VALIDATE II Study: Observational Trial Evaluating Elevated Factor VIII Related Labs in Multiple Sclerosis Relapse as a Marker for Incomplete Recovery
Overview
- Phase
- Not Applicable
- Intervention
- Not specified
- Conditions
- Multiple Sclerosis
- Sponsor
- Dignity Health Medical Foundation
- Enrollment
- 9
- Primary Endpoint
- Correlation of Factor VIII activity, Factor VIII with MS relapse
- Status
- Not yet recruiting
- Last Updated
- 2 years ago
Overview
Brief Summary
Nine Multiple Sclerosis (MS) patients suffering an acute relapse from the outpatient or inpatient settings will be consented to be followed prospectively for three months post relapse, in an effort to identify markers of incomplete relapse recovery. Factor VIII-related labs will be drawn for three months without influencing standard of care treatment decisions. During this time, patients will be followed with clinical and diagnostic assessments in addition to blood tests including: Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS), Multiple Sclerosis Functional Composite (MSFC), recovery surveys, and MRIs of the brain, cervical spine, and thoracic spine with and without contrast. Clinical, imaging, and Factor VIII-related lab data individually or in aggregate will be correlated with relapse presence, severity, and extent of recovery following standard treatment interventions.
Detailed Description
The identification of blood tests that detect patients having disability provoking Multiple Sclerosis (MS) relapses in real time could lead to a new era of MS relapse treatment. The cross-talk between inflammatory and coagulation pathways in multiple sclerosis has been recognized on some level for decades. Accidental and anecdotal clinical observations suggest that excessive activation of the intrinsic coagulation pathway, namely with increased Factor VIII activity, occurs with some MS relapses, and that these are the relapses that don't recover with current standard of care treatments, leaving behind permanent disability. To test this hypothesis that real time abnormally increased levels of Factor VIII activity related labs can identify disabling relapses in real time, nine adult patients with relapsing remitting MS with or without secondary progression will be consented and enrolled in this observational, longitudinal clinical trial. Patients will receive standard of care treatment per the investigator's discretion for their relapse, but will have additional blood tests testing Factor VIII activity, Factor VIII antigen, serum neurofilament among others drawn on days 1, 8, 22 and 90 of the study. The investigator and the patient will not know these lab test results. Patients will also have mris of the brain, cervical spine, and thoracic spine done with and without contrast as soon as possible upon study entry. On Days 1,8,22, and 90, in addition to blood tests, the patient will complete an EDSS and MSFC (that looks at ambulation, hand/arm coordination, and cognitive function, comprised of the 25 foot timed walking tests, with and without any assistive devices if possible), and fill out a recovery survey. Individual blood tests, aggregate blood tests, mri findings, EDSS and MSFC individual and summed scores will be scrutinized and evaluated for the ability to identify a MS relapse and to identify a treatment-resistant MS relapse
Investigators
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- •Identified by prinicipal investigator as having an acute multiple sclerosis relapse of less than 30 days duration
Exclusion Criteria
- •Inability to have a MRI
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
Correlation of Factor VIII activity, Factor VIII with MS relapse
Time Frame: 90 days
Correlation of Factor VIII activity, Factor VIII antigen with MS relapse incomplete recovery
Time Frame: 90 days
Correlation of additional labs with MS relapse or MS relapse incomplete recovery
Time Frame: 90 days
Correlation of MRI findings with MS relapse and MS relapse recovery
Time Frame: 90 days