MedPath

Marfan Syndrome Moderate Exercise Trial II

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Marfan Syndrome
Interventions
Other: Exercise Intervention Group
Other: Control Group
Registration Number
NCT05809323
Lead Sponsor
Baylor College of Medicine
Brief Summary

Marfan syndrome (MFS) is a distinctive connective tissue disorder that affects multiple organ systems including the heart, bones, ligaments, and eyes, and is associated with significant risk of aortic dissection. Given limited evidence from in-vitro studies, and theoretical concerns, the majority of patients with MFS are restricted from certain physical activities. The lack of exercise and deconditioning have detrimental effects including increasing weakness, joint pain, decreased endurance, and depressive symptoms. Given the significant paucity of data currently existing on the effects of exercise in humans with MFS, and the recent, optimistic findings in rodent models, this pilot trial was established to assess the effects of moderated dynamic exercise in adolescents and young adults with MFS.

Detailed Description

Marfan syndrome (MFS) is a distinctive connective tissue disorder with clinical phenotypes that affect multiple organ systems including the heart, bones, ligaments, and eyes, and are associated with significant risk of aortic dissection. Given anecdotal reports of aortic dissection, limited evidence from in-vitro studies, and theoretical concerns, the majority of patients with MFS are restricted from certain physical activities, most commonly isometric exercise and contact sports. Published guidelines also suggest restriction from highly dynamic competitive sports. While clinicians may mean to restrict patients only from competitive sports, often children and families interpret this caution as applying to almost all exercise, resulting in a large number of patients with MFS being sedentary. This lack of exercise and deconditioning likely has detrimental effects in increasing weakness and joint pain and decreasing endurance. Depressive symptoms are also not uncommon in patients with these syndromes, and may be triggered or exacerbated by guidance to acutely cease participation in sports at the time of diagnosis.

To date, as far as we are aware, there are no published controlled studies on the effects of dynamic exercise on human subjects. In 2017, Mas-Stachurska et al published a study suggesting that a moderate level of dynamic exercise mitigated progressive degradation of the cardiac structures typically seen in MFS in a rodent sample. This study suggests the possibility that the fears surrounding moderate exercise in humans may be unwarranted. In addition, this study suggests that moderate exercise may actually protect the aorta and myocardium, in addition to the numerous other physical and emotional benefits that have been shown to result from consistent exercise. We have unpublished trial results in a pilot study that also suggest benefit to adolecents and young adults.

Given the significant paucity of data currently existing on effects of exercise in humans with MFS, and the recent optimistic findings in rodent models, we plan to conduct a randomized control trial of moderate dynamic exercise in adolescents and young adults with MFS.

The objective is to:

1) Randomize 50 patients with Marfan syndrome from ages 10-25 years to current status and care (controls) versus a moderate dynamic exercise intervention, then 2) allow the control group patients to undergo the exercise intervention.The investigators will then compare outcomes between both the intervention and control groups, and between the baseline and post-intervention states. Specific outcome measures will include cardiovascular assessment: maximal oxygen uptake (max VO2), ambulatory blood pressure, segmental and central aortic stiffness, ventricular mass and volume, and endothelial function, physical assessment by the physical therapist, and quality of life/mental health assessment: health-related quality of life, depression and anxiety screening scales. The hypothesis is that the intervention of a moderate exercise program introduced by a licensed physical therapist will result in improvement in cardiovascular status, muscular health, and mental health without detrimental effects on the aortic wall.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
50
Inclusion Criteria
  • Male and female patients diagnosed with Marfan syndrome (defined by Ghent criteria and either a pathogenic variant in FBN1 or ectopia lentis)
  • Age 10-25 years at enrollment
Exclusion Criteria
  1. History of aortic surgery
  2. History of spinal surgery with implanted materials that may negatively impact MRI safety or imaging quality.
  3. Diagnosis of major congenital heart disease (ASD, VSD, bicuspid aortic valve, and mitral valve prolapse will not qualify as exclusion criteria)
  4. Condition limiting the ability to perform moderate exercise.
  5. Major concurrent diagnosis that may confound the interpretation of the effect of the proposed intervention on the proposed outcome measures.
  6. Aortic dilation meeting threshold for prophylactic aortic surgical intervention (>/= 4.5 cm in diameter)

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Exercise Intervention GroupExercise Intervention GroupGroup of up to 50 patients will randomly allocated into an experimental group at a 4:1 ratio intervention to controls. The experimental group will receive all of the preliminary outcome measure testing (cardiovascular, musculoskeletal, and psychological screening) in addition to exercise intervention education, demonstration, and follow up to ensure compliance and safety.
Control GroupControl GroupControl group will be randomly allocated at a 4:1 ratio, intervention to controls.. The control group will receive all of the preliminary outcome measure testing (cardiovascular, musculoskeletal, and psychological screening) and will be instructed to continue with baseline physical activities. They will be asked to return for a reassessment of all baseline procedures (cardiovascular, musculoskeletal, and psychological screening).
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Maximum VO24 Months

Maximum VO2 in ml/kg/minute will be collected via Exercise Stress Test. Range 30-85, higher is better.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Maximum aortic root dimension4 Months

Measured in cm, range 1-8cm

BMI4 Months

kg/m2, lower is better generally, excluding pts with BMI \<5% for age

Quality of Life Scale (QOLS) (ages 19-21 y)4 Months

16 items, each with 7 point Likert, higher is worse

Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9)4 Months

Nine-item questionnaire that detects depression and the severity of the depression, scaled from 0-27, higher is worse

Mean systolic blood pressure4 Months

mmHg, range 20-200, both low and high are abnormal, goal is age, sex and height-based, goal 10-50 percentile

Mean diastolic blood pressure4 Months

mmHg, range 20-150, both low and high are abnormal, goal is age, sex and height-based, goal 10-50 percentile

Weight4 Months

kg, range 50-300kg, lower is better, excluding underweight patients

Mean pulse pressure4 Months

mmHg, systolic blood pressure minus diastolic blood pressure, range 30-70 mmHg, goal is normal range for age and sex

Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7-item (GAD-7)Every 2 Weeks for 4 Months

Seven-item questionnaire that detects generalized anxiety disorder and the severity of the anxiety. GAD-7 total score for the seven items ranges from 0 to 21. Using a cut-off of 8 the GAD-7 has a sensitivity of 92% and specificity of 76% for diagnosis generalized anxiety disorder.

