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Sub-thalamic Nucleus Stimulation in Parkinson Disease (PARKEO)

U

University Hospital of Bordeaux

Status

Completed

Conditions

Parkinson's Disease

Treatments

Procedure: New targeting procedure without electrophysiology
Procedure: Classical neurosurgical procedure

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01817088
CHUBX 2012/07

Details and patient eligibility

About

Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is an established procedure for the symptomatic treatment of Parkinson's disease. This procedure performed in two steps using electrophysiology. This study is a prospective, randomized and monocentric study to compare two DBS procedures with or without electrophysiology.

A better control of targeting and trajectory is necessary before not using electrophysiology, which is the reference procedure. A new definition of sub thalamic nuclei with new MRI stereotactic landmarks, the use of surgical robot (Neuromata Renishaw) and the use of operative imaging (O-arm) could allow the implantation of electrode in sub-thalamic nuclei without the need of electrophysiology.

Two groups of patients will be followed: a first group of patients with a procedure under general anesthesia alone without electrophysiological stimulation and a second smaller group of patients with a first step of electrode implantation under awake surgery with electrophysiological stimulation followed by a second step under general anesthesia for the implantation of stimulator.

Clinical results will be assessed at 6 months after implantation.

Full description

Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is an established procedure for the symptomatic treatment of Parkinson's disease. This procedure performed in two steps using electrophysiology (Limousin et al., 1995) to register the activity of the sub-thalamic nucleus and test the efficacy of stimulation while the patient is awake. A second procedure is needed a few days later to implant the stimulation device under general anaesthesia. The duration of the first procedure is long because of a necessary time of deep stimulation to control the target before definitive implantation. Firstly, the long time of procedure causes pain for the patient. Secondly, the time of procedure, and thus of electrophysiology, is correlated with a rate of device infection of 5 % - 6 % (Hamani et al., 2006; Kenney et al., 2007; Sillay et al., 2008; Doshi et al., 2011). Thirdly, the introduction of several microelectrodes increases the risk of operative and postoperative haemorrhages, estimated at 1 % (Kenney et al., 2007; Sansur et al., 2007; Voges et al., 2007; Bhatia et al., 2008). Moreover, Foltynie et al. (2011) described 12/79 patients treated under general anaesthesia alone with the same post operative results than those who were firstly treated under local anaesthesia.

A better control of targeting and trajectory is necessary before not using electrophysiology, which is the reference procedure. A new definition of sub thalamic nuclei with new MRI stereotactic landmarks, the use of surgical robot (Neuromata Renishaw) and the use of operative imaging (O-arm) could allow the implantation of electrode in sub-thalamic nuclei without the need of electrophysiology. (Caire et al. 2012, In press).

This study is a prospective, randomized and monocentric study. The randomization will be made according to a ratio 2:1 in favour of the technique without electrophysiology. Two groups of patients will be followed: a first group of patients with a procedure under general anesthesia alone without electrophysiological stimulation and a second smaller group of patients with a first step of electrode implantation under awake surgery with electrophysiological stimulation followed by a second step under general anesthesia.

After a preoperative assessment, a end-point evaluation at 6 months after implantation will complete the follow-up.

The stimulation efficacy (UPDRS-3) and the post operative adverse effects will be noticed.

This study will also evaluate the occurrence of a post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in Parkinson disease patients operated under deep brain stimulation.

Enrollment

30 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 70 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age : between 18 and 70 years old
  • Parkinson disease in fluctuation state despite the use of an optimal medical treatment
  • Dopa sensibility higher than 50% with the L-DOPA test
  • Normal MRI
  • Mattis Scale > 130
  • Surgical indication approved by a multidisciplinary team
  • Patient covered by a social insurance
  • Informed consent signed by patient and investigator

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients with surgical or anesthetic contraindications
  • Cerebral atrophy or signal abnormalities on MRI
  • Severe Depressive State : The Beck Scale score > 15
  • Women of childbearing potential without efficient contraceptive mean
  • Need of long-term antithrombotic treatment

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

30 participants in 2 patient groups

New targeting procedure without electrophysiology
Experimental group
Description:
Patients with the high precision procedure under general anesthesia alone without electrophysiological stimulation
Treatment:
Procedure: New targeting procedure without electrophysiology
Classical neurosurgical procedure
Active Comparator group
Description:
patients with a first step of electrode implantation under awake surgery with electrophysiological control followed by a second step under general anesthesia
Treatment:
Procedure: Classical neurosurgical procedure

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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