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Gilenya's Impact on Cognitive Function and Thalamic Volumes

Impact of Gilenya on Cognitive Function and Thalamic Volume Measured by 7 Tesla MRI in Multiple Sclerosis

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03243721
Enrollment
20
Registered
2017-08-09
Start date
2017-10-20
Completion date
2019-11-12
Last updated
2021-09-05

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Multiple Sclerosis

Keywords

multiple sclerosis, thalamus, high field MRI, cognition

Brief summary

This evaluation will be a one-year feasibility study to characterize the neuroprotective benefits of Gilenya and its effects on cognition and grey matter volumes. The study will enroll 15 patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis being treated with Gilenya and 5 healthy controls. Each participant will undergo a battery of neurometric testing at baseline, six months, and one year. In addition, patients will undergo high-field 7T MRI at the same time points.

Detailed description

Cognitive impairment is a well-recognized manifestation of multiple sclerosis (MS) with prevalence estimates ranging from 43 to 70%. It is also known to occur as early as the first demyelinating event and is a major factor contributing to quality of life in MS. Treatment strategies for cognitive impairment in MS are limited. Several agents have been tested as therapeutics for MS-related cognitive dysfunction and have showed no major benefit. Cognitive rehabilitation has shown some promise, but the data are limited and many studies have suffered from methodological shortcomings. Given the lack of well-established treatment options and the substantial impact of cognitive impairment, protection of cognitive function from the earliest stages of the disease is of great importance. Cognitive outcomes received relatively little attention in the pivotal studies of MS disease modifying therapies (DMT), but some data suggest that DMT may have a positive impact on cognition. Gilenya is of special interest because it was found to have a significant protective effect on whole brain atrophy when compared against placebo and intramuscular interferon β-1a in two phase III studies, showing a 31-35% reduction in percentage brain volume change. Gilenya's effect on whole brain atrophy leads to the natural hypothesis that it may have a beneficial effect on cognitive function in MS. Also of particular interest is the extent to which protection of the thalamus and cortex contributes to Gilenya's effect on whole brain atrophy and possible effects on cognition. The study will enroll 15 subjects from the Cleveland Clinic Mellen Center patient population. Participants must have been on Gilenya for at least 6 months at the time of study entry. The study will involve three assessments: at baseline, six months, and one year. At each time point, participants will undergo 7T MRI of the brain with and without contrast. Participants will also undergo a battery of neurometric testing at each time point. The tests will include the Brief Visuospatial Memory Test - Revised (visuospatial skills), the iPadTM Processing Speed Test (processing speed), the Selective Reminding Test (verbal learning and memory), and the Delis-Kaplan Executive Function System Sorting Test (problem-solving skills; can only be administered at baseline and one year due to version limitations).

Interventions

DIAGNOSTIC_TEST7T MRI

A high field MRI that will take approximately one hour.

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTNeurocognitive testing

A series of tests to assess memory, verbal skills, and visuospatial skills.

Sponsors

Novartis Pharmaceuticals
CollaboratorINDUSTRY
The Cleveland Clinic
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE

Masking description

There is no masking in this study.

Intervention model description

There will be two groups running in parallel. One will be MS patients (15) and the other will be control patients (5). Both groups will receive the same interventions.

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 50 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

(MS Patients): 1. RRMS phenotype 2. Treated with Gilenya for ≥6 months at the time of the baseline visit. 3. Age 18-50 inclusive. 4. EDSS 0-4.0 5. Disease duration of 5-15 years. 6. At least 12 years of education (high school diploma or general equivalency diploma). 7. Physically capable of completing neurometric testing and MRI studies. Inclusion Criteria (Healthy Controls): 1. Age 18-50 inclusive. 2. At least 12 years of education (high school diploma or general equivalency diploma) 3. Physically capable of completing neurometric testing and MRI studies.

Exclusion criteria

(MS Patients): 1. Contraindication to MRI (e.g. metal implants) 2. Current use of immunomodulatory or immunosuppressant medications other than Gilenya. 3. Disease of the central nervous system other than MS (e.g. Alzheimer disease, stroke, epilepsy). 4. Use of anti-psychotic or psychostimulant medications. Patients started on modafinil or armodafinil more than six months prior to enrollment will not be excluded. 5. Ongoing major depressive disorder that, in the opinion of the investigator, may affect cognitive functioning. 6. MS relapse within 90 days of study entry. 7. Treatment with corticosteroids within 90 days of study entry. 8. Current illicit substance use. 9. History of alcohol or drug abuse.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Thalamic volume to cognitive performanceOne year.Spearman's correlation coefficient of change in thalamic volume and change in cognitive function from baseline to one year in RRMS patients treated with Gilenya.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Thalamic nuclei to cognitive performanceSix months and one year.Spearman correlation coefficient for change in the volume of each thalamic nuclei (from baseline to six months and from baseline to one year) and change in cognitive testing scores (from baseline to six months and from baseline to one year).
Thalamic myelin density to cognitive performanceSix months and one year.Spearman correlation coefficient of change in thalamic myelin density (from baseline to six months and from baseline to one year) to change in cognitive test performance (from baseline to six months and from baseline to one year).
Thalamic axon density to cognitive performanceSix months and one year.Spearman correlation coefficient of change in thalamic axon density (from baseline to six months and from baseline to one year) to change in cognitive test performance (from baseline to six months and from baseline to one year).
Thalamic volume to other MRI metricsSix months and one year.Ratio of change in thalamic volume from baseline to six months and from baseline to one year to 1) change in brain volume (from baseline to six months and from baseline to one year); 2) change in T2 lesion volume (from baseline to six months and from baseline to one year); and 3) change in cortical thickness (from baseline to six months and from baseline to one year).
Changes in cognitive performance in Gilenya treated patients vs controlsSix months and one year.Ratio of change in cognitive test performance (from baseline to six months and from baseline to one year) between Gilenya treated patients and controls.
Thalamic volume to cognitive performanceSix months.Spearman's correlation coefficient of change in thalamic volume and change in cognitive function from baseline to six months in RRMS patients treated with Gilenya.
Changes in MRI metrics in Gilenya treated patients vs. controlsSix months and one year.Ratio of change in each of the following between Gilenya treated MS patients and healthy controls: 1.) Thalamic volume change (from baseline to six months and from baseline to one year); 2) Cortical thickness change (from baseline to six months and from baseline to one year); 3) thalamic axon density change (from baseline to six months and from baseline to one year); 4) thalamic myelin density (from baseline to six months and from baseline to one year).

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026