Autonomic Failure Clinical Trial
Official title:
Plasma Exchange for Autoimmune Autonomic Failure
This study will explore whether an antibody is influencing the autonomic nervous system, and
if its removal will eliminate signs and symptoms of failure in that system. The autonomic
nervous system is responsible for many automatic changes involved in everyday activities,
such as standing up, digesting food, and exercising in the heat. Antibodies fight germs but
sometimes cause health problems. Removal of the antibody is done through a procedure called a
plasma exchange.
Patients with primary chronic autonomic failure and a circulating antibody to what is called
the neuronal nicotinic receptor may be eligible for this study. To be eligible, patients will
have participated in an earlier study, protocol number 03-N-0004. Patients will undergo tests
and procedures that include an electrocardiogram, and blood collection for hepatitis, HIV,
and pregnancy. Blood will be tested for a complete blood count, clotting factors, and
chemistries. There will also be tests for liver function, kidney function, cortisol, and
thyroid. Participants will be tested for signs and symptoms of autonomic failure, and will be
asked to complete questionnaires about various symptoms before the plasma exchange, 1 or 2
weeks afterward, and then monthly or bimonthly for up to 1 year. Patients will undergo a
series of other tests. In one test, a patient is upright and blows against a resistance
(Valsalva maneuver). The quantitative sudomotor axon reflex test (QSART) uses iontophoresis,
involving application of acetylcholine, a chemical messenger, and a small amount of
electricity. QSART examines the regulation of sweating, a particular aspect of the autonomic
nervous system. There will be a test using edrophonium, given intravenously (IV), to evaluate
that drug's effects on the heart, skin, glands, gastrointestinal activity, bladder tone, and
salivation. A glucagon test, also by IV, will show patients' ability to release the hormone
adrenaline.
The plasma exchange will be performed by use of an automated cell separator. Patients' blood
will be removed continuously through a needle in the arm. Blood cells will be separated from
the plasma by a spinning process and continuously returned to circulation through a needle in
the patients' opposite arm. Blood cells that are returned will be mixed with albumin, a
sterile replacement solution. A blood thinner, citrate, will be given, to prevent clotting of
blood. This whole procedure will take about 2 hours. Patients will typically undergo five
exchange procedures in about 10 days while they are inpatients at the NIH Clinical Center.
The amount of plasma removed in a single session and the number of sessions will be set by
the NIH Blood Bank. It is expected that patients' autonomic failure will improve after
several days of starting the plasma exchange. Testing for symptoms of autonomic failure and
autonomic function testing will occur about 1 month after the plasma exchange and monthly or
bimonthly for up to 1 year. For each visit of testing, patients will be inpatients for about
2 days. If autonomic failure recurs, patients may have a second plasma exchange, with the
same follow-up tests, for about 1 year.
Background: Until recently, it was thought that primary chronic autonomic failure occurring
without central neurodegeneration (pure autonomic failure, PAF) reflected diffuse loss of
catecholamine-producing cells (sympathetic noradrenergic nerves and adrenomedullary
chromaffin cells) outside the brain. Rarely, however, PAF patients have clinical laboratory
findings suggesting decreased post-ganglionic nerve traffic in intact autonomic nerves,
rather than denervation. To date, all of four such patients have also had a high titer of a
circulating antibody to the nicotinic receptor mediating ganglionic neurotransmission. In one
case, studied by another group, plasma exchange reversed signs and symptoms of autonomic
failure, consistent with the antibody being pathogenic.
Purpose: In this Protocol, we will carry out plasma exchange in patients we identify as
having PAF, intact cardiac noradrenergic innervation, and a circulating antibody to the
neuronal nicotinic receptor, to determine whether antibody pathogenicity is a consistent
finding in this condition. We will assess the extent of relationship between symptoms, signs,
and clinical laboratory indices of autonomic function with the titer of the antibody and
obtain abundant plasma for antibody characterization and target protein identification.
Methods: Autonomic function testing will be done before plasma exchange, 1-2 weeks after
plasma exchange, and monthly or bi-monthly thereafter for up to one year. Plasma exchange may
be repeated once, when symptoms of autonomic failure return as the antibody level builds up,
to verify in individual patients whether repetition of plasma exchange produces reproducible
amelioration of clinical and laboratory measures of autonomic failure.
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