Multiple Sclerosis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Exploring in Vivo the Energetic Origin of Neurodegeneration in Multiple Sclerosis: a Ultra-high Field Sodium Imaging, Phosphorus Spectroscopy and Diffusion-weighted Spectroscopy Study.
In multiple sclerosis (MS), the sequence of events leading to irreversible neuro-axonal
degeneration, which is a major determinant of clinical disability, is poorly understood.
Recently, the key role of neuronal energy dysfunction in driving axonal degeneration has been
highlighted. In the neuronal injury pathway triggered by inflammation and myelin disruption,
multiple adaptive changes force the neuron to a temporary condition of "virtual hypoxia",
characterized by a mismatch between energy demand and supply. If this condition of energy
dysregulation is not reversed within an appropriate time-window, neurons enter an
irreversible axonal degeneration.
Two key questions on the relationship between early energy dysregulation and
neurodegeneration remain unanswered:
i) whether brain energy dysfunction measured at a given time point can predict the subsequent
occurrence of neurodegeneration; ii) to what extent and for how long neurons can bear this
"virtual hypoxia" before undergoing structural damage.
Tracking the "energetic signature" of MS and defining its temporal distance from irreversible
damage is essential for the development of neuroprotective therapies.The recent optimization
of innovative magnetic resonance (MR)-based techniques such as sodium (23Na) MRI, phosphorus
MR spectroscopy (31P-MRS), and diffusion-weighted 1H MRS (DW-MRS) has allowed the generation
of promising in vivo data on cellular energy dysregulation in MS.
The main objective of this project is to explore whether MR-derived metrics of energy
dysregulation predict MR-derived parameters of cortical neurodegeneration developing over 2
years, as reflected by cortical atrophy. To address this key question, the Investigators will
use a combination of 23Na MRI, 31P MRS, and DW-MRS associated with advanced MRI sequences to
explore energy dysregulation in the sensorimotor region, and measurements of cortical atrophy
in the same area after 24 months in 40 patients with either relapsing-remitting or
progressive MS and 15 age- and gender-matched healthy controls.
The Investigators will also test whether MR-derived metrics of energy dysregulation at study
entry correlate, both cross-sectionally and longitudinally, with: i) global cortical atrophy;
ii) functional cortical reorganization resulting from the condition of energy dysregulation,
which precedes the occurrence of structural damage; iii) cortical demyelination and
remyelination; iv) clinical, neuropsychological and biological measures.
1. RESEARCH JUSTIFICATION
1.1 Energy dysregulation is a key process in the physiopathology of neurodegeneration in MS
Several mechanisms have been suggested to play a major role in the physiopathology of
neurodegeneration in multiple sclerosis (MS), among which: inflammatory demyelination,
excitotoxicity, oxidative stress and ionic channel dysfunction. Each of these mechanisms is
potentially implicated in inducing an energy dysregulation. Moreover, the notion that early
neuronal energy failure may play a key role in axonal degeneration is being more and more
acknowledged. In these physiological conditions, myelin sheath integrity not only allows
efficient saltatory conduction of the action potential, but it also helps to maintain the
environment for neuronal survival by assuring the correct amount of cellular energy.
Following myelin disruption and inflammation, multiple adaptive changes force the neurone to
enter a temporary state of "virtual hypoxia". Indeed, the loss of axonal coverage determines
the VGSC redistribution along the axon and the re-expression of NaV1.2.
Furthermore, demyelination induces mitochondrial proliferation along damaged axons, together
with a complex for hyperactivity in order to support the sodium/potassium pump. These
compensatory mechanisms initially overcome the conduction block resulting from demyelination,
but in such conditions transmembrane electrochemical gradients are maintained at the cost of
an increased energy demand.
This supplementary energy demand leads to a dysequilibrium between energy demand and supply,
called "neuronal virtual hypoxia". In MS energetic distress is worsened by the inflammatory
environment, which affects mitochondrial function and is associated with a cell structural
deformation. This condition of energy dysfunction is potentially reversible in the first
stages of the disease but, if not reversed after a certain time it induces a cascade
characterised by a mitochondrial function failure, free radical production and
sodium/potassium ATPase dysfunction. Ionic pump dysfunction induces an accumulation of
inter-cellular sodium with an inversion of calcium flux operated by the Na+/Ca2+ pump.
Calcium intracellular influx eventually leads to an irreversible neuronal degeneration.
