ADCY5-related movement disorders are caused by dominant mutations in the ADCY5 gene. This rare neurogenetic disease is characterized by childhood-onset generalized hyperkinetic movements. Currently, the only tools available to rate the severity of movement disorders observed in ADCY5-patients are clinical rating scales of abnormal movements. These scales use the investigators' judgement to rate globally the severity of movements observed in various body parts of the patient. This protocol proposes to investigate a multimodal approach, combining a clinical scale assessment with ViconTM's objective movement measurement. A secondary objective of the study is to assess the effect of coffee on ADCY5-patients.
ADCY5-related movement disorders are caused by dominant mutations in the ADCY5 gene. This rare neurogenetic disease is characterized by childhood-onset generalized hyperkinetic movements. The abnormal movements typically comprise a combination of dystonia, myoclonus and chorea occurring on a background of axial hypotonia, with superimposed disabling episodes of paroxysmal dyskinesia. The causing mutations are located in the ADCY5 gene coding for the Adenylate Cyclase 5 (AC5). AC5 is highly expressed in the striatal projection neurons of the striatum, a region involved in the control of movements. No effective treatment has been found. Currently, the only tools available to rate the severity of movement disorders observed in ADCY5-patients are clinical rating scales of abnormal movements. These scales use the investigators' judgement to globally rate movements severity in various body parts. This leads to inter-raters' scoring variability. An objective assessment through refined and comprehensive quantification of movements is needed. A motion capture system, such as ViconTM, could better reflect the global and focal variations of abnormal movements. This would be critical for the evaluation of responses to potential treatments. This protocol proposes to investigate a multimodal approach, combining a clinical scale assessment with ViconTM's objective movement measurement. A secondary objective of the study is to assess the effect of coffee on ADCY5-patients. The caffeine contained in coffee acts as a nonselective adenosine receptor antagonist, with a strong affinity for A2A receptors. By blocking A2A receptors, caffeine reduces the enzymatic activity of the altered mutated AC5 protein coded by the mutated ADCY5 gene. This effect could modulate the abnormal movements observed in patients.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
2
Drink caffeinated coffee one morning and drink decaffeinated coffee the other morning
CIC Neurosciences, GH Pitié-Salpêtrière
Paris, France
Quantification movement disorders
Assessment of correlation between displacement data using the ViconTM system and standardized clinical scales' scores of movements
Time frame: 24 HOURS
Coffee effects
Change in abnormal movements, measured with motion sensors (ViconTM system) after caffeinated coffee vs after decaffeinated coffee
Time frame: 24 Hours
Involuntary scales evaluation
Change in abnormal movements, measured with standardized clinical scale (Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale (AIMS; Global score range 0 to 28 and severity subscore range 0 to 4; higher scores mean worse outcome), after caffeinated coffee vs after decaffeinated coffee
Time frame: 24 Hours
Dyskinesia impairment evaluation
Change in abnormal movements, measured with standardized clinical scale Dyskinesia Impairment Scale (DIS) (total score range 0 to 288; higher scores mean worse outcome) after caffeinated coffee vs after decaffeinated coffee
Time frame: 24 Hours
Dyskinesia Rating Scale evaluation
Change in abnormal movements, measured with standardized clinical scale Unified Dyskinesia Rating Scale (UDysRS) (total score range of 0 to 104; higher scores mean worse outcome), after caffeinated coffee vs after decaffeinated coffee
Time frame: 24 Hours
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