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Brief Title: MS-SMART: Multiple Sclerosis-Secondary Progressive Multi-Arm Randomisation Trial
Official Title: A Multi-arm Phase IIB Randomised, Double Blind Placebo-controlled Clinical Trial Comparing the Efficacy of Three Neuroprotective Drugs in Secondary Progressive Multiple Sclerosis.
Study ID: NCT01910259
Brief Summary: Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a disabling and progressive neurological disease that affects approximately 100,000 people in the UK. Many patients with MS experience two phases of disease; early MS (also called relapsing remitting MS, RRMS) and late MS (also called secondary progressive MS (SPMS). Early MS is due to inflammation of the nerves and the insulation (called myelin) that surrounds the nerves. Early MS is often characterised by periods of "attacks" interspersed with periods of "remission" with no or low disease symptoms. Late or progressive MS, which affects the majority of patients and typically emerges after 10-15 years of disease, results from actual nerve death (also called neurodegeneration). The progressive stage of disease results not in individual attacks but slow, cumulative and irreversible disability affecting walking, balance, vision, cognition, pain control, bladder and bowel function. Critically, and unlike early disease, there is no proven treatment for the late stage of MS. This is therefore an urgent and major unmet health need. MS-SMART directly addresses this need and will evaluate in this clinical trial three drugs (fluoxetine, riluzole or amiloride), all of which have shown some promise in MS, and in particular in SPMS. The trial is randomised and blinded. Randomisation means patients can get any one of the three active drugs or the inactive placebo/dummy; blinded means that neither patients nor the doctors will know which drug or placebo patients are receiving. Randomisation and blinding are standard approaches in clinical trials to ensure unbiased testing of drugs. All patients in MS-SMART will have periodic MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) brain scans and after 96 weeks these will be analysed. We will then compare the scans of each drug to the placebo or dummy to see if any of the drugs slow the rate of brain shrinkage that normally occurs in SPMS. This measured change in brain size is the primary (major) outcome of MS-SMART.
Detailed Description: MS-SMART will test the efficacy and mechanism of action of three repurposed drugs (fluoxetine, riluzole and amiloride). All three drugs are in human use and have a good safety record. Critically for the purpose of MS-SMART they all have shown promise in early phase human MS clinical trials and target one or more of the pivotal neurodegenerative causing pathways implicated in SPMS. This is a Type B trial, as the IMPs are all in human use, have a good safety profile but are not currently used for this patient population. The major need for patients with established and progressive MS is neuroprotective or disease modifying treatments that will slow or even stop disease progression. This study will evaluate three highly promising putative neuroprotective drugs as well as comprehensively address several of the current knowledge gaps related to the understanding of neuroprotection and neurodegeneration in SPMS through MRI and CSF examination. MS-SMART is a multicentre, multi-arm, double blind, placebo-controlled phase IIb randomised controlled trial. A total of 440 patients with SPMS, with an entry criteria of an EDSS score of 4.0-6.5 will be equally randomised to receive placebo or one of the three active agents (fluoxetine 20mg bd, amiloride 5mg bd or riluzole 50mg bd). Patients will be followed up for 96 weeks with outcome-data collected after 0, 24, 48 and 96 weeks. That is, the duration of the trial for a trial participant is 96 weeks (a telephone assessment at week 100, 4 weeks post completion will be conducted). This is standard practice for phase II trials in SPMS.
Minimum Age: 25 Years
Eligible Ages: ADULT, OLDER_ADULT
Sex: ALL
Healthy Volunteers: No
Anne Rowling Regenerative Neurology Clinic, Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, , United Kingdom
Gartnavel Royal Hospital, 1055 Great Western Road, Glasgow, , United Kingdom
Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals, Haywards Heath, , United Kingdom
St James's University Hospital, Leeds, , United Kingdom
The Walton Centre, Liverpool, , United Kingdom
The National hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, University College London, London, , United Kingdom
The Royal Victoria Infirmary, Newcastle, , United Kingdom
Queens Medical Centre, Nottingham, , United Kingdom
John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford University Hospitals NHS Trust, Oxford, , United Kingdom
Derriford Hospital, Plymouth, , United Kingdom
Royal Hallamshire Hospital, Sheffield, , United Kingdom
University Hospital of North Staffordshire, Stoke-on-Trent, , United Kingdom
Royal Cornwall Hospital, Truro, , United Kingdom
Name: Jeremy Chataway
Affiliation: University College, London
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Name: Siddharthan Chandran
Affiliation: University of Edinburgh
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR