Multiple Sclerosis Clinical Trial
— ENHANCEOfficial title:
A Multicenter, Randomized, Double Blind, Placebo Controlled Study to Assess the Long-Term Efficacy and Safety of Prolonged Release Fampridine (BIIB041) 10 mg, Administered Twice Daily in Subjects With Multiple Sclerosis
The primary objective is to determine whether prolonged-release fampridine (10 mg twice daily) has a clinically meaningful effect on patient-reported walking ability over a 24-week study period. The secondary objectives are: To determine whether prolonged-release fampridine 10 mg taken twice daily (BID) has a clinically meaningful effect on dynamic and static balance, physical impact of Multiple Sclerosis (MS), and upper extremity function over a 24-week study period; To evaluate criteria for early assessment of response to fampridine that can predict clinically meaningful benefits in walking ability and balance; To assess the safety and tolerability of prolonged-release fampridine 10 mg twice daily over a 24-week treatment period.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 646 |
Est. completion date | February 2016 |
Est. primary completion date | February 2016 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 18 Years to 70 Years |
Eligibility |
Key Inclusion Criteria: - Must have a diagnosis of primary-progressive, secondary-progressive, progressive-relapsing, or relapsing-remitting MS per revised McDonald Committee criteria [McDonald 2001; Polman 2005] as defined by Lublin and Reingold [Lublin and Reingold 1996] of at least 3 months duration - Must have an Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) score of 4 to 7, inclusive - Must have walking impairment, as deemed by the Investigator Key Exclusion Criteria: - History of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) - Presence of acute or chronic hepatitis. Subjects who have evidence of prior hepatitis infection that has been serologically confirmed as resolved are not excluded from study participation - Known allergy to fampridine, pyridine-containing substances, or any of the inactive ingredients in the prolonged-release fampridine tablet - Creatinine Clearance (CrCl) of <80 mL/min - History of malignant disease - Presence of pulmonary disease - A body mass index (BMI) =40 (BMI formula: BMI = mass [kg]/[height(m)]2) NOTE: Other protocol defined Inclusion/Exclusion criteria may apply. |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Bulgaria | Research site | Pleven | |
Bulgaria | Research site | Plovdiv | |
Bulgaria | Research site | Sofia | |
Bulgaria | Research site | Sofia | |
Bulgaria | Research Site | Sofia | |
Bulgaria | Research site | Sofia | |
Bulgaria | Research site | Sofia | |
Bulgaria | Research Site | Sofia | |
Czech Republic | Research site | Brno | |
Czech Republic | Research site | Brno | |
Czech Republic | Research site | Chocen | |
Czech Republic | Research site | Havirov | |
Czech Republic | Research site | Jihlava | |
Czech Republic | Research site | Pardubice | |
Czech Republic | Research site | Praha 2 | |
Czech Republic | Research site | Praha 5 | |
Czech Republic | Research site | Teplice | |
Finland | Research site | Helsinki | |
Finland | Research site | Oulu | |
Finland | Research site | Tampere | |
Finland | Research site | Turku | |
Italy | Research site | Messina | |
Italy | Research site | Milano | |
Italy | Research site | Milano | |
Italy | Research site | Napoli | |
Italy | Research site | Rome | |
Lithuania | Research site | Kaunas | |
Lithuania | Research site | Klaipeda | |
Lithuania | Research site | Vilnius | |
Netherlands | Research Site | Breda | |
Netherlands | Research Site | s-Hertogenbosch | |
Netherlands | Research Site | Sittard-Geleen | |
Poland | Research Site | Bialystok | |
Poland | Research site | Gdansk | |
Poland | Research site | Grudziadz | |
Poland | Research Site | Katowice | |
Poland | Research Site | Katowice | |
Poland | Research site | Katowice | |
Poland | Research Site | Kielce | |
Poland | Research site | Krakow | |
Poland | Research site | Krakow | |
Poland | Research site | Lodz | |
Poland | Research site | Olsztyn | |
Poland | Research site | Plewiska | |
Poland | Research site | Rzeszow | |
Poland | Research site | Warsaw | |
Poland | Research site | Warsaw | |
Poland | Research site | Warsaw | |
Poland | Research site | Warsaw | |
Russian Federation | Research Site | Kazan | |
Russian Federation | Research site | Kemerovo | |
Russian Federation | Research site | Krasnoyarsk | |
Russian Federation | Research Site | Moscow | |
Russian Federation | Research site | Moscow | |
