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About
This multi-center randomized controlled trial evaluates if the addition of intravenous immunoglobulin to standard treatment of corticosteroids improves outcome in children and adults with first episode of Transverse Myelitis of Neuro-myelitis optica. Half of participants will receive corticosteroids alone, whilst the other half will receive corticosteroids plus intravenous immunoglobulin.
Full description
Transverse myelitis (TM) is a severe demyelinating condition predominantly affecting young people, which causes significant long-term disability in approximately one third. Current initial treatment is with corticosteroids, although evidence for their use is based on extrapolation from trials in adult multiple sclerosis relapses. In view of the severity of the condition, additional treatments have been trialed.
Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) is often used as second-line treatment in steroid-unresponsive central nervous system demyelination, although evidence for its efficacy is limited to small case series and case reports. Randomized controlled trials have demonstrated that IVIG reduces inflammation and enhances remyelination in a number of neurological conditions, although there have been no randomized controlled trials testing its use in adults and children with TM.
This study will evaluate if additional and early treatment with IVIG is of extra benefit in TM when compared to the current standard therapy of intravenous steroids alone.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
EITHER acute first onset transverse myelitis (using the TM Consortium Working Group 2002 criteria) - patients must fulfill all of the following criteria:
OR first presentation of neuromyelitis optica (using standardised criteria) - patients must fulfil both absolute criteria:
Optic neuritis
Acute myelitis, plus two out of three supportive criteria (as Aquaporin 4 antibody (AQP4) is often not available acutely, only the first two supportive criteria would be applied),
Brain MRI not meeting criteria for Multiple Sclerosis (MS) at disease onset
Spinal cord MRI with contiguous T2-weighted signal abnormality extending over three or more vertebral segments, indicating a relatively large lesion in the spinal cord
AQP4 seropositive status
Exclusion criteria
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2 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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