Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Not yet recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05914649 |
Other study ID # |
REB23-0202 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Not yet recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
June 1, 2024 |
Est. completion date |
December 31, 2029 |
Study information
Verified date |
June 2023 |
Source |
University of Calgary |
Contact |
Satish R Raj, MD MSCI |
Phone |
(403)210-6152 |
Email |
autonomic.research[@]ucalgary.ca |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Patients with Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome (POTS) and Post-Acute Sequelae of
COVID (PASC, or "Long COVID") experience cognitive dysfunction. The investigators will test
the hypothesis that 999 mL of IV saline will improve cognitive function in patients with POTS
and Long COVID compared to placebo (50 mL of saline).
Description:
Many POTS patients report cognitive dysfunction, otherwise referred to as brain fog, mental
fog, mental clouding, or mental fatigue. Importantly, this cognitive dysfunction can occur
even while lying down or seated, limiting the ability to engage in work and educational
activities. Despite the prevalence and clinical impact of cognitive dysfunction in POTS,
there are limited studies examining this phenomenon. Many patients with post-acute sequelae
of SARS-COV-2 (PASC, or "Long COVID") experience symptoms such as subjective cognitive
impairment ("brain fog"), fatigue, memory loss, headache, and fluctuation of blood pressure,
amongst other signs and symptoms. Compared to healthy controls, this study will measure
cognitive function in patients with POTS and Long COVID. This study will also evaluate IV
normal saline (999 mL infusion) as a potential treatment for reduced cognitive function in
POTS and Long COVID. This cross-over study will use a 50 mL saline infusion as a placebo
control.
The findings from this study will be an initial first step towards understanding any
neurocognitive impairment in participants with long COVID and POTS patients. This is a
critical first step to future studies to assess underlying pathophysiology and potential
treatments.
Primary hypothesis: Some objective measures of neurocognitive functions will improve in Long
COVID and POTS patients after the infusion of 999 mL of normal saline compared to 50mL
placebo control.
The primary analysis will compare the standing 5RTI task on the CANTAB testing scores between
999 mL saline infusion and 50 mL saline infusion (placebo).
Study Day and Instrumentation:
- A trained research staff member will insert an intravenous line in the vein of the
participant's arm to administer either 999 mL or 50 mL of normal saline, which can take
up to 30 minutes.
- After instrumentation, the participant will lie supine for at least 10 minutes while
their ECG and BP are continuously recorded.
- The participant will stand up quickly (within several seconds) and then stand quietly
for about 11 minutes while the recording continues. The lying-to-stand procedure will
allow us to assess the hemodynamics of IST, POTS, and OH. A chair will be provided to
the participant at any time they want to sit down during the test.
- After the stand test, the participant will be asked to do the Trail-Making Test (TMT) in
the standing position. They will be asked to join numbers and letters in a circle. This
test should not take more than approximately 10 minutes. A chair will be provided if
they want to sit down at any time during the test.
- The participant will then be seated comfortably in a chair with their feet on the floor.
They will be asked to do the Heart Counting Task (HCT) test. The participant will be
asked to count their heartbeats without using their hands or other means to feel their
pulse, which might affect their performance. This test will take approximately 10
minutes.
- The research team will then de-instrument the participant except for the Blood Pressure
cuff on the arm. The team will continue to monitor the blood pressure throughout the
study.
- Neuropsychological testing of the cognitive domains of memory, attention and executive
function will be assessed using the Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery
(CANTAB) both seated and standing.
- The seated cognitive testing period will last approximately 60 minutes.
- The participant will be asked to stand unaided for up to 30 minutes and repeat portions
of the CANTAB tests. Blood Pressure will be monitored throughout the stand test. A chair
will be provided to the participant in case they would want to sit down.
- At the end of each stand test, the investigators will assess the patient's symptoms
using the Vanderbilt Orthostatic Symptoms Score (VOSS). VOSS is a 9-item symptom rating,
with each item scoring from 0 (absent) to 10 (worst) for a total score ranging from 0 to
90.
- The study will then be finished. The investigators will remove the recording patches and
electrodes.
- The participant will then be booked for the second visit according to their convenience,
where all the tests will be repeated, including IV insertion and infusion of normal
saline, supine, and stand, and the cognitive tests (CANTAB, TMT, and HCT). Repeating
these tests will help the research team assess whether the cognitive functions will
improve for the Long COVID and POTS patients with blood volume expansion with the
infusion of normal saline.
CANTAB Testing Protocol: CANTAB tests have demonstrated sensitivity to detecting changes in
neuropsychological performance and include tests of working memory, learning and executive
function; visual, verbal and episodic memory; attention, information processing and reaction
time; social and emotion recognition, decision making and response control. The subtests that
will be used in this study for seated cognitive function are: Reaction Time Test (psychomotor
Speed), Rapid Visual Information processing (Attention), Paired Associates Learning (Visual
Episodic Memory), Spatial Span (Working memory), Verbal Recognition Memory (Verbal memory),
Multitasking Test (Executive Function - Inhibition), Stocking of Cambridge (Executive
Function - Planning) and the Emotional Bias Task (Emotion Processing). All tests are
administered using a touchscreen tablet, and participants will respond to each test
on-screen. Standardized written and audio instructions are given to participants through the
software, and practice trials are completed before each test, reducing practice effects.
Seated testing will be completed in approximately 60 minutes. The Reaction Time Test, Rapid
Visual Processing and Multi Tasking tests will be repeated upon standing and will take
approximately 30 minutes to complete.
After the in-lab portion of the study, participants will complete a series of validated
questionnaires through a paper or RedCap secure web application for assessment of psychiatric
symptoms. A unique URL link will be sent to the participants via Redcap Survey. These online
surveys will take approximately 60 minutes to complete.