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Vagal Nerve Stimulation for Gastroparesis

Not Applicable
Terminated
Conditions
Gastroparesis
Interventions
Device: Vagal Nerve Stimulation
Registration Number
NCT03120325
Lead Sponsor
Stanford University
Brief Summary

This study is investigating a new form of treatment for a digestive disorder called gastroparesis. Gastroparesis is thought to be caused by a mix of inflammation and neural dysfunction. The vagal nerve is a large nerve originating from the brain that regulates digestive function. Patients with gastroparesis have what is a called a low vagal tone which results in gastrointestinal motility problems and inflammation; therefore, investigators hypothesize that increasing vagal tone through a hand-held vagal nerve simulator will reduce inflammation and gastrointestinal motility problems in gastroparesis patients. Investigators will evaluate this hypothesis through the use of upper endoscopy testing, breath testing, and blood, stool, urine, heart rate variability, and saliva testing before and after 4 weeks of vagal nerve stimulation (VNS) treatment.

There are 6 research visits

Visit 1 and visit 2 may take up to 8 weeks (screening/baseline) Visit 3 and visit 4 will take 4 weeks (VNS treatment) visit 5 and 6 will take approximately 4 weeks (VNS followup/washout)

Consequently, it is possible that if a patient were to be at the farthest ends of visit windows, they could potentially be in the study for approx 16 weeks. Visit 1 and 2 may be less than 8 weeks which would shorten the patient's overall involvement in the study.

The treatment phase of the study will always be 4 weeks with an additional 4 week washout phase.

Use of the VNS device takes 4 weeks. Endoscopy and blood work are taken before and after the treatment period.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
TERMINATED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
24
Inclusion Criteria
  1. Male or female.
  2. Age 21-65 years old.
  3. Established diagnosis of functional dyspepsia, idiopathic or diabetic gastroparesis as per AGA (American Gastroenterology Association) guidelines.
  4. Patient is capable of giving informed consent and undergo upper endoscopy.
  5. Patient is on stable doses of other medications for gastroparesis for preceding 4 weeks prior to enrollment (baseline measures).

Exclusion Criteria

  1. Surgical-related gastroparesis
  2. Extrinsic myopathy or neuropathy causing gastroparesis.
  3. Use of narcotic pain medications in the preceding 2 weeks of study enrollment.
  4. Patients with enteric feeding tubes or requiring parenteral nutrition (Patients with g-tubes who are stable for 3 months and not using the g-tube for venting may be eligible. patient with J-tubes are not eligible.
  5. Patients with severe flare requiring hospitalization.
  6. Untreated significant depression or suicidal thoughts.
  7. Pregnant or breast-feeding women.
  8. History of gastric pacemaker implantation.
  9. Patients with prior gastric surgery, including fundoplication, partial/total gastrectomy, or gastric bypass.
  10. Patients with malabsorption of enteric, pancreatic, or hepatibiliary etiology.
  11. Patients with primary pulmonary disorders that affect the spirulina breath test.
  12. Patients with implantable electronic devices.
  13. Patients with carotid artery atherosclerosis.
Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Diabetic GastroparesisVagal Nerve StimulationPatients with diabetic gastroparesis and delayed gastric emptying. All patients in trial will be giving themselves vagal nerve stimulation for two minutes on each side twice a day in the morning and the night for four weeks starting at visit 3 and ending at visit 5.
Idiopathic GastroparesisVagal Nerve StimulationPatients with idiopathic gastroparesis and delayed gastric emptying. All patients in trial will be giving themselves vagal nerve stimulation for two minutes on each side twice a day in the morning and the night for four weeks starting at visit 3 and ending at visit 5.
Functional DyspepsiaVagal Nerve StimulationPatients with functional dyspepsia and normal gastric emptying. All patients in trial will be giving themselves vagal nerve stimulation for two minutes on each side twice a day in the morning and the night for four weeks starting at visit 3 and ending at visit 5.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Effect of Vagal Nerve Stimulation on the Gastric Emptying Spirulina Breath Test Emptying TimeBaseline and week 4 (3 hours to assess at each time point)

Investigators will measure a change in gastric emptying time before and after vagal nerve stimulation as measured in minutes. Higher number (longer times) indicate more severe gastroparesis.

Effect of Vagal Nerve Stimulation on Gastroparesis Symptoms as Measures by the Gastroparesis Cardinal Symptom Index Daily Diary (GCSI-DD) Questionnaire.Baseline (2 weeks prior to initiation), week 4 (7 days), week 8 (7 days)

Investigators will send daily GCSI-DD to patients for 8 weeks. This 10 item questionnaire measures the severity of gastroparesis symptoms on a scale 0-5. 0=none, 1=very mild, 2=mild, 3=moderate, 4=severe, 5=very severe. Investigators hypothesize a change of more than 0.75 points. Scored were recorded daily at each time point and scores then averaged to produce an overall score (range: 0 to 5, higher scores correspond to worse symptoms).

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Heart Rate Variability (HRV) as a Measure of the Effect of VNS Therapy on Vagal ToneBaseline, week 4, week 8

The effect of VNS therapy on vagal tone as measured bv HRV (accounting for respiratory rate variability) using electrocardiogram (ASNAR) device. HRV is measured as an RFa value, a measure of the high-frequency heart rate (bpm\^2 per hertz). Normal RFa is 0.5 to 8.0.

PROMIS Pain Interference Questionnaire Score as a Measure of the Effect of VNS Therapy on Overall PainBaseline, week 4, week 8

The effect of VNS therapy on overall pain interference as assessed by the PROMIS (Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System) pain interference questionnaire which is a 6 item questionnaire on a 5 point scale to assess the impact of pain on daily life. Scores are summed and converted to percentiles normalized for the population (normalized T-score). 50 indicates the population mean with a standard deviation of 10. The higher the T-score, the more severe the symptoms.

Short Form 12 (SF-12) Score the Effect of VNS Therapy on Overall Wellbeing and HealthBaseline, week 4, week 8

The effect of VNS therapy on overall wellbeing and health as assessed by the SF-12. Score range: 0-100, higher scores correspond to better quality of life.

Number of Participants With Any Serious or Treatment-emergent Adverse Event (AE) as a Measure of the Safety and Tolerability of VNS in Patients With Gastroparesis8 weeks

The safety and tolerability of VNS in patients with gastroparesis assessed by recording any side effects or adverse events. Number of patients reporting serious or treatment related adverse events are reported

Effect of VNS on Mucosal InflammationBaseline (pre-VNS) and 4 weeks (post-VNS)

Median fluorescence intensity (MFI) data were preprocessed for each cytokine through a sequence of averaging over duplicate wells, natural-logarithm transformation to reduce variance heterogeneity, and isolation and removal of plate effects. The effects of VNS therapy on gastric and small intestine inflammation was measured as average fold change across all tissue cytokines from endoscopic mucosal biopsies before and after VNS, using cytokine multiplex assays, which report relative levels of various cytokines as adjusted mean fluorescence intensity (MFI).

The Effect of VNS Therapy on Gastric and Small Intestine Leukocyte Infiltration.Baseline (pre-VNS) and 4 weeks (post-VNS)

The effects of VNS therapy on gastric and small intestine leukocyte infiltration was measured as relative abundance (normalized ratio) of immune cells (identified via CD45 marker) to total live cells across tissue leukocytes from endoscopic mucosal biopsies before and after VNS, using flow cytometry.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Stanford University Medical Center

🇺🇸

Redwood City, California, United States

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