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Open-Label Trial of Sulforaphane in Premutation Carriers With FXTAS

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Fragile X Associated Tremor/Ataxia Syndrome (Fxtas) (Diagnosis)
Interventions
Dietary Supplement: Sulforaphane
Registration Number
NCT05233579
Lead Sponsor
University of California, Davis
Brief Summary

FXTAS is a rare genetic progressive neurodegenerative disorder, linked to a trinucleotide repeat expansion in the FMR1 gene. FXTAS is characterized by tremor and ataxia in addition to atrophy and white matter disease in the central nervous system (CNS). In addition to the major clinical observations of intention tremor and gait dysfunction, minor symptoms of parkinsonism, neuropathy, and cognitive decline also significantly impact individuals with FXTAS.

The dietary supplement being tested in this study is called Sulforaphane. It is found in broccoli and similar cruciferous vegetables and may cause some gas and discomfort. This is not a study looking at clinical efficacy but instead a study of molecular outcome measures. Investigators want to get more information about how Sulforaphane affects specific biomolecular markers captured in blood.

In this study, participants will be taking an increasing amount of the Sulphoraphane supplement pills (238mg/tablet), starting at 1 and increasing to 6, every morning at breakfast for 6 months. In addition, there will be a total of 3 visits (Initial, 3-month and 6-month) to the MIND Institute where participants will be evaluated. At each visit (3 total) participants will undergo a battery of medical and neurologic exams which make take 2-3 days to complete each time. Participants and/or their caregivers will also be asked to fill out questionnaires/surveys. At the initial visit and at 6 months, we will collect blood for analysis. Two MRI scans will be done, also at the initial visit and at 6 months.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
15
Inclusion Criteria
  • Diagnosis of FXTAS
  • Presence of a FMR1 premutation (55 to 200 CGG repeats)
Exclusion Criteria
  • Individuals with severe renal failure (GFR is <60 ml/min/1.73 m^2)
  • Significant and current reported substance abuse
  • Individuals with substance use disorder (meets 6 or more symptoms of substance use disorder criteria)
  • Any subject on hospice or on home oxygen
  • Individuals who are pregnant

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SEQUENTIAL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Sulforaphane 1 TabletSulforaphaneParticipants are taking 1 tablet per day. All participants will start with 1 tablet and continue with 1 tablet for 2 weeks before increasing dose.
Sulforaphane 4 TabletsSulforaphaneParticipants will increase dosage to 4 tablets per day at 6 weeks from the start of study participation. Participants will continue to take 4 tablets for 2 addiitonal weeks before increasing dose. If participants experience adverse side effects, participants will decrease dosage to 3 tablets.
SulforaphaneSulforaphaneParticipants will increase dosage to 6 tablets per day at 10 weeks from the start of study participation. Participants will continue to take 6 tablets for 2 addiitonal weeks before increasing dose. If participants experience adverse side effects, participants will decrease dosage to 5 tablets.
Sulforaphane 2 TabletsSulforaphaneParticipants will increase dosage to 2 tablets per day after 2 weeks from the start of study participation. Participants will continue to take 2 tablets for 2 addiitonal weeks before increasing dose. If participants experience adverse side effects, participants will decrease dosage to 1 tablet.
Sulforaphane 3 TabletsSulforaphaneParticipants will increase dosage to 3 tablets per day at 4 weeks from the start of study participation. Participants will continue to take 3 tablets for 2 addiitonal weeks before increasing dose. If participants experience adverse side effects, participants will decrease dosage to 2 tablets.
Sulforaphane 5 TabletsSulforaphaneParticipants will increase dosage to 5 tablets per day at 8 weeks from the start of study participation. Participants will continue to take 5 tablets for 2 addiitonal weeks before increasing dose. If participants experience adverse side effects, participants will decrease dosage to 4 tablets.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Changes in mitochondrial function via mitochondrial membrane potential and mass.Baseline, 6 months

Primary measures are performed on PBMCs. Mitochondrial mass and membrane potential will use selected floors and either plate readers or analytical flow cytometry.

Changes in mitochondrial function via ATP productionBaseline, 6 months

Using PMBCs we will observe in changes in ATP production of various segments of the electron transport chain by utilizing different substrates and coupling between electron transport and ATP production.

Observing changes in candidate molecular biomarkers in FXTAS and mitochondrial dysregulation: GRP78Baseline, 6 months

Observing levels in potential molecular biomarkers that affect mitochondrial dysregulation. GRP78 is a master controller of the mitochondrial ER stress response. It helps improve Ca2+ transfer and mitochondrial function. Its level will be measured via ELISA

Observing changes in candidate molecular biomarkers in FXTAS and mitochondrial dysregulation: CHOP levelbaseline, 6 months

Observing levels in potential molecular biomarkers that affect mitochondrial dysregulation. CHOP is a common downstream indicator of mitochondrial ER stress signals. It helps improve Ca2+ transfer and mitochondrial function. Its level will be measured via ELISA

Observing changes in candidate molecular biomarkers in FXTAS and mitochondrial dysregulation: Bax/Bcl-2 ratiobaseline, 6 months

Observing levels in potential molecular biomarkers that affect mitochondrial dysregulation. Bax/Bcl-2 is a common measure of mitochondrial dysfunction. It helps improve Ca2+ transfer and mitochondrial function. It will be measure via Elisa.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Changes in subcortical brain structures damaged in FXTAS through MRI imagingBaseline, 6 months

The measurements will include anatomic volume for quantifying atrophy. We have developed a robust and efficient method for accurate segmentation of the cerebellum and brainstem and have applied this method to segment the hippocampus, amygdala, basal ganglia, and corpus callosum accurately. We will continue using this method for quantifying volumes of the white matter in individual lobes and subcortical structures, including the corpus callosum, midbrain, pons, and cerebellar white matter, and calibrating iron depositions in subcortical nuclei (i.e., dentate nucleus, substantia nigra, putamen, and globus pallidus)

Changes in gait variabilityBaseline, 6 months

Gait variability will be measured using the GAITRite in which participants will traverse the GAITRite walkway across 6 walking trials for each condition with minimal interruption.

