Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT06234995
Other study ID # STUDY00007291
Secondary ID P50NS123103
Status Recruiting
Phase Phase 4
First received
Last updated
Start date August 9, 2021
Est. completion date July 31, 2026

Study information

Verified date January 2024
Source Emory University
Contact Jonna Seppa
Phone 404-727-1509
Email jonna.k.seppa@emory.edu
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Patients with Parkinson's Disease will be studied before, during, and after a deep brain stimulation implantation procedure to see if the stimulation location and the size of the electrical field produced by subthalamic nucleus (STN) DBS determine the degree to which DBS engages circuits that involve prefrontal cortex executive functions, and therefore have a direct impact on the patient's ability to inhibit actions.


Description:

Patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) commonly develop difficulties with executive function due to neurodegeneration in neuronal networks that involve the prefrontal cortex and associative territories of the basal ganglia, even in early stages of the disease. Executive cognitive functions serve to direct behavior toward a goal and modify actions to accommodate changing demands. One of the key components of executive control is the ability to cancel or inhibit habitual responses. Motor response inhibition is critical in everyday life, for example, to stop crossing the street when a speeding car appears. In patients with PD, the failure of these inhibitory control mechanisms may manifest, for example, as an inability to stop festinating gait or as impulsively jumping out of a chair and losing balance. Beyond the failure of stopping or inhibiting motor responses, patients with PD are also prone to impulsivity and compulsions, leading to behaviors such as overeating or gambling. Approximately 15-20% of PD patients are diagnosed with impulse control disorders which can be exacerbated by dopaminergic medications. Furthermore, PD patients with deep brain stimulation (DBS) may develop additional impairments in executive function. Given the prevalence of executive dysfunction, the everyday-importance of this issue, and the connection with PD therapies, disease- or therapy-induced alterations in inhibitory control are an important area of research in PD. The primary clinical objective for DBS therapy in PD has been to optimize motor function. The effect of stimulation on cognition and behavior, particularly in the subthalamic nucleus (STN), has been controversial. Behavioral side effects have been supported by reports of worsened cognition, increased impulsivity and even suicidal behavior. While large, randomized trials do not show significant detrimental changes in global cognition with DBS, meta-analyses and systematic reviews have shown adverse effects on executive functions, particularly response inhibition. Based on animal studies, the STN can be divided into a sensorimotor (dorsolateral), cognitive-associative (ventromedial) and limbic (medial) parts. Most DBS leads implanted into the STN contain four ring-shaped contacts, spaced over a total distance of 7.5-10.5mm. While surgeons generally target the dorsolateral sensorimotor region of the STN, the most ventral DBS contacts almost inevitably end up in the ventral associative or limbic regions of the nucleus. There are anecdotal observations of abrupt mood and behavioral changes (impulsivity, hypomania, depression) with STN DBS, perhaps due to spread of stimulation to the ventral STN regions. However, the effect of stimulation location on cognitive function is poorly understood and unaccounted for in clinical programming which may lead to suboptimal gains in quality of life. Electrophysiology and imaging studies have demonstrated that the STN is a key node in the inhibitory network, although other basal ganglia nuclei are involved. The STN receives input from prefrontal cortical areas (via the prefrontal hyperdirect pathway) and is thought to provide a global inhibitory signal to the basal ganglia and thalamus to halt habitual responses and allow additional processing time in situations of conflict and uncertainty. STN DBS might (antidromically) disrupt the inhibitory signal from the cortex, leading to impulsive responses and inability to inhibit actions. However, it remains unclear whether stimulation in the STN worsens or improves motor response inhibition. It is also possible that some aspects of inhibitory control (proactive vs. reactive) can worsen during stimulation while others improve suggesting that the effects may be mediated by different pathways or mechanisms. Proactive inhibition refers to preparatory mechanisms that facilitate action inhibition (i.e. enables a person to act with restraint), while reactive inhibition is a sudden stopping process triggered by an external stimulus. This study will address the following knowledge gaps: 1. Which cortical mechanisms (on the level of population-based electrophysiologic activity) are engaged in different aspects of inhibitory control (proactive control vs reactive; discrete movements vs continuous) in PD patients compared to healthy controls? 