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Combining Low Oxygen Therapy and an Adenosine A2a Receptor Antagonist to Improve Functional Mobility After Spinal Cord Injury

A Selective Adenosine 2a Antagonist to Enhance Training-related Gains in Walking Function for Persons With Chronic, Incomplete Spinal Cord Injury

Status
Not yet recruiting
Phases
Phase 1Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT05217498
Enrollment
40
Registered
2022-02-01
Start date
2027-09-01
Completion date
2028-06-30
Last updated
2026-03-20

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

Conditions

Spinal Cord Injuries, Myelopathy

Keywords

spinal cord injury, walking, motor control, istradefylline, adenosine, strength

Brief summary

Breathing brief, moderate bouts of low oxygen trigger (low oxygen therapy, LOT) spinal plasticity (the ability of the nervous system to strengthen neural pathways based on new experiences), and improve walking after spinal cord injury (SCI). The greatest improvements in walking ability occur when LOT is administered prior to skill-based walking practice (WALK). However, the enduring benefits of LOT on walking recovery may be undermined by the accumulation of LOT-induced increase in extracellular adenosine. The goal of the study is to understand the extent to which istradefylline (adenosine 2a receptor antagonist) may limit the competing mechanisms of adenosine on LOT-induced walking recovery following SCI.

Detailed description

This randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial will examine the efficacy of a selective adenosine 2a antagonist (istradefylline) to enhance the beneficial effects of LOT-related gains on overground walking performance after spinal cord injury (SCI). Participants will be randomly assigned to a combinatorial intervention: istradefylline+LOT, placebo+LOT, istradefylline+SHAM. Participants will be asked to avoid caffeine-containing substances for 48 hrs (\> 5\* half-life of \ 7 hrs) before the start of the study. They also will refrain from consuming caffeine during the 4-week combinatorial intervention. Participants enrolled in istradefylline+AIH will receive 20mg of istradefylline orally for 28 consecutive days. After 14 days of istradefylline treatment, the participants will receive 2 weeks (4 sessions/week) of LOT prior to 45min of skill-based walking practice (WALK) within the INSPIRE Lab. A single session of LOT will consist of 15 episodes of breathing 90s low levels of oxygen (10% O2) with 60s intervals at room air (21% O2). Participants enrolled in istradefylline+SHAM will receive 20mg of istradefylline orally for 28 consecutive days. After 14 days of istradefylline treatment, the participants will receive 2 weeks (4 sessions/week) of SHAM therapy prior to 45min of skill-based walking practice (WALK) within the INSPIRE Lab. A single session of SHAM therapy will consist of 15 episodes of breathing 90s of normal levels of oxygen (21% O2) with 60s intervals at room air (21% O2). Participants enrolled in placebo+AIH will receive 20mg of placebo (dextrose) treatment orally for 28 consecutive days. After 14 days of placebo treatment, the participants will receive 2 weeks (4 sessions/week) of LOT prior to 45min of skill-based walking practice (WALK) within the INSPIRE Lab. A single session of LOT will consist of 15 episodes of breathing 90s low levels of oxygen (10% O2) with 60s intervals at room air (21% O2). Blood samples will be collected at baseline, and at the end of week 2, week 4 to assess for potential confounding effects of systemic inflammation and caffeine on responsiveness to the combinatorial interventions. The study will assess functional outcomes, vital signs, and symptoms before and after each intervention. For our primary outcome measure, the study will assess walking speed (10-meter walk test, 10MWT) relative to baseline at the end of day 5 (D5), and 8 (F1) and 14 days (F2) post-treatment. This study also will assess leg strength, walking distance, and coordination on D5, F1, and F2 as secondary outcome measures. A linear mixed model will be used to compare differences in 10MWT with treatment and time as main effects and participants as random effects. This study will follow the Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials.

Interventions

Consume 20mg tablet of istradefylline for 28 consecutive days.

Breath intermittent low oxygen 4 days/week over 2 consecutive weeks. Intermittent low oxygen consists of 15, 90-second episodes of breathing low oxygen at 10% oxygen with 60-second intervals at 21% oxygen.

Sponsors

Randy Trumbower, PT, PhD
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
CROSSOVER
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE (Subject, Caregiver, Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 75 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

1. age 18 and 75 years (the latter to reduce the likelihood of heart disease) medical clearance to participate 2. lesion at or below C2 and above T12 with non-progressive etiology 3. classified as motor-incomplete with visible volitional leg movement 4. injury greater than 12 months 5. ability to advance one step overground without human assistance

Exclusion criteria

1. Concurrent severe medical illness (i.e., infection, cardiovascular disease, ossification, recurrent autonomic dysreflexia, unhealed decubiti, and history of pulmonary complications) 2. Pregnant women because of the unknown effects of AIH on pregnant women and fetus 3. History of seizures, brain injury, and/or epilepsy 4. Undergoing concurrent physical therapy 5. Diabetes 6. Cirrhosis Caffeine and/or NSAID allergies or intolerances

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Pre-Treatment Walking Speedwithin 5 days of first treatmentPre-Treatment Walking Speed; 10MWT (time, seconds)
Walking Speed Post-Treatment 1within 1 day after last treatmentPost-Treatment Walking Speed; 10MWT (time, seconds)
Walking Speed Post-Treatment 2between 7-10 days after Post-Treatment 1Post-Treatment Walking Speed; 10MWT (time, seconds)
Walking Speed Post-Treatment 3between 17-20 days after Post-Treatment 1Post-Treatment 10MWT (time, seconds)

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Pre-Treatment Walking Distancewithin 5 days of first treatmentPre-Treatment 6MWT (distance, meters)
Walking Distance Post-Treatment 1within 1 day after last treatmentPost-Treatment 6MWT (distance, meters)
Walking Distance Post-Treatment 2between 7-10 days after Post-Treatment 1Post-Treatment 6MWT (distance, meters)
Walking Distance Post-Treatment 3between 17-20 days after Post-Treatment 1Post-Treatment 6MWT (distance, meters)
Pre-Treatment Timed Up-and-Go Testwithin 5 days of first treatmentPre-Treatment TUG (walking balance)
Timed Up-and-Go Test Post-Treatment 1within 1 day after last treatmentPost-Treatment TUG (walking balance)
Timed Up-and-Go Test Post-Treatment 2between 7-10 days after Post-Treatment 1Post-Treatment TUG (walking balance)
Timed Up-and-Go Test Post-Treatment 3between 17-20 days after Post-Treatment 1Post-Treatment TUG (walking balance)
Pre-treatment Ankle Strengthwithin 5 days of first treatmentPre-Treatment Plantarflexion Torque (strength, torque)
Ankle Strength Post-Treatment 1within 1 day after last treatmentPost-Treatment Plantarflexion Torque (strength, torque)
Ankle Strength Post-Treatment 2between 7-10 days after Post-Treatment 1Post-Treatment Plantarflexion Torque (strength, torque)
Ankle Strength Post-Treatment 3between 17-20 days after Post-Treatment 1Post-Treatment Plantarflexion Torque (strength, torque)

Countries

United States

Contacts

CONTACTRandy D. Trumbower, PT, PhD
randy.trumbower@mgh.harvard.edu6179526953
CONTACTWilliam Muter
wmuter@partners.org6179526953
PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATORRandy D Trumbower, PT, PhD

Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Mar 21, 2026