Therefore, identifying in-vivo the early phase of neuronal energy dysfunction proceeding
neuro-axonal death and understanding its temporal relationship with reversible neuronal
degeneration is essential for the development of therapies aimed at reverting this
degenerative process and maintain long term neuronal integrity.
1.2 Imaging energy dysregulation: state of the art
The optimisation over the past few years of innovative techniques based on magnetic resonance
(MR) such as sodium MRI (23Na), phosphorus spectroscopy (31P-MRI) and diffusion-weighted
spectroscopy (DW-MRS), have enabled the production of promising data which allow the
clarification of different aspects of the initial phase of energy dysregulation in MS.
Several studies using 23Na MRI have shown an increase of the concentration of total sodium in
the brain of patients with MS, which is correlating with clinical disability. More recently,
more sophisticated techniques to quantify 23Na concentration have been proposed, such as
"triple quantum filtered (TQF) imaging", which allows the differentiation between
intracellular and extracellular sodium, thus providing unique information on the early phase
of energy dysregulation. Due the relatively weak sensibility of 23Na MRI, high-field MRI is
particularly suited for TQF. The team lead by professor Matilde Inglese has recently applied
7 tesla TQF imaging in MS, showing that patients with a relapsing/remitting form of the
disease (RR-MS) have increased intracellular sodium concentration compared to healthy
volunteers. This reflects the pathological intracellular accumulation of 23Na as a
consequence of Na+ K+ ATpase dysfunction.
31-MRS allows the direct measurement of the concentration in the brain of phosphocreatine
(PCr) and adenosine triphosphate (ATP), which is the main energy currency of cells. 31P-MRS
at 3T has shown that MS patients present higher PCr levels in the normal-appearing white
matter when compared to healthy controls. 21P-MRS has also shown that beta-ATP percentage was
higher in RR-MS and lower in progressive forms, reflecting a "relatively high energy state"
in the early phases of the disease, with a reduction in the progressive phase, leaving room
for axonal degeneration.
Important technical processes have been reached through the successful generation of 31P-MRS
data at 7T.
DW-MRS gives in-vivo measurements of the diffusion properties of creatine (Cr) + PCr. In a
recent study using DW-MRS at 3T, the Investigators found a reduced Cr+PCr diffusivity in the
normal-appearing white matter and the thalami of patients with MS compared with healthy
controls, reflecting a reduction of energy reserved in neurons and glial cells. Two
alternative hypotheses could explain the observed reduction of Cr+PCr diffusivity: an altered
intracellular transport of creatine, in particular from oligodendrocytes to neurones from one
to another, or a reduced PCr consumption due to an altered function of creatine kinase B.
Overall, these results confirm the strong potential of combining these different techniques
(23Na MRI, 31PMRS and DW-MRS) in order to obtain innovative information on each aspect of the
pathogenic cascade linking energy dysregulation to neuro-axonal degeneration in MS.
2. OBJECTIVES
2.1 Main objective
The main objective of this project is to explore the relationship between the MRI-derived
parameters reflecting energy dysregulation in the motor sensory regions (MSR) at study entry,
and the parameters of neurodegeneration in the MSR after 24 months in RR-MS and PMS patients
compared to healthy volunteers, through a combination of 23Na quantitative MRI, 31P-MRS and
DW-MRS, and measurements of cortical thickness.
2.2 Secondary objectives
The secondary objectives of this research will be:
(i) To compare MRI-derived metrics of energy dysregulation between patients and controls in
the whole brain and the MSR at study entry.
(ii) To define the correlations between MRI-derived metrics of energy dysregulation and
cortical demyelination at study entry, as well as cortical myelination after 12 months.
(iii) To study the correlation between cortical 23Na MRI at study entry and the evolution of
cortical volume over 24 months.
(iv) To study the correlations between MRI-derived metrics of energy dysregulation and early
axonal damage a well as axonal-dendritic density in the whole brain and in the MSR: 1) at
study entry; 2) over the follow-up period of 24 months.
(v) To study the relationship between MRI-derived metrics of energy dysregulation and the
changes of brain connectivity at study entry, at 12 and 24 months.
(vi) To establish the correlations between MRI-derived metrics and serum neurofilaments
measured at study entry, at 12 and 24 months.
(vii) To establish the contribution of MRI-derived metrics of energy dysregulations to
clinical disability and to cognitive dysfunction, at study entry and at 24 months.