2. Does the effect of STN DBS on motor response inhibition depend on activation of the prefrontal hyperdirect pathway? Successful completion of the proposed studies will provide substantial new knowledge about the frontal brain areas involved in inhibitory control, their topographic representation within the STN and means of cortico-subcortical communication. The results may inform future DBS targeting and programming strategies, aiming to avoid cognitive side effects of STN DBS. Recent engineering upgrades to clinical devices (e.g. segmented leads) allow more precise fine tuning of the stimulation field which can serve to design stimulation strategies that maximize motor benefit and minimize cognitive and behavioral side effects. This study will enroll patients with Parkinson's Disease as well as health controls. Participation in this trial does not affect patient's clinical management. Patients' medication (levodopa) dosages and decision to undergo deep brain stimulation surgery are based on clinical needs. There are 3 study aims: Aim 1: To determine the effect of the PD disease process, levodopa treatment, and cognitive status on performance and cortical electrophysiology during motor response inhibition tasks. Participants with PD prior to surgery to implant the DBS leads and healthy controls are examined in Aim 1. Aim 2: To characterize cortico-subthalamic connectivity during proactive motor response inhibition during surgery to implant clinically-indicated DBS leads in participants with PD. Aim 3: To determine if activation of the prefrontal cortico-STN hyperdirect pathway impairs response inhibition in participants with PD from Aim 1 after implantation of DBS leads. The experimental interventions considered in this study are: 1) medication state (PD patients are tested in levodopa-off and levodopa-on state), and 2) DBS stimulation settings (PD patients are tested under 4 stimulation settings: clinical, sham, maximizing prefrontal activation, and minimizing prefrontal activation). Healthy controls will attend two study visits, while patients with PD will be in the study for up to 18 months.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Recruiting
Enrollment 80
Est. completion date July 31, 2026
Est. primary completion date July 31, 2026
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 45 Years to 75 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria for Persons with Parkinson's Disease for Aim 1: - diagnosis of idiopathic Parkinson's disease (PD) - Hoehn and Yahr (H&Y) stage 2-4 (off medication) Exclusion Criteria for Persons with Parkinson's Disease for Aim 1: - severe tremor at rest or severe dyskinesia which would cause significant artifacts in electrophysiological signals - inability to hold antiparkinsonian medications for research recordings - dementia Inclusion Criteria for Persons with Parkinson's Disease for Aim 2: - diagnosis of idiopathic PD - there is a clinical indication for DBS surgery - normal preoperative MRI - ability to tolerate microelectrode-guided neurosurgery in an awake state Exclusion Criteria for Persons with Parkinson's Disease for Aim 2: - presence of a coagulopathy - uncontrolled hypertension - heart disease - other medical conditions considered to increase the patient's risk for surgical complications Inclusion Criteria for Persons with Parkinson's Disease for Aim 3: - diagnosis of idiopathic PD - functioning DBS system Exclusion Criteria for Persons with Parkinson's Disease for Aim 3: - severe tremor at rest or severe dyskinesia which would cause significant artifacts in electrophysiological signals - inability to hold antiparkinsonian medications for research recordings - inability to tolerate temporary discontinuation of DBS therapy or alteration of stimulation settings for research purposes - other medical conditions considered to increase the patient's risk for surgical complications Inclusion Criteria for Healthy Controls: - age 45-75 Exclusion Criteria for Healthy Controls: - history of a neuropsychiatric disorder and/or treatment with psychotropic medications

