MedPath

The Effect of Alemtuzumab on the Blood-brain-barrier and the Brain's Metabolism in Multiple Sclerosis Patients

Conditions
Multiple Sclerosis
Interventions
Registration Number
NCT03193086
Lead Sponsor
Glostrup University Hospital, Copenhagen
Brief Summary

The development and progression of multiple sclerosis seem to be driven by concomitant inflammation and, to a less well-defined degree, disturbances in metabolism of individual cells of the human central nervous system as well as changes in the dynamical supply of blood to the brain. These alterations in normal physiology can be quantified by investigating the change in specific parameters over the time course of multiple sclerosis evolution. Amongst these specific parameters, the ability of the so-called blood-brain-barrier to selectively filter nutrients from the blood stream prior to passage into the nervous tissue, is disrupted in multiple sclerosis, and the severity of this deficiency seem to be related to the underlying disease burden. The present study utilises a novel imaging technology in order to monitor changes in the integrity of the blood-brain-barrier over the course of treatment with a biological disease modifying agent known as alemtuzumab. Alemtuzumab is a potent immunosuppressant drug. It is hypothesised that alemtuzumab reverts the deficiency in blood-brain-barrier integrity and, conversely, the severity of blood-brain-barrier disruption at several time points during alemtuzumab treatment can be utilised as prognostic marker for the requirement of additional administration of alemtuzumab beyond the regular treatment regimen. In addition, several other factors are investigated by advanced imaging techniques in combination with blood and urine samples in order to elucidate the possible underlying mechanism of alemtuzumab efficacy. It is hypothesized that alemtuzumab normalises metabolic alterations and changes in the blood supply through resolution of inflammation in the brains of multiple sclerosis patients.

Detailed Description

Traditional paraclinical measures of disease severity in multiple sclerosis (MS), such as T2 lesion load as measured by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), are poorly correlated with long-term disability accumulation. Other surrogate markers of the current and future disease burden are therefore needed. The permeability of the blood-brain-barrier (BBB) seems to better reflect the substantial, subclinical disease activity underlying MS progression. Its useful role as a prognostic marker in MS has been clearly established by the recent observation that BBB permeability increase in optic neuritis patients is associated with conversion to definite MS. BBB permeability can be quantified, in a convenient manner to the patient, using Dynamic-Contrast-Enhanced Magnetic Resonance Imaging (DCE-MRI) by modelling the change in intrinsic MRI parameters of the human brain in response to the administration of a bolus contrast agent. Alemtuzumab is a disease modifying drug that depletes T- and B-cells. It is administered in two series separated by 12 months, as explained in the section "Groups and Interventions." The number of relapses are significantly reduced as compared to other efficacious treatments in MS, as demonstrated recently (study referred to by its ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT00050778). The efficacy of alemtuzumab in resolving the inflammatory burden underlying relapses is, thus, well-established. Its influence on subclinical inflammation, however, remains unknown. It is the aim of the present study to investigate whether or not the latter influence is of importance, and, consequently, can be used to evaluate the need for an intensified treatment, in the form of an additional series of alemtuzumab administration.

BBB permeability changes, as surrogate markers of subclinical inflammation, are measured every 6 months just prior to and during the course of alemtuzumab treatment. In order to elucidate other potential mechanisms involved in disability accumulation, biomarkers and MRI-derived parameters are evaluated concomitantly. Specifically, the role of metabolic changes are investigated using MRI methods that measures blood perfusion and oxygen consumption. Secondarily, the BBB permeability and metabolic changes are correlated to novel biomarkers of inflammation and neurodegeneration in serum and urine, as well as conventional measures of MS severity: annual relapse rate, Expanded Disability Severity Score, MRI-derived estimates of disease activity and brain atrophy.

35 patients are included in the study in order to achieve enough statistical power and accommodate drop-outs. Patients are MRI scanned at baseline, 6 months after alemtuzumab treatment, and, finally, prior to administration of the second series of alemtuzumab 12 months after the baseline MRI scanning. At each time point, the patient's disease status is evaluated by an experienced neurologist, and urine and serum samples are obtained. Repeated Measures Analysis Of Variance (ANOVA) will be used to evaluate changes of permeability of the BBB and metabolic parameters at different time points, and baseline characteristics, such as prednisolone treatment will be implemented as between-subjects covariates. Logistic regression will be applied to estimate the ability of BBB permeability changes to predict the need for additional series of alemtuzumab administration.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
35
Inclusion Criteria
  • A diagnosis of Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis
  • Eligible for alemtuzumab treatment at Glostrup Hospital or The Danish Kingdom Hospital
  • Subjects must be deemed physically and mentally able to participate in the study
Exclusion Criteria
  • Contraindications to MRI scanning (pregnancy, pacemakers, claustrophobia, extreme obesity)
  • Contraindications to the use of MRI contrast agents (kidney disease, previous allergic reactions)
  • Conflicting disorders (e.g. disorders with a systemic, inflammatory component)

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Alemtuzumab treated MS patientsAlemtuzumabThose with Multiple Sclerosis that have commenced therapy with alemtuzumab (60 mg infusion over the course of 5 days) and completed treatment with alemtuzumab (additional 36 mg infusion during the course of 3 days, 12 months later).
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Blood-Brain-Barrier Permeability1 year

Blood-Brain-Barrier Permeability as measured by Dynamic-Contrast-Enhanced MRI (DCE-MRI)

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Relapse frequency1 year

Number of relapses during follow-up and past history

Plasma markers of Blood-Brain-Barrier breakdown1 year

Detection of markers associated with Blood-Brain-Barrier breakdown nervous system

Diffusion Tensor MRI parameters and MR spectroscopy metabolite concentrations1 year

Measurement of changes in microstructural organization as measured by Diffusion Tensor MRI

Clinical Severity of Disease1 year

Estimation of disease severity by the Expanded Disability Severity Scale (EDSS)

Oxygen Consumption1 year

The Cerebral Metabolic Rate of Oxygen Consumption as measured by a novel MRI technique

Plasma markers of neuronal damage1 year

Detection of markers associated with neuronal damage

Urinary markers of inflammation1 year

Detection of markers associated with inflammatory activity specific to macrophages/microglia in the human central nervous system

Cerebral perfusion1 year

Quantification of cerebral perfusion using DCE-MRI and Arterial-Spin-Labelling MRI

Brain atrophy2 years

Voxel-Based-Morphometry of grey and white matter utilizing high-resolution MRI

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Functional Imaging Unit, Department of Clinical Physiology, Nuclear medicine and PET, Glostrup Hospital

🇩🇰

Glostrup, Copenhagen Capital Region, Denmark

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath