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Neuromuscular Electrostimulation in Multiple Sclerosis People With Dysphagia

I

I.R.C.C.S. Fondazione Santa Lucia

Status

Completed

Conditions

Multiple Sclerosis
Deglutition Disorders

Treatments

Device: Experimental: traditional dysphagia therapy plus Neuromuscular electrostimulation
Device: Sham Comparator: Traditional dysphagia therapy plus sham Neuromuscular electrostimulation

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05063708
No 2019/R -Multi/ 005 (Other Grant/Funding Number)
CE/PROG.809

Details and patient eligibility

About

Dysphagia is a disabling, life-threatening symptom that can cause death in Multiple Sclerosis people (pwMS) through aspiration pneumonia. Speech therapists use behavioural therapies (compensatory and rehabilitative) to alleviate such swallowing problems, with limited benefit. Compensatory strategies such as postural changes and changes in food consistency, have been found to be partially effective, especially in patients with mild dysphagia and may be ineffective in patients with more severe dysphagia. The rehabilitative strategies include "no swallow exercises" which aim to strengthen isolated muscles used in swallowing (such as tongue strengthening) and "swallowing exercises" that aim at strengthening all the muscles used in swallowing while executing a hard, effortful, or prolonged swallow. To date, no randomized clinical trials have shown that rehabilitative strategies are effective. Neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES), often referred to as electrical stimulation, was introduced as a novel therapy for dysphagia in the late 2001. The principles of NMES in the limb rehabilitation literature are well established. However published protocols applying NMES to swallowing function have shown mixed results in people with stroke and only one study was published on MS people. This will be a double blinded, randomized clinical trial (patients and research staff blinded) with two arms: standard speech therapy plus Active NMES vs speech therapy with Sham NMES. The aim of this study is to determine whether NMES added benefit to a therapy program comprised of standard swallowing exercises in dysphagic pwMS.

Full description

Recent studies has shown that dysphagia in MS is more frequent than previously believed, the real prevalence ranging from 33 to 43%. Dysphagia is a disabling, life-threatening symptom that can cause death in MS people through aspiration pneumonia. Dysphagia has also been reported in about 17% of patients with low disability (EDSS score lower than 2.5) . These figures, which are based on clinical evaluations, are undoubtedly higher when the symptom is evaluated by means of instrumental investigations . According to the De Pauw study , permanent dysphagia emerges in mildly impaired patients (EDSS 2-3), and becomes increasingly common as disability worsens, reaching a prevalence of 65% in the most severely disabled subjects (EDSS 8-9). Thus, diagnosis in the early stages may play an important role in limiting the consequences of this dysfunction. However, as patients themselves sometimes underestimate this symptom, diagnosis must be supported, as recently described in the literature, by functional tests and instrumental evaluations. A specific questionnaire (DYMUS: Dysphagia in Multiple Sclerosis) was published and validated for the assessment of dysphagia in MS. Its good internal consistency and the feasibility of administration has made it a reliable means to detect dysphagia in MS. In particular it consents to distinguish dysphagia to solids from dysphagia to liquids. However, a more detailed and objective evaluation is needed to investigate specific deficits and to plan appropriate rehabilitation; the Fiberoptic Endoscopy Evaluation of Swallowing (FEES) may be used for this purpose. In the 20 years since these initial reports, the FEES has become a validated technique for the evaluation of pharyngeal swallowing. The swallowing disturbances in MS are characterized by impairment of the oral and pharyngeal phases. Abraham et al. found impairment of the upper oesophageal sphincter in 100% of a small MS population . Calcagno et al., using a mixed clinical and instrumental examination, subdivided their population into three groups according to the severity of dysphagia: severe, moderate and slight. Severe dysphagia group showed impairment of both oral and pharyngeal phases of swallowing, moderate dysphagia group showed motor impairment of the tongue, lips, velum or larynx, while the mild dysphagia group showed deficiency either of the velum or of the glottic closure. In the same paper, Calcagno et al. found that the compensatory strategies resolved dysphagia in about 94% of the cases (46 pts. Out of 49) These strategies help to redirect and improve the food flow, avoiding aspiration and reducing the risk of pneumonia, but patients remain dysphagic and always need to perform compensatory strategies. This seem to be the only study evaluating the rehabilitative approach, but it was not a control study. The role of food was highlighted in a recent paper showing that the main effect of food hardness is a delay in oral ejection time, which strongly delays total swallowing time, whereas pharyngeal bolus transit is dependent on its viscosity. Recently, a pilot study has shown as NMES could probably improve voice quality in MS patients: in fact, dysarthria has been proven to affect quality of life in MS patients .

NMES is a form of muscle stimulation with short electrical pulses that is frequently used in physiotherapy to strengthen healthy muscles and has been well described for several decades. NMES is used with a variety of different parameters for different types of treatment, since muscle contraction depends on different electrical parameters. An increase in frequency will result in an increased tension of the stimulated muscle, whereas increased intensity spreads current over a larger area, stimulating more motor units. Lastly, increasing the current duration causes more motor unit activation. NMES can be used for either muscle strengthening, retardation of atrophy or muscle re-education, and different stimulation parameters have to be chosen for each of these three applications of NMES. The use of NMES in dysphagia treatment is relatively new; the first study was published in 2001 . Although Logemann reported that the therapeutic effects of NMES still lacks convincing supporting evidence, several studies have been carried out Research using NMES, including randomized controlled trials, has demonstrated functionally improved swallowing with subjects moving from modified diets to more normal diet and fluids when NMES is used in conjunction with traditional therapy, but not when used in isolation .