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Drug:
Levodopa
Participants will take levodopa in dosages prescribed by their care provider. Patients will be instructed to not take their regularly prescribed PD medications for 12 hours prior to the study assessment, as is typical for clinical evaluations in patients with PD. Participants will be tested in both levodopa-off (after 12 hours of not having medication) and levodopa-on states.
Device:
Clinical DBS Setting
Deep brain stimulation performed with the patients' optimized clinical setting.
Sham DBS
Deep brain stimulation performed with sham stimulation.
DBS Setting Maximizing Prefrontal Activation
Deep brain stimulation performed to maximize the activation of the prefrontal cortico-STN projections.
DBS Setting Minimizing Prefrontal Activation
Deep brain stimulation performed to minimize the activation of the prefrontal cortico-STN projections.

Locations

Country Name City State
United States Emory Brain Health Center Atlanta Georgia
United States Emory University Hospital Atlanta Georgia

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Emory University National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Response Time During Go/No-Go (GNG) Task for Participants in Aim 1 The GNG task is a tool for measuring impulsiveness by asking participants to respond to a cue signal for pressing a button. There are Go trials, where the button should be pressed, and No-Go trials, where the button should not be pressed. A total of 240 trials will be administered (5 blocks of 30) after an initial practice block (12 trials). An additional 120 Go only trials will be administered prior to the Go/No-Go blocks and serve as a control without inhibitory demands. Participants with PD attend a single study visit, completing this task twice: once after not taking PD medications for 12 hours and again after levodopa dosage. Healthy controls complete the task twice during one study visit. Response time is measured in milliseconds (ms) during the GNG task. Day 1 (before and after levodopa dosage for persons with PD)
Primary Percent of Errors During Go/No-Go (GNG) Task for Participants in Aim 1 The GNG task is a tool for measuring impulsiveness by asking participants to respond to a cue signal for pressing a button. There are Go trials, where the button should be pressed, and No-Go trials, where the button should not be pressed. A total of 240 trials will be administered (5 blocks of 30) after an initial practice block (12 trials). An additional 120 Go only trials will be administered prior to the Go/No-Go blocks and serve as a control without inhibitory demands. Participants with PD attend a single study visit, completing this task twice: once after not taking PD medications for 12 hours and again after levodopa dosage. Healthy controls complete the task twice during one study visit. Accuracy is measured as the percentage of errors during the GNG task. Day 1 (before and after levodopa dosage for persons with PD)
Primary Stopping Time During Modified Stop Signal (MSS) Task for Participants in Aim 1 For the MSS task, a fixation cross indicates the start of a trial. After a variable delay (300-700 ms) this signal is replaced by a green Go signal circle, prompting the subject to start to make circling movements with a computer mouse at approximately one rotation per second using dominant hand. After 500 ms the green circle is replaced by a visual countdown to when a red Stop signal appears (planned stop). In 50% of the trials, the Stop signal appears unexpectedly during the countdown (unplanned stop). A total of 120 trials will be administered (10 blocks of 12). Participants with PD attend a single study visit, completing this task twice: once after not taking PD medications for 12 hours and again after levodopa dosage. Healthy controls complete the task twice during one study visit. Stopping time is measured in milliseconds. Day 1 (before and after levodopa dosage for persons with PD)
Primary Response Time During Go/No-Go (GNG) Task for Participants in Aim 3 The GNG task is a tool for measuring impulsiveness by asking participants to respond to a cue signal for pressing a button. There are Go trials, where the button should be pressed, and No-Go trials, where the button should not be pressed. A total of 240 trials will be administered (5 blocks of 30) after an initial practice block (12 trials). An additional 120 Go only trials will be administered prior to the Go/No-Go blocks and serve as a control without inhibitory demands. Participants with PD attend two study visits, within a 4-week period, at 6 to 12 months after implantation of the DBS leads. Participants will not take PD medications for 12 hours prior to the study visit. During each study visit chronic DBS will be turned off and two stimulation settings will be tested at each study visit so that participants all four stimulation settings over the two study visits. Response time is measured in milliseconds (ms) during the GNG task. Up to 12 months post-implantation of DBS leads
Primary Percent of Errors During Go/No-Go (GNG) Task for Participants in Aim 3 The GNG task is a tool for measuring impulsiveness by asking participants to respond to a cue signal for pressing a button. There are Go trials, where the button should be pressed, and No-Go trials, where the button should not be pressed. A total of 240 trials will be administered (5 blocks of 30) after an initial practice block (12 trials). An additional 120 Go only trials will be administered prior to the Go/No-Go blocks and serve as a control without inhibitory demands. Participants with PD attend two study visits, within a 4-week period, at 6 to 12 months after implantation of the DBS leads. Participants will not take PD medications for 12 hours prior to the study visit. During each study visit chronic DBS will be turned off and two stimulation settings will be tested at each study visit so that participants all four stimulation settings over the two study visits. Accuracy is measured as the percentage of errors during the GNG task. Up to 12 months post-implantation of DBS leads
