-50 patients. The study is investigator-initiated without financial sponsorship from the industry.


Clinical Trial Description

Background: The only available treatment for normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH) is implantation of a neurosurgical shunt system that reduces symptoms in two out of three cases. Postoperative complications are common, causing reoperations in 20-30% within the first years after surgery. A pharmacological treatment is missing. In three previous studies, acetazolamide, a reversible inhibitor of the carbonic anhydrase enzyme, was used as treatment off-label. In the first of these studies, 15 patients with NPH were treated with doses 250-500 mg/day and 10 patients improved (Aimard G et. al.). The second study was a case report of one patient with NPH who improved after receiving the dose 500 mg/day (Garcia-Gasco P et. al.). The most recent study used doses of 125-375 mg/day and included 8 patients of whom 5 improved. Furthermore, the last study reported a reduction of the periventricular edema that is often present in the white matter close to the lateral ventricles in patients with NPH (Alperin N et. al.). These three studies were open label with no blinding or control group. Study design: Study design is a double-blind randomized placebo-controlled trial. The study is investigator-initiated without financial sponsorship from the industry. The plan is to consecutively include 42-50 patients with NPH. Patients will be randomized to acetazolamide or placebo and take the study drug from diagnosis (baseline) to admission for shunt surgery. Waiting time for shunt surgery at the center of the study is approximately 4-8 months at the moment. The dose will be titrated to 250 mg x 2 during 4-6 weeks. Two phone visits with a study nurse and routine blood samples are controlled during the titration phase to rule out side effects. Evaluations of clinical symptoms and blood samples for blood biomarkers are collected at baseline, after 3 months and when the study drug is stopped. Lumbar cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is collected at baseline and intraventricular CSF is collected during shunt surgery. All patients are investigated after shunt surgery, 3 months postoperatively with evaluation of symptoms and blood samples. Blood- and CSF samples are stored in a biobank. In a subgroup of 24-26 patients, an MRI of the brain is performed before the start of study drug and after 3 months. In this subgroup also assessments of symptoms and blood samples for analysis of plasma biomarkers will be collected in connection with the MRI scans. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04975269
Study type Interventional
Source Uppsala University Hospital
Contact Johan Virhammar, MD, PhD
Phone +46186110000
Email johan.virhammar@neuro.uu.se
Status Recruiting
Phase Phase 2
Start date February 17, 2022
Completion date July 2025

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT03350750 - A Placebo-Controlled Effectiveness in INPH Shunting (PENS) Trial N/A
Recruiting NCT05081128 - Efficacy in iNPH Shunting (PENS) Trial N/A
Completed NCT04702035 - Walking Pattern Characteristics in Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus N/A
Completed NCT05204745 - Ventriculomegaly and Gait Disturbance in the Senior Population in the Region of Västerbotten