Changes in kinetic, postural, and rest tremor upper extremity bradykinesia, hypokinesia, dysrhythmia, and dyskinesiasBaseline, 6 months

Participants will perform pre-defined tasks for the Kinesia One test (e.g., finger to nose, finger tapping, wrist rotation, holding arms extended, arms resting on the legs, and hand grasps).

Changes in executive function deficits using BDS-2Baseline, 6 months

The Behavioral Dysfunction Scale 2 (BDS-2) is a 9-item assessment of simple motor tasks that scores the participant's completion of each item/task on a scale of 0 (patient demonstrates a complete lack of insight into the accuracy of his or her performance and fails to recognize that errors are being made) to 3 (patient demonstrates good performance with no errors). The BDS-2 is administered at baseline and 6 months and changes in participant scores will measure changes in executive function deficits.

Changes in motor movementsBaseline, 6 months

The Choice Reaction Time subtest from the CANTAB assessment will be used to measure motor changes and bradykinesia.

Changes in clinical staging of FXTASBaseline, 6 months

The standardized neurological examination including frontal release signs, snout, jaw jerk, and palmomental reflex; sensory examination of pinprick and vibration sense; and assessment of alternating movements and cranial nerves. These measures constitute the FXTAS Rating Scale (FXTAS-RS).

Changes in FLAIR hypersensitivity volume for subcortical lesionsBaseline, 6 months

The measurements will include FLAIR hyperintensity volume for subcortical lesions. Subcortical hyperintensities will be segmented automatically using Lesion Prediction Algorithm (LPA) from SPM12, which also co-registers FLAIR images to T1 images. To calculate regional FLAIR hyperintensity volume, we will threshold the generated lesion probability maps at 0.7 and superimpose subcortical and white matter masks to the probability maps using fslmaths from FSL.

Changes in Neurological Quality of Life using the Neuro-QoL upper extremity function fine motor scaleBaseline, 6 months

The upper extremity function fine motor scale measures the neurological quality of life related to one's ability to carry out various activities involving digital, manual, and reach-related functions ranging from fine motor to self-care. The assessment is administered as a self-report questionnaire and responses are recorded on a scale of 1 (unable to do) to 5 (without any difficulty). The assessment will be administered at baseline and at 6 months and any changes in scaled responses will measure changes in neurological quality of life related to the upper extremity functioning.

Changes in Neurological Quality of Life using the Neuro-QoL lower extremity functioning mobility scaleBaseline, 6 months

The lower extremity function mobility scale measures the neurological quality of life related to one's ability to carry out various activities involving the trunk region and increasing degrees of bodily movement, ambulation, balance, and endurance. The assessment is administered as a self-report questionnaire and response are recorded on a scale of 1 (unable to do/can't do) to 5 (without any difficulty/no difficulty). The assessment will be administered at baseline and 6 months and any changes in scaled responses will measure change in neurological quality of life related to the lower extremity functioning.

Changes in psychological IssuesBaseline, 6 months

The Symptom Checklist-90-Revised (SCL-90-R) is a 90 item self-report psychometric questionnaire created to capture a broad range of psychological problems and has been shown to be sensitive in capturing emotional issues in carriers both with and without FXTAS.

Changes in Grip StrengthBaseline, 6 months

For the NIH Toolbox Grip Strength Test, participants squeeze the Jamar Plus Digital dynamometer as hard as they can for a count of three. The dynamometer provides a digital reading of force in pounds.

Changes in cognitive dysfunction using MoCABaseline, 6 months

The Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) will be administered at baseline and 6 months and the MoCA is scored on a scale of 0-30 points. Changes in the participant's score from the MoCA administered at baseline and the MoCA administered at 6 months will measure whether there are changes in cognitive dysfunction.

Changes in cognitive dysfunction using MMSEBaseline, 6 months

The Mini Mental State Exam (MMSE) will be administered at baseline and 6 months. MMSE is scored on a scale of 0-30 points. Changes in participant's score from MMSE administered at baseline and MMSE administered at 6 months will measure whether there are changes in mild cognitive dysfunction.

Changes in executive function deficits using COWATBaseline, 6 months

The Controlled Oral Word Association Test (COWAT) measures executive functioning deficits using verbal fluency and word retrieval tasks. One's score is calculated by the total number of words listed (1 word = 1 point) Changes in the participant's score from the COWAT administered at baseline and the COWAT administered at 6 months will measure changes in executive function deficits.

Changes in frontal executive planningBaseline, 6 months

The Stocking of Cambridge subtest from the CANTAB assessment will be administered to measure deficits in frontal executive planning.

Changes in Hippocampus-mediated memory deficitsBaseline, 6 months

The Spatial Working Memory and Paired Associates Learning subtest from the CANTAB assessment will be used to measure hippocampus-mediated memory deficits

Changes in cognitive abilityBaseline

Cognitive ability will be measured using the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale, Fourth Edition (WAIS-IV).

Changes in dexterity, tremor, and bradykinesia abnormalitiesBaseline, 6 months

The Purdue Pegboard test will measure abnormalities in dexterity, tremor, and bradykinesia.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

UC Davis MIND Institute

🇺🇸

Sacramento, California, United States

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