Campbell Kathleen, Neul Jeffrey L, Lieberman David N, Berry-Kravis Elizabeth, Benke Tim A, Fu Cary, Percy Alan, Suter Bernhard, Morris David, Carpenter Randall L, Marsh Eric D, von Hehn Jana
Division of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, Vanderbilt Kennedy Center, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, USA.
J Neurodev Disord. 2025 Jan 24;17(1):4. doi: 10.1186/s11689-025-09591-y.
Preclinical studies and anecdotal case reports support the potential therapeutic benefit of low-dose oral ketamine as a treatment of clinical symptoms in Rett syndrome (RTT); however, no controlled studies have been conducted in RTT to evaluate safety, tolerability and efficacy.
This was a sequentially initiated, dose-escalating cohort, placebo-controlled, double blind, randomized sequence, cross-over study of oral ketamine in 6-12-year-old girls with RTT to evaluate short-term safety and tolerability and explore efficacy.
Participants were randomized to either five days treatment with oral ketamine or matched placebo, followed by a nine-day wash-out period and then crossed-over to the opposite treatment. Ketamine was dosed twice daily at 0.75 mg/kg/dose (Cohort 1) or 1.5 mg/kg/dose (Cohort 2). An independent safety monitoring committee evaluated safety and approved proceeding to the next dose cohort. Caregivers, participants, outcome assessors, and study staff except pharmacists were blinded to allocation. The primary endpoint was safety and tolerability. Exploratory efficacy endpoints included change in clinician- and caregiver-rated measures of RTT features, brain activity on electroencephalography, and wearable biosensors to measure respiration, heart rate, sleep, and activity.
Twenty-three participants enrolled (11 in Cohort 1, 12 in Cohort 2) from 3/12/2019-11/22/2021. One participant was excluded from analysis due to not meeting inclusion criteria on blinded review prior to analysis. One participant was withdrawn from the study due to an adverse event (vomiting) after the first dose of ketamine. Although planned for four dose cohorts, the trial was stopped after Cohort 2 due to enrollment challenges associated with the COVID-19 pandemic. Ketamine was safe and tolerated in both cohorts, with 1 related treatment emergent adverse event of vomiting. No difference was observed in efficacy between ketamine and placebo. Electroencephalography showed the expected increase in high frequency power with ketamine.
Short-term, low-dose oral ketamine was safe and well tolerated in girls with RTT. No clinical efficacy of ketamine in treating symptoms of RTT was observed with 5 days of treatment, despite electroencephalography evidence of ketamine target engagement during the first dose. Further studies are needed to evaluate safety and efficacy of higher dose and longer exposure to ketamine in RTT.
Registered at clinicaltrials.gov NCT03633058.
临床前研究和轶事性病例报告支持低剂量口服氯胺酮治疗雷特综合征(RTT)临床症状的潜在治疗益处;然而,尚未在RTT中进行对照研究以评估其安全性、耐受性和疗效。
这是一项序贯启动、剂量递增队列、安慰剂对照、双盲、随机序列、交叉研究,对6至12岁RTT女童口服氯胺酮,以评估短期安全性和耐受性并探索疗效。
参与者被随机分为接受为期五天的口服氯胺酮治疗或匹配的安慰剂治疗,随后是九天的洗脱期,然后交叉接受相反的治疗。氯胺酮每日给药两次,剂量为0.75毫克/千克/剂量(队列1)或1.5毫克/千克/剂量(队列2)。一个独立的安全监测委员会评估安全性并批准进入下一个剂量队列。除药剂师外,照顾者、参与者、结果评估者和研究人员对分配情况不知情。主要终点是安全性和耐受性。探索性疗效终点包括临床医生和照顾者评定的RTT特征测量值的变化、脑电图上的脑活动,以及用于测量呼吸、心率、睡眠和活动的可穿戴生物传感器。
2019年3月12日至2021年11月22日,共有23名参与者入组(队列1中有11名,队列2中有12名)。一名参与者因在分析前的盲态审查中不符合纳入标准而被排除在分析之外。一名参与者在第一剂氯胺酮后因不良事件(呕吐)退出研究。尽管计划进行四个剂量队列研究,但由于与2019冠状病毒病大流行相关的入组挑战,该试验在队列2之后停止。两个队列中氯胺酮都是安全且耐受性良好的,有1例与治疗相关的呕吐不良事件。氯胺酮和安慰剂在疗效上未观察到差异。脑电图显示氯胺酮使高频功率出现预期增加。
短期、低剂量口服氯胺酮在RTT女童中是安全且耐受性良好的。尽管脑电图证据表明在第一剂氯胺酮给药期间药物作用靶点被激活,但在5天治疗中未观察到氯胺酮治疗RTT症状的临床疗效。需要进一步研究以评估更高剂量和更长时间使用氯胺酮治疗RTT的安全性和疗效。
在clinicaltrials.gov上注册,注册号为NCT03633058。