Effect of Pioglitazone Administered to Patients With Friedreich's Ataxia: Proof of Concept
Information source: Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris
Information obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov on October 19, 2009 Link to the current ClinicalTrials.gov record.
Condition(s) targeted: Friedreich's Ataxia
Intervention: pioglitazone (Drug)
Phase: Phase 3
Status: Recruiting
Sponsored by: Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris Official(s) and/or principal investigator(s): isabelle Husson, Principal Investigator, Affiliation: Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris
Overall contact: isabelle husson, PH, Phone: 0140035394, Email: isabelle.husson@rdb.aphp.fr
Summary
Friedreich's ataxia (FA) is a rare progressive neurological disorder affecting approximately
1/30, 000 individuals. No treatment is presently available to counteract the
neurodegeneration of this extremely severe disease.
Pioglitazone, a well known PPAR gamma (peroxysome proliferators-activated receptor gamma)
ligand induces the expression of many enzymes involved in the mitochondrial metabolism,
including the superoxide dismutases. This agent may be therapeutic by counteracting the
disabled recruitment of antioxidant enzymes in FA patients. This potential neuroprotective
agent crosses the brain blood barrier in human.
Primary objective: To explore the effects of Pioglitazone on neurological function in FA
patients. We expect neurological benefits taking into account the natural course of the
disease.
Population: Subjects for this study will be limited to patients not older than 25 years
Methodology: Prospective, randomized double-blind trial of Pioglitazone versus placebo in FA
patients. Patients will be treated two years and will undergo clinical exams and testing
during three days each six months at the clinical investigation centre.
Clinical Details
Official title: Effect of Pioglitazone Administered to Patients With Friedreich's ATAXIA:Proof of Concept
Study design: Treatment, Randomized, Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Placebo Control, Parallel Assignment, Safety/Efficacy Study
Primary outcome: evaluate the efficacy of Pioglitazone on the neurological function of FA patients. Success will be defined as a stabilisation or improvement on ICARS designed as no more than 2 points maximum increment on this scale in two year.
Secondary outcome: tolerance of Pioglitazoneefficacy of Pioglitazone on neurological function efficacy of Pioglitazone on functional handicap and quality of life effect of Pioglitazone on cardiac parameters
Detailed description:
State of the art Friedreich's ataxia (FA) is a rare progressive neurological disorder
affecting approximately 1/30, 000 individuals. No treatment is presently available to
counteract the neurodegeneration of this extremely severe disease. The cardinal feature is a
progressive gait and limb ataxia. Other commonly associated clinical signs include:
dysarthria, sensory loss, distal weakness, pyramidal signs, absent reflexes, nystagmus and
cardiomyopathy. Pes caves, scoliosis, diabetes and decline of vision or audition are also
found in many patients. The disease often reveals before adulthood and leads to a
progressive loss of autonomy about ten years after disease onset. FA is recessively
inherited with a GAA trinucleotide repeat expansion in the first intron of a gene encoding
frataxin a mitochondrial protein. Decreased frataxin leads to a mitochondrial iron-sulfur
protein deficiency and hampered signalling pathways for superoxide dismutases, key enzymes
of early antioxidant defences of the cells. As a result, cultured patient cells are
particularly sensitive to oxidative insult. One aspect of the pathogenesis in vivo might be
explained by this phenomenon.
Pioglitazone, a well known PPAR gamma (peroxysome proliferators-activated receptor gamma)
ligand induces the expression of many enzymes involved in the mitochondrial metabolism,
including the superoxide dismutases. This agent may be therapeutic by counteracting the
disabled recruitment of antioxidant enzymes in FA patients. This potential neuroprotective
agent crosses the brain blood barrier in human. A clinical study has shown that a daily
treatment with Pioglitazone during three years induced apparent clinical improvement without
adverse events in multiple sclerosis patients. Pioglitazone has been shown to possibly act
on neurodegeneration in humans and animals models thus it appears a promising agent to be
tested in Friedreich ataxia. This agent also didn't show any peculiar toxicity in cultured
human cells with low frataxin compared with control. All these facts lead us to propose a
clinical trial with Pioglitazone in patients with FA. .
Primary objective: To explore the effects of Pioglitazone on neurological function in FA
patients. We expect neurological benefits taking into account the natural course of the
disease.
Population: Subjects for this study will be limited to patients not older than 25 years
Methodology: Prospective, randomized double-blind trial of Pioglitazone versus placebo in FA
patients. Patients will be treated two years and will undergo clinical exams and testing
during three days each six months at the clinical investigation centre.
Patients number justification: 20 patients in each group will be enrolled in the study with
considerations to inclusion possibilities and the Bayes statistical analysis methodology.
Evaluation of prior distribution of success probability per arm will be based on previous
literature data and experts consensus.
Primary endpoint : change in neurological testing as performed using the International
Cooperative Ataxia Rating Scale (ICARS) settled down by the World Federation of Neurology.
Success will be defined as a stabilisation or improvement on ICARS designed as no more than
2 points maximum increment on this scale in two years.
Secondary endpoints include measurements of the following: Neurological score by the
Friedreich's Ataxia Rating Scale (FARS), gait record and analysis of its components, posture
study, kinetic study of the upper limbs, speech, oculomotor and auditory disorders,
functional handicap using the Disability Status Scale (DSS), quality of life by SF-36 score;
Cardiac involvement (electrocardiography, 24 hours holter, echocardiography with tissue
doppler) and drug tolerance.
Benefits expected with this clinical trial: Expected results will be reduced symptoms or
stabilization of the natural evolution of this threat full progressive disease with bad
prognosis in patients treated with Pioglitazone. Furthermore, study results will possibly
contribute in the validation and standardization of new clinical evaluation tools used in
the follow-up of Friedreich ataxia patients
Eligibility
Minimum age: 7 Years.
Maximum age: 24 Years.
Gender(s): Both.
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
- Diagnosis of FA with confirmed FRDA mutations
- GAA repeat length of the shorter allele of frataxin gene > 300
- Age ≤ 24 years
- Ambulatory (assistance devices permitted) or able to stand up without support
- Neurologically symptomatic
- All subjects agree and commit to the use of 2 reliable methods of birth control for
the duration of the study if sexually active
- Willing (and parents if minor) to participate in all aspects of trial design and
follow-up
- No modification of the usual treatment 6 months before inclusion and agree to stay
with the same treatment during the trial (idebenone with a stable dosage, cardiologic
therapeutic)
Exclusion Criteria:
- Composite heterozygote
- Patients unable to stand up even with support
- Pregnant women
- Cardiac insufficiency NYHA I to IV
- Alkaline phosphatase, SGOT or SGPT greater than 1. 5 X the upper limit of normal
- Patients with diabetes
- Modification of the concomitant medications taken by the patient within the 6 months
before inclusion or during the trial
- Clinically significant medical disease that, in the judgment of the investigators,
would expose the patient to undue risk of harm or prevent the patient from completing
the study.
Locations and Contacts
isabelle husson, PH, Phone: 0140035394, Email: isabelle.husson@rdb.aphp.fr
Hôpital Robert Debré, Paris 75019, France; Recruiting Isabelle Husson, PH, Phone: 0140035394, Email: isabelle.husson@rdb.aphp.fr isabelle husson, PH, Principal Investigator
Additional Information
Starting date: December 2008
Ending date: December 2012
Last updated: April 1, 2009
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