Dromerick Alexander W, Edwardson Matthew A, Edwards Dorothy F, Giannetti Margot L, Barth Jessica, Brady Kathaleen P, Chan Evan, Tan Ming T, Tamboli Irfan, Chia Ruth, Orquiza Michael, Padilla Robert M, Cheema Amrita K, Mapstone Mark E, Fiandaca Massimo S, Federoff Howard J, Newport Elissa L
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Center for Brain Plasticity and Recovery, Georgetown University and MedStar National Rehabilitation Hospital Washington, DC, USA ; Department of Neurology, Georgetown University Washington, DC, USA.
Department of Kinesiology and Occupational Therapy, University of Wisconsin Madison, WI, USA.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2015 Apr 29;9:231. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2015.00231. eCollection 2015.
Seven hundred ninety-five thousand Americans will have a stroke this year, and half will have a chronic hemiparesis. Substantial animal literature suggests that the mammalian brain has much potential to recover from acute injury using mechanisms of neuroplasticity, and that these mechanisms can be accessed using training paradigms and neurotransmitter manipulation. However, most of these findings have not been tested or confirmed in the rehabilitation setting, in large part because of the challenges in translating a conceptually straightforward laboratory experiment into a meaningful and rigorous clinical trial in humans. Through presentation of methods for a Phase II trial, we discuss these issues and describe our approach.
In rodents there is compelling evidence for timing effects in rehabilitation; motor training delivered at certain times after stroke may be more effective than the same training delivered earlier or later, suggesting that there is a critical or sensitive period for strongest rehabilitation training effects. If analogous critical/sensitive periods can be identified after human stroke, then existing clinical resources can be better utilized to promote recovery. The Critical Periods after Stroke Study (CPASS) is a phase II randomized, controlled trial designed to explore whether such a sensitive period exists. We will randomize 64 persons to receive an additional 20 h of upper extremity therapy either immediately upon rehab admission, 2-3 months after stroke onset, 6 months after onset, or to an observation-only control group. The primary outcome measure will be the Action Research Arm Test (ARAT) at 1 year. Blood will be drawn at up to 3 time points for later biomarker studies.
CPASS is an example of the translation of rodent motor recovery experiments into the clinical setting; data obtained from this single site randomized controlled trial will be used to finalize the design of a Phase III trial.
今年将有79.5万美国人罹患中风,其中半数会出现慢性偏瘫。大量动物实验文献表明,哺乳动物大脑具有利用神经可塑性机制从急性损伤中恢复的巨大潜力,并且可以通过训练模式和神经递质操纵来激活这些机制。然而,这些发现大多尚未在康复环境中得到验证或证实,很大程度上是因为将概念上简单的实验室实验转化为有意义且严谨的人体临床试验存在挑战。通过介绍一项II期试验的方法,我们将讨论这些问题并描述我们的方法。
在啮齿动物中,有令人信服的证据表明康复存在时间效应;中风后特定时间进行的运动训练可能比更早或更晚进行相同训练更有效,这表明存在一个康复训练效果最强的关键期或敏感期。如果能在人类中风后识别出类似的关键/敏感期,那么现有的临床资源就能得到更好的利用以促进恢复。中风后关键期研究(CPASS)是一项II期随机对照试验,旨在探索是否存在这样一个敏感期。我们将把64人随机分为四组,分别在康复入院时、中风发作后2 - 3个月、发作后6个月立即接受额外20小时的上肢治疗,或分为仅接受观察的对照组。主要结局指标将是1年后的动作研究臂测试(ARAT)。将在多达3个时间点采集血液用于后续生物标志物研究。
CPASS是将啮齿动物运动恢复实验转化为临床实践的一个实例;从这个单中心随机对照试验获得的数据将用于确定III期试验的设计。