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Early Pharmacological Treatment of Acute Spasticity After Spinal Cord Injury

C

Centre Integre Universitaire de Sante et Services Sociaux du Nord de l'ile de Montreal

Status and phase

Not yet enrolling
Phase 4

Conditions

Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury

Treatments

Drug: Usual routine care
Drug: Early baclofen Intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06564714
MP-32-2023-2550

Details and patient eligibility

About

The objective of this clinical trial is to evaluate if early detection of spasticity and immediate treatment with oral baclofen during acute care prevents problematic spasticity and improves neurofunctional recovery after tSCI.

The main questions it aims to answer are :

  1. Assess the safety of early baclofen treatment during acute care after SCI.
  2. Compare the neurofunctional outcomes between the early baclofen group and the control group up to 6 months after tSCI, in terms of mobility, global functional independence, neurological recovery, pain and spasticity.

The early baclofen group will receive oral administration of baclofen as soon as any sign of acute spasticity is observed. The dose is started initially at 5 mg three times a day and is increased every 7 days by 5 mg per intake (up to a maximum 80 mg total per day) until achieving an optimal response, i.e. when spasticity is no longer problematic. The control group however will receive the "usual routine care" at our institution as per which baclofen is initiated by the attending physician (i.e. physiatrist or spine surgeon) only when acute spasticity becomes severe and problematic.

Full description

Spasticity is a condition in which muscles are abnormally stiff or tight, and interfere with normal movement. Following spinal cord injury (SCI), spasticity is common, affecting up to 70% of patients in the chronic stage 6 months or more after the injury. (1-4). After SCI, spasticity is due to a stretch reflex disorder of sensorimotor control following an upper motor neuron lesion, i.e. a lesion involving the neurons carrying the information within the spinal cord. Clinically, spasticity manifests as a complex syndrome of velocity-dependent hypertonia, clonus (rhythmic oscillating stretch reflex) and spasms (involuntary muscle contractions) that can have profound consequences on function and quality of life.

Traditionally, the clinical impact of spasticity has been mostly recognized during the subacute and chronic phases after SCI. Based upon the current management paradigm, the great majority of individuals with spasticity will receive pharmaceutical treatment for spasticity only during the rehabilitation period weeks or months after the injury when the clinical manifestations become severe and problematic. The investigators have challenged this long-held belief by proposing their paradigm shift towards early recognition and treatment of spasticity during the acute within the first month after SCI, after showing that about half of individuals will develop clinical signs of early spasticity during the acute hospitalization, and that acute spasticity is associated with poor long-term outcomes.

In particular, the investigators found that long-term mobility is significantly decreased in individuals presenting acute spasticity within the first month after the SCI. Our preliminary data suggest that prompt pharmacological treatment with baclofen - an anti-spasmodic medication - during the acute hospitalization improves neurological recovery in the presence of acute spasticity. Based on these preliminary findings, the overarching hypothesis of this study is that long-term neurofunctional outcomes are improved by early detection of acute spasticity and immediate treatment with oral baclofen.

Our team of experienced clinician-scientists specialized in SCI care therefore propose a single-site pilot randomized clinical trial including 55 patients admitted for a traumatic SCI (tSCI), in order to evaluate the safety and neurofunctional benefits of early baclofen treatment (i.e. as soon as any signs of spasticity are observed within the first month after the injury) during the acute hospitalization.

Enrollment

55 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Male or female aged 18 years or older
  • Blunt (non-penetrating) traumatic SCI
  • AIS grade A to D
  • NLI between C0 and L1
  • Patient willing and able to provide informed consent

Exclusion criteria

  • Non-traumatic SCI (e.g. tumor, infection, transverse myelitis, etc.)
  • AIS grade E upon admission
  • Penetrating tSCI (from stab wound, gunshot injury, etc.)
  • Cauda equina syndrome or NLI below L1
  • Moderate or severe brain injury (mild traumatic brain injury not an exclusion criteria)
  • Contraindication to oral baclofen use (needs clearance from attending physician and pharmacological consultant)
  • Pre-existing neurological disorders (cerebrovascular disease, Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis, etc.)
  • Major cognitive deficits precluding informed consent and/or assessments
  • Unlikely to comply with scheduled visits (e.g. living in another country)
  • Renal insufficiency

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

55 participants in 2 patient groups

Early Baclofen treatment group
Experimental group
Description:
Oral baclofen will be started as soon as any sign of acute spasticity consisting of spasms, velocity-dependent hypertonia and/or clonus is observed. Oral baclofen will be initiated the same day as when signs of spasticity are first observed. Dosage : oral administration of baclofen is started initially at 5 mg three times a day. The dose is increased every 7 days by 5 mg per intake (up to a maximum 80 mg total per day) until achieving an optimal response,
Treatment:
Drug: Early baclofen Intervention
Control group
Other group
Description:
The control group will receive the "usual routine care" as per which baclofen is prescribed only when acute spasticity becomes severe and problematic. In the presence of problematic spasticity, oral administration of baclofen is started initially at 5 mg three times a day. The dose is increased every 7 days by 5 mg per intake (up to a maximum 80 mg total per day) until achieving an optimal response.
Treatment:
Drug: Usual routine care

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Lara Chawa; Pascal Mputu

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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