Primary Stopping Time During Modified Stop Signal (MSS) Task for Participants in Aim 3 For the MSS task, a fixation cross indicates the start of a trial. After a variable delay (300-700 ms) this signal is replaced by a green Go signal circle, prompting the subject to start to make circling movements with a computer mouse at approximately one rotation per second using dominant hand. After 500 ms the green circle is replaced by a visual countdown to when a red Stop signal appears (planned stop). In 50% of the trials, the Stop signal appears unexpectedly during the countdown (unplanned stop). A total of 120 trials will be administered. Participants with PD attend two study visits, within a 4-week period, at 6 to 12 months after implantation of the DBS leads. Participants will not take PD medications for 12 hours prior to the study visit. During each visit chronic DBS will be turned off and two stimulation settings will be tested so that participants all four stimulation settings over the two study visits. Stopping time is measured in milliseconds. Up to 12 months post-implantation of DBS leads
Secondary Electroencephalogram (EEG) Signals During GNG for Participants in Aim 1 Cortical EEG signals are acquired simultaneously during GNG task. Trigger pulses are sent from the task computer to the EEG system indicating the stimulus onsets and subject responses (button press or mouse movement). A photodiode attached to the screen will monitor the timing of stimulus presentation synchronized to EEG. Day 1 (before and after levodopa dosage for persons with PD)
Secondary Electroencephalogram (EEG) Signals During MSS for Participants in Aim 1 Cortical EEG signals are acquired simultaneously during the MSS task. Trigger pulses will be sent from the task computer to the EEG system indicating the stimulus onsets and subject responses (button press or mouse movement). The mouse spatial coordinates and data from a wrist accelerometer are recorded during the MSS task. A photodiode attached to the screen will monitor the timing of stimulus presentation synchronized to EEG. Day 1 (before and after levodopa dosage for persons with PD)
Secondary Electrocorticography (ECoG) Signals During GNG for Participants in Aim 2 ECoG signals are recorded during interoperative administration of the GNG task. The GNG task is a tool for measuring impulsiveness by asking participants to respond to a cue signal for pressing a button. There are Go trials, where the button should be pressed, and No-Go trials, where the button should not be pressed. A photodiode is affixed to the screen to synchronize the electrophysiological recordings with stimulus onsets and, like the response button readout, inputs directly into the recording system. During surgical procedure to implant clinically-indicated DBS leads (approximately 15 minutes on the single day of surgery)
Secondary Electroencephalogram (EEG) Signals During GNG for Participants in Aim 3 Cortical EEG signals are acquired simultaneously during GNG task. Trigger pulses are sent from the task computer to the EEG system indicating the stimulus onsets and subject responses (button press or mouse movement). A photodiode attached to the screen will monitor the timing of stimulus presentation synchronized to EEG. Up to 12 months post-implantation of DBS leads
Secondary Electroencephalogram (EEG) Signals During MSS for Participants in Aim 3 Cortical EEG signals are acquired simultaneously during the MSS task. Trigger pulses will be sent from the task computer to the EEG system indicating the stimulus onsets and subject responses (button press or mouse movement). The mouse spatial coordinates and data from a wrist accelerometer are recorded during the MSS task. A photodiode attached to the screen will monitor the timing of stimulus presentation synchronized to EEG. Up to 12 months post-implantation of DBS leads
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT05415774 - Combined Deep Brain Stimulation in Parkinson's Disease N/A
Recruiting NCT04691661 - Safety, Tolerability, Pharmacokinetics and Efficacy Study of Radotinib in Parkinson's Disease Phase 2
Active, not recruiting NCT05754086 - A Multidimensional Study on Articulation Deficits in Parkinsons Disease
Completed NCT04045925 - Feasibility Study of the Taïso Practice in Parkinson's Disease N/A
Recruiting NCT04194762 - PARK-FIT. Treadmill vs Cycling in Parkinson´s Disease. Definition of the Most Effective Model in Gait Reeducation N/A
Completed NCT02705755 - TD-9855 Phase 2 in Neurogenic Orthostatic Hypotension (nOH) Phase 2
Terminated NCT03052712 - Validation and Standardization of a Battery Evaluation of the Socio-emotional Functions in Various Neurological Pathologies N/A
Recruiting NCT05830253 - Free-living Monitoring of Parkinson's Disease Using Smart Objects
Recruiting NCT03272230 - Assessment of Apathy in a Real-life Situation, With a Video and Sensors-based System N/A
Recruiting NCT06139965 - Validity and Reliability of the Turkish Version of the Comprehensive Coordination Scale in Parkinson's Patients
Completed NCT04580849 - Telerehabilitation Using a Dance Intervention in People With Parkinson's Disease N/A
Completed NCT04477161 - Effect of Ketone Esters in Parkinson's Disease N/A
Completed NCT03980418 - Evaluation of a Semiconductor Camera for the DaTSCAN™ Exam N/A
Completed NCT04942392 - Digital Dance for People With Parkinson's Disease During the COVID-19 Pandemic N/A
Terminated NCT03446833 - LFP Beta aDBS Feasibility Study N/A
Completed NCT03497884 - Individualized Precise Localization of rTMS on Primary Motor Area N/A
Completed NCT05538455 - Investigating ProCare4Life Impact on Quality of Life of Elderly Subjects With Neurodegenerative Diseases N/A
Recruiting NCT04997642 - Parkinson's Disease and Movement Disorders Clinical Database
Completed NCT04117737 - A Pilot Study of Virtual Reality and Antigravity Treadmill for Gait Improvement in Parkinson N/A
Recruiting NCT03618901 - Rock Steady Boxing vs. Sensory Attention Focused Exercise N/A