Fatigue Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Placebo-controlled Double Blind Crossover Trial of Acetylsalicylic Acid as a Pre-treatment for Exercise in Multiple Sclerosis
Exercise has many benefits for people with multiple sclerosis (MS), such as improved physical
symptoms, mood, fatigue, and cognition. However, many people with MS refrain from exercising
because of the discomfort of exhaustion and overheating that they experience. This study
investigates the use of aspirin before exercise as a treatment to reduce overheating and
exhaustion, thereby availing many more people with MS the opportunity to benefit from
exercise.
The investigators recently published the first-ever report of elevated body temperature in
relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS) patients relative to healthy controls, and elevated temperature
was linked to worse fatigue. This finding that body temperature is elevated and linked to
fatigue in RRMS lays the groundwork for a paradigm shift in our understanding and treatment
of fatigue. That is, the focus shifts from exogenous to endogenous temperature, and from
stimulant medication to cooling treatments.
A recent study comparing healthy adults to adults with MS showed that whereas exercise
increased body temperature in both groups, only in the MS group was it correlated with
exhaustion. The reason for this may relate to the elevation in resting body temperature in
relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS) patients relative to healthy controls. The finding is
clinically meaningful, as elevated body temperature was correlated with worse fatigue in
patients. Exercise Aim: To determine whether pretreatment with ASA (compared to placebo:
within subject crossover design) before exercise results in improved exercise performance
(i.e., increased time-to-exhaustion). The investigators hypothesize that participants will
tolerate exercise for longer after taking ASA than placebo. This hypothesis is based on a)
demonstrated efficacy of antipyretic for reducing body temperature during exercise in healthy
controls, b) demonstrated efficacy of antipyretic for reducing fatigue in non-exercising MS
patients, and c) demonstrated efficacy of elaborate (unblinded) cooling treatments (e.g.,
cooling garments, cooling hand chamber) for improving exercise performance in MS patients.
Note that this project is especially important for MS patients, who have a disease-specific
body temperature elevation and sensitivity to heat (i.e., Uhthoff's).
Exercise is beneficial for people with MS. Exercise has many benefits for persons with
multiple sclerosis (MS), including increased muscle strength, improved balance, decreased
fatigue, decreased depression, improved memory, and improved quality of life. In addition to
clinical improvements, there is direct and indirect neural evidence for beneficial effects of
exercise in MS. For example, work in the experimental autoimmune encephalopathy (EAE) animal
model of MS has shown that exercise protects against demyelination, increases brain-derived
neurotrophic factor (BDNF), and reduces myelin damage and axonal damage. Consistent with
pre-clinical research, MS work in humans has shown increased BDNF and reduction in
pro-inflammatory circulating cytokines (i.e., IL-22) in those who exercised for 24 weeks
versus those who maintained a sedentary lifestyle over the same period of time. In
preliminary MS work from our group, 12 weeks of aerobic exercise resulted in increased
hippocampal volume and hippocampal functional connectivity. Exercise is being considered as a
candidate disease-modifying treatment. However, exercise is only beneficial if people do it.
Despite the preponderance of evidence for exercise's salutary effects, many MS patients are
deterred by overheating and exhaustion brought about by exercise. And while there is good
evidence for the long-term safety profile of exercise in MS, many patients are put off by
short-term discomforts, despite being physically capable of exercising.
Exercise causes overheating in people with MS. In healthy people, exercise triggers the
conversion of metabolic to mechanical energy, resulting in the liberation of approximately
30-70% of the total energy as heat, which causes an increase in core body temperature. As
core body temperature increases, exercise performance worsens. Exercise in persons with MS
also raises body temperature, and heat-related MS symptoms increase following exercise. This
is consistent with Uhthoff's phenomenon: the well-known deleterious impact of heat exposure
and exercise for persons with MS. The investigators recently added an essential piece to this
puzzle, reporting for the very first time that persons with relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS)
have elevated body temperature even before being exposed to heat or exercising (i.e., at
rest) relative to healthy controls. Importantly, this elevation in body temperature is
clinically meaningful as warmer resting body temperature is linked to worse fatigue in
patients with RRMS.Not only does this finding represent a paradigm shift in the
conceptualization of heat sensitivity / heat exposure in persons with MS, but it highlights
the additional burden of exercise-induced heat for people who are already warmer before
exercise begins. Exercise increases body temperature in everyone; however, it was recently
reported that only for persons with MS (compared to healthy controls) is exercise-induced
increase in body temperature linked to exhaustion. Elevated body temperature at rest in
persons with RRMS may be a key reason for this, and may also point to cooling as an effective
treatment.
Cooling treatments are effective for people with MS. Elevated body temperature and its link
to worse fatigue in RRMS patients aligns with positive results of several non-exercise trials
of cooling treatments for reducing fatigue in MS patients none of which considered or
targeted endogenously elevated body temperature. Aligned with this is evidence showing that
cooling treatments administered to MS patients prior to or during exercise improve
performance and reduce exhaustion. For example, in one study, ten MS patients used a
hand-cooling chamber while walking on a treadmill: subjects kept one hand in the airtight
device, a rigid chamber suspended by a bungee cord from above the treadmill throughout
exercise. Cooling resulted in 33% increased exercise duration in the MS patients who kept
their hand in the chamber. These findings support a beneficial impact of cooling during
exercise, although these methods may be difficult to replicate / standardize, and implement
clinically. In other work, whole-body precooling with a cooling vest and cap was used to
successfully decrease perceived exertion during exercise. Yet another method of cooling via
immersion in a cold water bath prior to exercise was found to reduce perceived exertion
during exercise. By way of mechanism, Marino explained the heat-fatigue link in MS by
proposing heat reaction blockade of action potentials in demyelinated neurons (i.e.,
frequency-dependent conduction block), noting that when demyelination is present, only a
small increase in temperature (e.g., the amount induced by exercise) is necessary to
completely block action potentials. This is consistent with seminal work in the giant squid
axon demonstrating the disruption of action potentials in the presence of small, incremental
increases in exogenous heat, ultimately resulting in reversible 'heat block' (cessation of
neuronal conduction). An encouraging observation was that all effects of warming were
completely reversible in this experimental model.
Cooling during exercise is an effective treatment for persons with RRMS. Taken together, the
evidence supports cooling treatments as an effective means of improving exercise performance
in patients with MS, although notably, no prior exercise study in MS has considered elevated
core resting body temperature. Note that the finding of elevated body temperature was
specific to RRMS; prior exercise cooling studies did not restrict their selection criteria to
the relapsing-remitting phenotype. By doing so in the current proposal, the investigators
expect to reveal a larger effect of cooling since relapsing-remitting MS patients with
elevated body temperature at rest are most likely to experience exercise-induced fatigue (and
are therefore most in need of effective cooling treatment). Prior methods of experimental
cooling are cumbersome (e.g., cooling garments, immersion in a cool bath prior to exercise,
insertion of one hand into a vacuum cooling chamber during exercise), thereby limiting
replication and standardization for research use, and restricting practicality for clinical
use. Here, the investigators propose to test the effectiveness of an oral antipyretic taken
before exercise (i.e., administered 1-hour prior to exercise in order to reach peak serum
concentration). Work in healthy adults has shown that antipyretic administration before
exercise reduces body temperature during strenuous exercise in a hot environment, and
improves performance (i.e., increases time-to-exhaustion). Aspirin (acetylsalicylic acid,
ASA) has been selected, as it is shown to effectively reduce fatigue in prior non-exercise
trials in MS (none of which considered aspirin's antipyretic mechanism of action as the key
factor underlying treatment efficacy).
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