3. CONCEPTION OF THE RESEARCH PROJECT
3.1 Type of research project
This is a monocentric research project on human beings with physiopathologic purposes (no
health products involved), with a duration of 24 months, whose aim is to explore the role of
energy dysregulation in neurodegeneration, which is the main pathologic substrate of clinical
progression in patients with MS. Our aim is to investigate the relationship between energy
dysfunction and neuro-axonal damage in patients with MS compared to healthy controls, using a
combination of imaging methods and clinical, cognitive and biological tests.
Given that the techniques used in the study involve imaging methods with the injection of
contrast agents, the research will be classified as interventional research of category 1,
according to the Jardé Law.
3.2 Methodology of the research
This is a non-randomized, controlled, open label clinical-radiological research.
Patients will be selected from the cohorts followed at the Department of Neurology of
Saint-Antoine Hospital and the Department of Nervous System Pathologies of the
Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital. They will receive a first information on the research during the
consultation, and the information form may be delivered on this occasion.
Healthy volunteers will be selected from the volunteers of the Center of Clinical
Investigation (CIC) of the Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital.
All participants will be included at the CIC of the Brain and Spine Institute (ICM) -
Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital.
A group of RR-MS (n=20) and progressive (PP-MS or SP-MS, n=20) patients will be studied and
compared to a group of healthy volunteers (n=15), age- and gender-matched (but without a 1:1
matching between patients and controls). The choice of matching a sample of 40 patients to a
sample of 15 healthy volunteers is based on the calculation of the minimum number of
observations per group needed to detect a between-group difference in the evaluation
criteria, using a multivariable linear regression model.
Each patient and healthy volunteer will undergo four visits:
Visit 1 (inclusion visit) - D0 : ICM (CIC/CENIR) (30-minute clinical visit + 65-minute 3 T
MRI)
- information, verification of inclusion/exclusion criteria, signature of the informed
consent form
- neurological evaluation (EDSS, MRC scores) and testing of fatigue (MFIS, Jamar hydraulic
hand dynamometer) to assess the level of physical impairment
- neuropsychological tests (BICAMS) to evaluate the level of cognitive impairment
- pregnancy test for all women of child-bearing age
- 3T MRI - with gadolinium injection for patients only (see 8.1 for administration
procedures) - with DW-MRS sequences to quantify tCr et NAA (N-acetyl aspartate)
diffusivity in a voxel centered on the MSR, and with sequences for volumetric,
structural and functional analyses (65 min)
- blood sampling (4 mL) to search for neurofilaments as biological markers of
neurodegeneration.
Visit 2 - M1: NeuroSpin (CEA Center in Saclay, Gif-sur-Yvette, France) (120 minutes)
- Urinary pregnancy test for all women of child-bearing age
- 7T MRI including a whole brain 23Na MRI and a 31P MRS centered on the MSR voxel for
sodium, ATP and PCr quantification (1h40min)
Visit 3 - M12 : ICM (CIC/CENIR) (15-minute clinical visit + 65-minute 3 T MRI)
- neurological evaluation (EDSS, MRC scores) and testing of fatigue (MFIS, Jamar hydraulic
hand dynamometer) to assess the level of physical impairment
- pregnancy test for all women of child-bearing age
- 3T MRI - using the same protocol of V1 - with gadolinium injection for patients only
(see 8.1 for administration procedures) - with DW-MRS sequences to quantify tCr et NAA
(N-acetyl aspartate) diffusivity in a voxel centered on the MSR, and with sequences for
volumetric, structural and functional analyses (65 min)
- blood sampling (4 mL) to search for neurofilaments as biological markers of
neurodegeneration.
Visit 4 - M24 : ICM (CIC/CENIR) (30-minute clinical visit + 65 minute 3 T MRI)
- neurological evaluation (EDSS, MRC scores) and testing of fatigue (MFIS, Jamar hydraulic
hand dynamometer) to assess the level of physical impairment
- neuropsychological tests (BICAMS) to evaluate the level of cognitive impairment
- pregnancy test for all women of child-bearing age
- 3T MRI - using the same protocol of V1 - with gadolinium injection for patients only
(see 8.1 for administration procedures) - with DW-MRS sequences to quantify tCr et NAA
(N-acetyl aspartate) diffusivity in a voxel centered on the MSR, and with sequences for
volumetric, structural and functional analyses (65 min)
- blood sampling (4 mL) to search for neurofilaments as biological markers of
neurodegeneration.
;
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