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About
Phase I / II randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of melatonin administration combined with ocrelizumab in patients with Progressive Multiple Primary Sclerosis.
Full description
Multiple sclerosis (MS), the most common inflammatory disease of the central nervous system in young adults, has a huge social and health interest, especially the primary progressive (PP-) course, in which the disability is very fast accumulated and currently there are no available treatments in Spain. PP-MS is characterized by neuro-inflammation and, especially, by neurodegeneration, with brain atrophy as key feature. It has been proposed that PP-MS therapies should combine anti-inflammatory and neuroprotective activities. The investigators have shown that melatonin, an immunomodulatory, antioxidant and neuroprotective compound, ameliorates the disease and modulates the pathogenic/protective immune responses in a MS animal model. Moreover, melatonin caused a long-term improvement of disability on a PP-MS patient. Thus, melatonin could be of interest in the therapy of PP-MS.
So far, ocrelizumab, recently authorized by the European Medicines Agency and incorporated into the portfolio of the Spanish National Health System in December 2018, is the only therapy that has shown some therapeutic efficacy on the decrease in long-term disability.
The purpose of this study is to determine the feasibility of using melatonin combined with ocrelizumab to treat PP-MS. Thus, the investigators propose a randomized, single-blind, placebo-controlled study on the safety and efficacy of melatonin combined with ocrelizumab on PP-MS patients. The investigators will assess the daily administration to patients treated with ocrelizumab for at least 9 months of one oral dose of melatonin containing 100mg during 24 months on patients safety and its effects over brain atrophy progression, Expanded Disability Status Scale scores, quality of life, MS symptoms, circadian impairment and levels of markers of central nervous system inflammation, axonal damage, Blood-brain barrier disruption and oxidative stress.
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Inclusion criteria
Patients who come to the Multiple Sclerosis Unit of the Department of Neurology of the Virgen Macarena University Hospital (Seville) or Vithas Nisa Seville Hospital or Virgen del Rocío University Hospital (Seville), and who meet the following criteria:
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
50 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
Clara M Rosso Fernández, MD/PhD; Antonio Carrillo Vico, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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