Moreover, recent UK guidelines from the National Institute of Clinical Excellence (NICE) recognized the positive results from these trials and promoted a further research to support the routine clinical use. NMES has been used in a wide range of patients, suffering from diverse pathologies: from head and neck cancer, to post-stroke dysphagia, obtaining different results . Although it has been hypothesized, that neuromuscular electrical stimulation might enhance muscle strength in weak and disused oro-pharyngeal muscles, its clinical effectiveness remains unclear. Regardless the mechanism of action, clinical results showed that NMES enhances laryngeal elevation , reduces upper esophageal sphincter pressure and it enhances tongue base retraction during swallowing in health volunteers . As reported by Oh and Hamdy , the improvement of the swallowing function in stroke, after electrical stimulation is correlated with cortical reorganization, suggesting that multiple sessions of NEMS of the neck muscles could improve swallowing function also trough the recruitment of new cortical areas.

NMES has poor been used in treating dysphagia in MS patients A pilot study performed with pharyngeal electrical stimulation for dysphagia associated with MS showed an improvement in penetration and aspiration scale, suggesting a potential benefit for the treatment of this symptom.

However, this type of treatment can be performed only in specialized centers and it is probably more invasive than NMES. In 2009, Bogaardt conducted a Class IV trial with a sample of 25 patients with MS. The primary focus of the study was to examine the effects of NMES on pooling of saliva or liquid in the valleculae and pyriform sinuses. Six of the 25 patients had significant reduction in pooling of saliva in the pyriform sinuses, and 23 participants reported through a questionnaire that their swallowing had improved. This seem to be the unique paper focusing on the therapeutic effects of NMES in MS patients. Simonelli et al recently published about the use of NMES in people with stroke and dysphagia. The methodology resulted safe with a good effectiveness in add on with traditional speech therapy. In fact, combined treatment seem to reduce the risk of penetration and aspiration in stroke dysphagic people.

The aim of the study is to determine whether NMES added benefit to a therapy program comprised of standard swallowing exercises in dysphagic pwMS.

Enrollment

136 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Diagnosis: definite MS (Thompson et al 2018)
  • Stability: recruited subjects must be in a stable phase of the disease, without relapses which induce worsening > 1 point in the EDSS and with an EDSS <=8
  • ASHA<6 and DYMUS >2
  • Novelty: subjects should not have been trained with dysphagia program in the last 6 month
  • Mini-Mental State Examination: > 24

Exclusion criteria

  • Dysphagia related to other diseases
  • Presence of tracheal cannula
  • Local or general contraindications to the use of equipment for electrical muscle stimulation of the neck
  • Malignancies or acute inflammation in the anterior region of the neck.
  • Lack of collaboration due to mental impairment

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

136 participants in 2 patient groups

Traditional dysphagia therapy plus sham Neuromuscular electrostimulation
Sham Comparator group
Description:
Traditional dysphagia therapy (TDT) involved orofacial, lingual, and laryngeal motor exercises and compensatory swallowing strategies included various modifications of head, neck, and body postures and adjustment of food/liquid temperature, viscosity, and volume. The choice of specific strategies was based on the FEES findings and the clinical swallowing examination. The rehabilitative treatment will be administered in the 8 centers taking part to the study. The electrodes in this "sham" group will be placed in the same positions as the active treatment, with a current between 3 and 5 mA (average of 3.5 mA) current unable to perform muscle contraction. Every MS patient will be received 16 sessions of TDT according to their degree of dysphagia, contemporary associated with Sham neuromuscular electrostimulation two 30-min treatment a day, separated by a rest period of at least 45 minutes for four consecutive days per week, within a period of 4 weeks
Treatment:
Device: Sham Comparator: Traditional dysphagia therapy plus sham Neuromuscular electrostimulation
traditional dysphagia therapy plus Neuromuscular electrostimulation
Experimental group
Description:
Every MS patient will be treated with traditional dysphagia therapy, associated with an active neuromuscular electrostimulation. The amplitude will be increased until the subject will feel a 'grabbing sensation' which corresponded to muscular contraction. This will be the amplitude used for the therapy. This process will be repeated for the second channel of the stimulator. The typical electrical stimulus is at 80 Hz and at 300 microsec, and it will be adapted to avoid annoying stimulus to the patients. During therapy, both channels will be active. Every MS patient will be received 16 sessions of traditional dysphagia therapy according to their degree of dysphagia, contemporary associated with neuromuscular electrostimulation , according to our previous experiences, two 30-min treatment a day, separated by a rest period of at least 45 minutes for four consecutive days per week, within a period of 4 weeks.
Treatment:
Device: Experimental: traditional dysphagia therapy plus Neuromuscular electrostimulation

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Claudio Ma Solaro, MD; Maria Grazia Grasso, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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