Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04876404 |
Other study ID # |
H19-03166 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Recruiting |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
January 25, 2021 |
Est. completion date |
May 1, 2024 |
Study information
Verified date |
November 2023 |
Source |
Pacific Parkinson's Research Centre |
Contact |
Alex Pavel |
Phone |
4162547734 |
Email |
alexandra.pavel[@]alumni.ubc.ca |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
This study aims to assess changes in connections within the brain in Parkinson's disease
(PD). We will invite up to 10 people with PD to participate in this study and complete
several brain scans using PET (Positron Emission Tomography) and fMRI (functional Magnetic
Resonance Imaging) on the Hybrid PET/MRI scanner. We will also invite 10 participants without
PD to complete the same scans for comparison. "Somatotopy" refers to how areas of the brain
are organized according to the body part they affect. The striatum is the brain region that
coordinates complex thinking and movement. Plasticity refers to changes in connections within
the brain, which can happen to make up for changes that are related to PD. In this study we
will use PET and fMRI imaging together to investigate changes in the striatum in people
affected by Parkinson's disease. The hybrid PET/MR scanner allows us to perform simultaneous
PET and MRI measurements to investigate this.
Description:
Purpose
The current investigation aims to study the altered striatal plasticity in early stage PD
versus healthy controls to delineate the functional reorganization of dopaminergic
projections in PD neurodegeneration. Analysis will be initially restricted to early PD, when
compensatory mechanisms are likely compensating for deficits arising from dopamine
deficiency. The use of hybrid PET-MRI imaging will allow for the simultaneous assessment of
patterns of striatal activation and functional connectivity, as well as dopamine release
induced by a variety of cognitive and motor tasks. In the future, depending upon the findings
of this study, we will examine the effects of disease progression on segregation of striatal
function. Altered plasticity is likely to contribute to clinical progression of disease and
to disease and treatment related complications, thus this investigation may help advance the
development of more effective PD treatment measures.
This investigation is intended as a pilot study. We currently do not have data on which to
base a power analysis for sample size, however based on our previous experience using a
double or triple bolus [11C] raclopride techniques, a sample size of 10 individuals per study
group is adequate to detect between-group differences in dopamine release using a single
bolus technique. Previous investigations we will be referencing in our study have similarly
relied on small sample sizes to obtain their data.
We are specifically interested in tracking functional changes within the brain in early PD,
as this is when compensatory mechanisms are still compensating for deficits arising from
dopamine deficiency. Thus for the purposes of this investigation we would like to focus on
early PD, with the potential to follow the PD cohort in a longitudinal fashion in future
investigations, to assess progressive loss of segregation over time.
Hypotheses
1. In healthy subjects, there will be segregation of striatal activation as measured by
cerebral blood flow determined by BOLD fMRI, as well as striatal dopamine release
determined using simultaneous [11C]raclopride PET, according to body site (motor
activation) and task type (motor vs. cognitive vs. reward)
2. In patients with PD, this segregation will be lost in a progressive fashion, in which
caudal and dorsal striatal activation and dopamine release are lost first, with these
functions shifted to progressively more rostral and ventral regions of the striatum.
Research Design
This is a cross-sectional study on 20 subjects (10 healthy control, 10 PD), involving 2-3
visits per subject to the Pacific Parkinson's Research Centre in UBC, Vancouver, BC. Each
study participant will undergo 4 separate scans, 2 scans per day.