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Clinical Trials/NCT07270120
NCT07270120
Not yet recruiting
Phase 1

Senolytics to Improve Physical and Cognitive Function in Older Adults With Multiple Sclerosis

Ohio State University1 site in 1 country30 target enrollmentStarted: January 15, 2026Last updated:

Overview

Phase
Phase 1
Status
Not yet recruiting
Enrollment
30
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Frequency of adverse drug effects of dasatinib and quercetin

Overview

Brief Summary

This is a clinical trial to see whether senolytic therapy is safe and feasible for patients with secondary progressive MS and whether treatment improves physical and thinking abilities. The study seeks to enroll adults with secondary progressive MS (SPMS), aged 50-85, who are not currently taking a MS disease-modifying therapy and have noticed their MS symptoms getting worse. People who join the study will take the medicines dasatinib and quercetin by mouth every two weeks for three months. These medicines work together to remove old, damaged cells that may cause inflammation and slow the repair of nerves. Participants will also be followed for one year from enrollment to monitor for treatment effects.

Detailed Description

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic immune-mediated inflammatory and neurodegenerative disorder of the central nervous system (CNS), which afflicts approximately one million people in the United States. Age is the strongest driver of disease course in MS. With increasing age, most older adults with MS develop a progressive disease phenotype characterized by gradual accrual of irreversible neurological disability, for which there are no effective treatments that reliably slow disease progression. Cellular senescence is a hallmark of aging, whereby senescent cells accumulate with age and produce mediators of inflammation through the senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP). In MS, senescent cells have been identified in both the central nervous system and peripheral immune compartments contributing to SASP expression, promoting chronic inflammation, axonal damage, and failure of myelin repair, and ultimately leading to functional decline. Senescent cells can be selectively removed by senolytic drugs, which delay age-related dysfunction in animal models and show potential for improving functional outcomes in human clinical trials. The senolytic drug combination of dasatinib and quercetin (D+Q) selectively induces apoptosis of senescent cells in human tissue. Our pilot data shows D+Q treatment improves function and survival in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, the widely used animal model of MS. Emerging evidence from early phase clinical trials of D+Q in age-related diseases shows improvement of gait speed in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and CNS penetrance of dasatinib in Alzheimer's disease. However, studies of senolytic therapy for people with MS have yet to be conducted. The investigators hypothesize that treatment with D+Q will be well tolerated, improve physical and cognitive function, reduce circulating biomarkers of senescence and neurodegeneration, and attenuate T-cell immune exhaustion. The investigators will test this hypothesis through a single arm, open label, study to 1) determine the feasibility of 3 months of intermittent D+Q treatment in 30 older adults age 50-85 with secondary progressive MS and 2) to obtain preliminary data of D+Q treatment on physical and cognitive function and 3) serum biomarkers of senescence, neurodegeneration, and the circulatory T cell repertoire. Targeting cellular senescence represents a novel strategy for treating progressive MS, and results from the study will lay the foundation for a future randomized controlled trial of senolytics to treat progressive MS.

Study Design

Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Na
Intervention Model
Single Group
Primary Purpose
Treatment
Masking
None

Eligibility Criteria

Ages
50 Years to 85 Years (Adult, Older Adult)
Sex
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No

Inclusion Criteria

  • Individuals aged 50-85 with SPMS diagnosed using the 2024 McDonald Criteria
  • Not treated with a DMT for MS within the last 6 months or have used alemtuzumab, cladribine, or mitoxantrone.
  • Evidence of MS progression over the past 12 months.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Unstable coronary artery disease (myocardial infarction within 6 months or angina)
  • Hospitalization within 6 months
  • Stroke or transient ischemic attack in the past 6 months
  • Pulmonary arterial hypertension
  • Current or chronic history of liver disease
  • Alzheimer's or Parkinson's disease
  • Drug or alcohol abuse in the previous 5 years
  • History of coagulation disorders, central nervous system hemorrhage, or gastrointestinal hemorrhage
  • History of angina or myocardial infarction, arrhythmia, or heart failure at any time
  • QTc prolongation

Arms & Interventions

Treatment

Experimental

Dasatinib and quercetin

Intervention: Dasatinib and quercetin (Drug)

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Frequency of adverse drug effects of dasatinib and quercetin

Time Frame: From baseline through study completion at 1 year

Frequency of adverse drug effects of dasatinib and quercetin

Participant retention rate

Time Frame: Baseline until 3 months

Participant retention rate with D+Q therapy with no more than one missed study visit

Recruitment feasibility

Time Frame: Baseline

The number of subjects screened to identify eligible participants

Secondary Outcomes

No secondary outcomes reported

Investigators

Sponsor Class
Other
Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Yinan Zhang

Assistant Professor

Ohio State University

Study Sites (1)

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