Russian Federation | Research Site | Nizhny Novgorod | |
Serbia | Research site | Belgrade | |
Serbia | Research site | Kragujevac | |
Serbia | Research site | Nis | |
United Kingdom | Research site | Birmingham | West Midlands |
United Kingdom | Research site | Cardiff | Swansea |
United Kingdom | Research site | Chertsey | Surrey |
United Kingdom | Research site | Exeter | Devon |
United Kingdom | Research site | Glasgow | Scotland |
United Kingdom | Research site | London | |
United Kingdom | Research site | London | |
United Kingdom | Research site | London | |
United Kingdom | Research site | Norwich | Norfolk |
United Kingdom | Research site | Nottingham | |
United Kingdom | Research site | Plymouth | Devon |
United Kingdom | Research site | Romford | Essex |
United Kingdom | Research site | Salford | Greater Manchester |
United States | Research site | Bradenton | Florida |
United States | Research site | Charlotte | South Carolina |
United States | Research site | Charlotte | North Carolina |
United States | Research site | Chesterfield | Missouri |
United States | Research site | Columbus | Ohio |
United States | Research site | Cullman | Alabama |
United States | Research site | Detroit | Michigan |
United States | Research site | Lexington | Kentucky |
United States | Research site | New Bedford | Massachusetts |
United States | Research Site | Orlando | Florida |
United States | Research site | Pheonix | Arizona |
United States | Research site | Roanoke | Virginia |
United States | Research site | Rochester | New York |
United States | Research site | San Diego | California |
United States | Research site | Tampa | Florida |
United States | Research site | Tampa | Florida |
United States | Research site | West Palm Beach | Florida |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Biogen |
United States, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Finland, Italy, Lithuania, Netherlands, Poland, Russian Federation, Serbia, United Kingdom,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Proportion of participants who achieve a mean improvement on the Multiple Sclerosis Walking Scale (MSWS-12) of =8-points | MSWS-12 is a patient self-assessment of the walking limitations due to MS during the past 2 weeks. It contains 12 items that measure the impact of MS on walking. Items are summed to generate a total score and transformed to a scale with a range of 0 to 100, where higher scores indicate greater impact on walking. | Baseline to 24 weeks (end of study ) | No |
Secondary | Proportion of participants who achieve a mean improvement in Time Up and Go (TUG) speed of =15% | Timed walking test designed to measure gait performance and balance. It measures in seconds the time taken by an individual to stand up from a standard arm chair (approximate seat height of 46 cm [18in], arm height 65 cm [25.6 in]), walk a distance of 3 meters (118 inches, approximately 10 feet), turn, walk back to the chair, and sit down | Baseline to week 24 (end of study) | No |
Secondary | Change in Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale-29 (MSIS-29) physical score | The 29-item Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale (MSIS-29) is a patient-reported outcome measure to assess the impact of MS on day-to-day life during the past 2 weeks from a patient's perspective; it measures 20 physical items and 9 psychological items. The physical score is generated by summing individual items and then transforming to a scale with a range of 0 to 100, where high scores indicate worse health. | Baseline to week 24 (end of study) | No |
Secondary | Change in Berg Balance Scale (BBS) | The Berg Balance Scale is a widely used assessment tool to identify balance impairment. Functional activities such as reaching, bending, transferring, and standing are evaluated on the test to evaluate balance. Patients are asked to complete fourteen tasks that are rated from 0 (cannot perform) to 4 (normal performance) for a total of 56 points | Baseline to week 24 (end of study) | No |
Secondary | Change in ABILHAND score | The ABILHAND Questionnaire measures the participant's perceived difficulty in performing everyday manual activities in the last 3 months. The participant completes a 56-item questionnaire by estimating their own difficulty or ease in performing each of 56 activities. Items are summed to generate a total score and transformed to a scale with a range of 0 to 100, where high scores indicate greater impact on manual ability | Baseline to week 24 (end of study) | No |
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