Center of Expertise for Parkinson & Movement Disorders; Nijmegen, the Netherlands, Department of Neurology, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behavior, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
IQ Healthcare, Radboud Institute for Health Sciences, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
BMC Neurol. 2022 Jul 14;22(1):262. doi: 10.1186/s12883-022-02770-7.
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disease, for which no disease-modifying therapies exist. Preclinical and clinical evidence suggest that hypoxia-based therapy might have short- and long-term benefits in PD. We present the contours of the first study to assess the safety, feasibility and physiological and symptomatic impact of hypoxia-based therapy in individuals with PD.
METHODS/DESIGN: In 20 individuals with PD, we will investigate the safety, tolerability and short-term symptomatic efficacy of continuous and intermittent hypoxia using individual, double-blind, randomized placebo-controlled N-of-1 trials. This design allows for dose finding and for including more individualized outcomes, as each individual serves as its own control. A wide range of exploratory outcomes is deployed, including the Movement Disorders Society Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating scale (MDS-UPDRS) part III, Timed Up & Go Test, Mini Balance Evaluation Systems (MiniBES) test and wrist accelerometry. Also, self-reported impression of overall symptoms, motor and non-motor symptoms and urge to take dopaminergic medication will be assessed on a 10-point Likert scale. As part of a hypothesis-generating part of the study, we also deploy several exploratory outcomes to probe possible underlying mechanisms of action, including cortisol, erythropoietin and platelet-derived growth factor β. Efficacy will be assessed primarily by a Bayesian analysis.
This evaluation of hypoxia therapy could provide insight in novel pathways that may be pursued for PD treatment. This trial also serves as a proof of concept for deploying an N-of-1 design and for including individualized outcomes in PD research, as a basis for personalized treatment approaches.
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05214287 (registered January 28, 2022).
帕金森病(PD)是一种神经退行性疾病,目前尚无针对该疾病的疗法。临床前和临床证据表明,基于缺氧的治疗可能对 PD 具有短期和长期的益处。我们首次呈现了评估基于缺氧的治疗对 PD 患者的安全性、可行性以及生理和症状影响的研究轮廓。
方法/设计:在 20 名 PD 患者中,我们将使用个体、双盲、随机安慰剂对照 N-of-1 试验来研究连续和间歇性缺氧的安全性、耐受性和短期症状疗效。这种设计允许进行剂量发现,并纳入更多个体化的结果,因为每个个体都是自己的对照。我们部署了广泛的探索性结果,包括运动障碍协会统一帕金森病评定量表(MDS-UPDRS)第三部分、计时起立和行走测试、简易平衡评估系统(MiniBES)测试和手腕加速度计。此外,还将使用 10 分制的李克特量表评估整体症状、运动和非运动症状以及服用多巴胺能药物的冲动的自我报告印象。作为研究的产生假设部分的一部分,我们还部署了几个探索性结果来探究可能的作用机制,包括皮质醇、促红细胞生成素和血小板衍生生长因子 β。疗效将主要通过贝叶斯分析进行评估。
这项缺氧治疗的评估可能为 PD 治疗提供新的潜在治疗途径。该试验还为在 PD 研究中部署 N-of-1 设计和纳入个体化结果提供了概念验证,为个性化治疗方法奠定了基础。
ClinicalTrials.gov 标识符:NCT05214287(2022 年 1 月 28 日注册)。