Left ventricular strain by cardiac MRI4 Months

Continuous measure derived from post-processing MRI

Aortic Root Distensibility4 Months

×10-3 mm Hg-1, Continuous measure, range 0.1-10

Aortic root z-score4 Months

No units, based on body surface area published references, range -3 to 25

Pediatric Quality of Life Scale (PedsQL) scale scores4 Months

reported in 3 domains, each reported on Likert scale, scaled to 0-100 scale, lower is worse

Pediatric Symptom Checklist Child (PSC-Y): Internalizing Problems Subscale4 Months

The Pediatric Symptom Checklist (PSC) is a 35 item questionnaire that helps identify and assess changes in emotional and behavioral problems in children. A positive score on the PSC or Y-PSC suggests the need for further evaluation by a qualified health. PSC-35-Youth, English \& Spanish cut off score is, 30 or higher. In a Mexican-American sample, a cutoff score of 12 was shown to be most sensitive.

PSC Subscales:

Internalizing Problems Subscale: Children with subscores greater than or equal to 5 usually have significant impairments with anxiety or depression.

Right ventricular strain by cardiac MRI4 Months

Continuous measure derived from post-processing MRI

Aortic root strain4 Months

Continuous measure %, higher is less stiff, Range 0-40

Pediatric Symptom Checklist Child (PSC-Y)4 Months

The Pediatric Symptom Checklist (PSC) is a 35 item questionnaire that helps identify and assess changes in emotional and behavioral problems in children. A positive score on the PSC or Y-PSC suggests the need for further evaluation by a qualified health. PSC-35-Youth, English \& Spanish cut off score is, 30 or higher. In a Mexican-American sample, a cutoff score of 12 was shown to be most sensitive.

PSC Subscales:

Attention Problems, Internalizing Problems, Externalizing Problems

Pediatric Symptom Checklist Child (PSC-Y): Attention Subscale4 Months

The Pediatric Symptom Checklist (PSC) is a 35 item questionnaire that helps identify and assess changes in emotional and behavioral problems in children. A positive score on the PSC or Y-PSC suggests the need for further evaluation by a qualified health. PSC-35-Youth, English \& Spanish cut off score is, 30 or higher. In a Mexican-American sample, a cutoff score of 12 was shown to be most sensitive.

PSC Subscales:

Attention Problems Subscale: Children with subscores greater than or equal to 7 usually have significant impairments in attention.

Pediatric Symptom Checklist Child (PSC-Y): Externalizing Problems Subscale4 Months

The Pediatric Symptom Checklist (PSC) is a 35 item questionnaire that helps identify and assess changes in emotional and behavioral problems in children. A positive score on the PSC or Y-PSC suggests the need for further evaluation by a qualified health. PSC-35-Youth, English \& Spanish cut off score is, 30 or higher. In a Mexican-American sample, a cutoff score of 12 was shown to be most sensitive.

PSC Subscales:

Externalizing Problems Subscale: Children with subscores greater than or equal to 7 usually have significant problems with conduct.

Aortic Root β-Stiffness index4 Months

No units, Range 0.1-90

Aortic pulse wave velocity from MRI4 Months

meters/second, range 0-30

Pulse wave velocity derived from applanation tonometry4 Months

meters/second, range 0-30

Patient Health Questionnaire-4 (PHQ-4) Subset A: Anxiety4 Months

Four-question test for anxiety and depression, scaled from 0-12 Subset A (Anxiety): Questions 1 \& 2, which have a total PHQ 4 score range of 0 to 6. A score of 3 or greater is considered positive for screening purposes.

Patient Health Questionnaire-4 (PHQ-4) Subset B: Depression4 Months

Four-question test for anxiety and depression, scaled from 0-12, Subset B (Depression): Questions 3 \& 4, which have a total PHQ 4 score range of 0 to 6. A score of 3 or greater is considered positive for screening purposes.

Pediatric Symptom Checklist Parent (PSC)4 Months

The Pediatric Symptom Checklist (PSC) is a 35 item questionnaire that helps identify and assess changes in emotional and behavioral problems in children. A positive score on the PSC or Y-PSC suggests the need for further evaluation by a qualified health. PSC-35-Youth, English \& Spanish cut off score is, 30 or higher. In a Mexican-American sample, a cutoff score of 12 was shown to be most sensitive.

PROMIS Pediatric Self- Reported Psychological Stress4 Months

PROMIS scores have a mean of 50 and standard deviation (SD) of 10 in a referent population. On the T-score metric, A score of 40 is one SD lower than the mean of the reference population. A score of 60 is one SD higher than the mean of the reference population. Better health is a lower score and worse health scores higher.

PROMIS Parent Proxy Reported Psychological Stress- Parent Proxy4 Months

PROMIS scores have a mean of 50 and standard deviation (SD) of 10 in a referent population. On the T-score metric, A score of 40 is one SD lower than the mean of the reference population. A score of 60 is one SD higher than the mean of the reference population. Higher score is worse health.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Texas Children's Hospital

🇺🇸

Houston, Texas, United States

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath