Neurosciences and Mental Health Program, Research Institute, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Nat Med. 2020 Aug;26(8):1285-1294. doi: 10.1038/s41591-020-0985-2. Epub 2020 Jul 27.
We asked whether pharmacological stimulation of endogenous neural precursor cells (NPCs) may promote cognitive recovery and brain repair, focusing on the drug metformin, in parallel rodent and human studies of radiation injury. In the rodent cranial radiation model, we found that metformin enhanced the recovery of NPCs in the dentate gyrus, with sex-dependent effects on neurogenesis and cognition. A pilot double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover trial was conducted (ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02040376) in survivors of pediatric brain tumors who had been treated with cranial radiation. Safety, feasibility, cognitive tests and MRI measures of white matter and the hippocampus were evaluated as endpoints. Twenty-four participants consented and were randomly assigned to complete 12-week cycles of metformin (A) and placebo (B) in either an AB or BA sequence with a 10-week washout period at crossover. Blood draws were conducted to monitor safety. Feasibility was assessed as recruitment rate, medication adherence and procedural adherence. Linear mixed modeling was used to examine cognitive and MRI outcomes as a function of cycle, sequence and treatment. We found no clinically relevant safety concerns and no serious adverse events associated with metformin. Sequence effects were observed for all cognitive outcomes in our linear mixed models. For the subset of participants with complete data in cycle 1, metformin was associated with better performance than placebo on tests of declarative and working memory. We present evidence that a clinical trial examining the effects of metformin on cognition and brain structure is feasible in long-term survivors of pediatric brain tumors and that metformin is safe to use and tolerable in this population. This pilot trial was not intended to test the efficacy of metformin for cognitive recovery and brain growth, but the preliminary results are encouraging and warrant further investigation in a large multicenter phase 3 trial.
我们探讨了内源性神经前体细胞(NPC)的药理学刺激是否可能促进认知恢复和大脑修复,重点关注药物二甲双胍,同时进行了啮齿动物和人类辐射损伤研究。在啮齿动物颅辐射模型中,我们发现二甲双胍增强了齿状回 NPC 的恢复,对神经发生和认知有性别依赖性影响。进行了一项双盲、安慰剂对照交叉试验(ClinicalTrials.gov,NCT02040376),纳入接受颅部放疗的儿童脑肿瘤幸存者。安全性、可行性、认知测试以及磁共振成像(MRI)测量白质和海马的结果作为终点。24 名参与者同意并随机分配完成 12 周的二甲双胍(A)和安慰剂(B)周期,在交叉时进行 10 周的洗脱期,采用 AB 或 BA 序列。进行血液检查以监测安全性。可行性评估为招募率、药物依从性和程序依从性。线性混合模型用于检查认知和 MRI 结果作为周期、序列和治疗的函数。我们发现没有与二甲双胍相关的临床相关安全性问题,也没有严重不良事件。我们的线性混合模型显示,所有认知结果都观察到序列效应。对于第 1 周期有完整数据的参与者子集,与安慰剂相比,二甲双胍与更好的陈述性和工作记忆测试表现相关。我们提供了证据表明,在儿童脑肿瘤长期幸存者中,检查二甲双胍对认知和大脑结构影响的临床试验是可行的,并且二甲双胍在该人群中使用安全且耐受。这项初步试验并不是为了测试二甲双胍对认知恢复和大脑生长的疗效,但其初步结果令人鼓舞,值得在更大的多中心 3 期试验中进一步研究。