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Neural Correlates of Motor and Psychiatric Fluctuations in Parkinson's Disease (Transition STN)

University Hospitals (UH) logo

University Hospitals (UH)

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

PARKINSON DISEASE (Disorder)

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07404241
2024-02324

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study explores the electrophysiological mechanisms underlying motor and non-motor fluctuations (NMF) in Parkinson's disease (PD), focusing on cortical and subthalamic dynamics during acute dopaminergic stimulation.

PD is characterized by both motor symptoms and disabling non-motor symptoms-including neuropsychiatric fluctuations that remain poorly understood. While local field potentials (LFP) recorded from the subthalamic nucleus (STN) via deep brain stimulation (DBS) have revealed beta-band abnormalities linked to motor dysfunction, little is known about the oscillatory signatures of NMF. Preliminary data from our group suggested that gamma-band EEG activity in frontotemporal regions may correlate with neuropsychiatric fluctuations.

This Swiss, two-center, prospective observational study aims to investigate resting-state electroencephalogram (EEG) and STN-LFP correlates of motor and non-motor symptoms during a modified levodopa challenge in 30 PD patients with STN-DBS. Using high-density EEG and chronically implanted Medtronic Percept™ DBS devices, electrophysiological data will be collected across five clinical states (combinations of ON/OFF levodopa and DBS). Clinical symptoms will be assessed alongside electrophysiological activity to identify frequency-specific cortical-STN biomarkers. Machine learning models (e.g., LASSO regression) will be used to predict motor and non-motor states from EEG and LFP data, enabling the identification of dynamic oscillatory markers. This could inform future adaptive DBS strategies.

The study leverages advanced methods in neurophysiology, imaging, and machine learning to deepen our understanding of PD fluctuations. It also proposes the first detailed electrophysiological mapping of NMF, which could improve patient stratification and neuromodulation therapies. Anatomical validation of DBS lead placement will be performed using standard neuroimaging toolkits.

Full description

  1. Background and Rationale Parkinson's disease (PD) is a common neurodegenerative disorder affecting 2% of individuals over 65 years. Beyond classical motor symptoms like bradykinesia, rigidity, and tremor, PD is increasingly recognized for its debilitating non-motor symptoms (NMS), which include depression, anxiety, fatigue, apathy, and bradyphrenia. These NMS fluctuate alongside motor symptoms, particularly in later disease stages when dopaminergic treatments become pulsatile. Neuropsychiatric fluctuations (NMF) significantly reduce patients' quality of life, yet their pathophysiology is not well understood.

    While EEG studies have characterized motor fluctuations and impulse control disorders through frequency-specific changes, few studies have systematically examined the EEG or intracranial electrophysiological substrates of NMF. STN-DBS offers the opportunity to record local field potentials (LFPs) directly from the subthalamic nucleus (STN). Beta oscillations in STN have been consistently associated with akinesia, while recent studies suggest that alpha and gamma band activities may relate to non-motor and neuropsychiatric features.

    Technological advances, such as Medtronic's PERCEPT™ PC DBS system, now enable chronic LFP recordings postoperatively. Coupling these with high-density EEG enables real-time exploration of cortical-subcortical interactions. Our pilot data show distinct EEG dynamics between motor and neuropsychiatric fluctuations following levodopa challenge, supporting a differential spatio-spectral signature for these symptoms.

  2. Objectives

    Primary Objective:

    To characterize the temporal dynamics of cortical EEG and STN LFP oscillatory activity and coherence during the acute levodopa response, and their correlation with motor and non-motor fluctuations in PD.

    Secondary Objectives:

    To determine the influence of STN-DBS on EEG/LFP biomarkers. To investigate motor and non-motor temporal profiles after levodopa administration.

    To characterize phase-coupling changes between STN and cortical networks. To use machine learning to identify spectral EEG/LFP biomarkers predicting ON/OFF states.

    To explore anatomical correlates of LFP signals using post-op imaging and electrode localization.

  3. Design and Methodology

Design:

Prospective, observational, exploratory two-center study (HUG Geneva and CHUV Lausanne).

Participants:

30 patients with idiopathic PD (per UK Brain Bank Criteria), in the fluctuations stage, treated or candidates for STN-DBS, on dopaminergic therapy, and without dementia.

Timeline:

Total duration: ~36 months

24 months for recruitment and data collection 12 months for data analysis and dissemination

Study Visits:

Visit 1: Baseline clinical and neuropsychological assessment in ON-drug/ON-DBS condition.

Visit 2: Modified levodopa challenge with 5 successive conditions:

OFF-drug/ON-DBS OFF-drug/OFF-DBS Transition period post-levodopa (serial assessments) ON-drug/OFF-DBS ON-drug/ON-DBS

For each condition: 10-min resting-state EEG, 5-min STN-LFP, and brief clinical assessment.

Levodopa Administration:

150% of usual morning dose (Madopar® LIQ), to ensure supramaximal response.

Neurophysiological Recording:

High-density EEG (256 channels, Philips EGI) STN-LFP using Medtronic PERCEPT™ system Synchronization via EMG trigger pulse

Clinical Assessments:

MDS-UPDRS Part III (motor) Neuropsychiatric Fluctuation Scale (tablet-based) Stop-Signal Task (SSRT) Bradyphrenia scale

4. Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria

Inclusion:

Idiopathic PD diagnosis DBS candidate or post-DBS (within 4-8 weeks) Motor or non-motor fluctuations MOCA >24/30 On stable dopaminergic therapy

Exclusion:

Age >80 Dementia, active psychosis, unstable disease Severe OFF symptoms precluding testing Legal guardianship or participation in other drug studies

6. Impact and Perspectives This study addresses an unmet need in PD: the poor understanding and characterization of neuropsychiatric fluctuations. By correlating motor and non-motor symptom dynamics with LFP and EEG signatures, it will provide pathophysiological insights and biomarkers to guide future adaptive DBS (aDBS). It will also inform clinical management of NMFs and open avenues for biomarker-driven neuromodulation strategies.

The collaboration between two major Swiss centers ensures feasibility and access to a representative PD cohort. Use of standardized procedures and machine learning ensures translatability to larger future trials.

Ultimately, this project aims to bridge the neurophysiological understanding of motor and non-motor circuits in PD, enhancing the personalization of neuromodulatory treatments.

Enrollment

30 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 80 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Diagnosis of Parkinson's disease (PD) based on United Kingdom Parkinson's Disease Society Brain Bank Criteria.
  • Patients candidate for STN-DBS in the PD phase called fluctuations stage.
  • Presence of fluctuations (motor and/or non-motor) are based on the pre-surgical DBS assessment:
  • To be on dopaminergic therapy.
  • Patients who have undergone STN-DBS implantation within 4 to 8 weeks before electrophysiological acquisition.

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients with an age greater than 80 years,
  • Dementia (defined by a MOCA score ≤24),
  • Active psychosis or depression with suicidal ideation,
  • Any clinically meaningful non-stable physical diseases,
  • Patients with OFF-drug state so severe that it prevents study tests from being carried out (e.g acute painful dystonia, intolerable non-motor symptoms such as pain, anxiety),
  • Participating in a pharmacological study,
  • Inability to provide informed consent (legal guardianship).

Trial design

30 participants in 1 patient group

Parkinson's disease patients treated with STN-DBS
Description:
Prospective cohort

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Damien BENIS, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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