Multiple Sclerosis Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effect of Percutaneous Venoplasty on Muscular Function, Mobility and Fatigue of Multiple Sclerosis (MS) Patients With Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency (CCSVI).
Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is a demyelinating disease of the central nervous system (CNS) that
often results in reduced muscle function which produces fatigue, weakness and a decline in
daily mobility. Although the underlying cause of the disease is unknown a possible
contributory mechanism is chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI). Post-mortem
studies and magnetic resonance venography have shown a strong relationship between the
cerebral venous system and MS cortical plaques. From this a role for CCSVI in MS has been
suggested: venous malformations that result in venous hypertension, pressure on the blood
brain barrier and subsequent inflammation due to leakage of haemosiderin into the
parenchyma. This provokes an immune response which results in neurodegeneration. A procedure
known as percutaneous venoplasty whereupon a balloon is inserted and inflated into the
jugular vein has been developed to improve this drainage of the CNS, reduce venous
hypertension and improve symptoms associated with MS. Although this procedure is widely
practiced throughout the world it has yet to be fully accepted as it needs to be supported
by evidence based clinical trials. As such NHS National Institute for Health and Clinical
Excellence (NICE) recently issued a consultation document to determine more about the
procedure's clinical safety and efficacy. A common concern raised is the ability to prevent
any possible placebo effect and like any other clinical trial should offer a sham procedure
to a matched control group. The difficulty with this option are the ethical issues
associated with an invasive sham treatment and also the practical issues of masking a
potentially painful treatment such as venoplasty. One option is to have blinded neurological
assessment of patients who have either been treated with venoplasty or had no active
treatment. Another option is to use dependent measures that are unaffected by motivational
or psychological influences which avoids any placebo effect issue. One such dependent
measure is motor unit firing behaviour whilst contracting at a submaximal target force.
Typically clinicians have used this to manage motor disorder patients but have used
cumbersome invasive technology that can only measure a few motor units with limited
accuracy. However, De Luca et al recently developed a high density surface electromyographic
(HDsEMG) system that can measure 30-40 motor units with 92-97% accuracy. From this it has
been proposed as a highly effective tool for evaluating efficacy of therapeutic
interventions for upper motoneuron disorders such as MS.
Accordingly the investigators propose to use a repeated measures design on an experimental
(receiving venoplasty) and control (not receiving venoplasty) MS groups (6 patients in each
group) to determine the effect of the treatment on muscular function, mobility and fatigue.
This would be combined with independent blinded neurological assessment of the two groups of
patients.
This design enables us to achieve two aims:
1. Acute neuromuscular response to the treatment
2. Chronic response to the treatment (6 weeks) to determine the effect on muscular
function, mobility and fatigue.*
Methods
- Four (first two to establish baseline variability of measures) repeat visits to the
laboratory at University of Stirling to establish neuromuscular measures:
1. HDsEMG pre and post tetanic induced fatigue
2. Muscle fibre conduction velocity as previously described (Hunter et al., 2011)
3. Ultrasound for CCSVI determination on visits 1 and 3
4. DEXA scans for alterations in body composition on visits 2 and 4
- With the use of accelerometers monitor free living activity on days 0-7 and 9-42 (post
venoplasty).
n/a
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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