Background: Patients who survive severe brain injury may develop chronic disorders of consciousness (DoC). Treating these patients to improve recovery is extremely challenging because of scarce and inefficient therapeutical options. Among pharmacological treatments, apomorphine, a potent direct dopamine agonist, has exhibited promising behavioral effects, but its true efficacy and its mechanism remains unknown. This randomized controlled study aims to verify the effects of apomorphine subcutaneous infusion in patients with disorders of consciousness and investigate the neural networks targeted by this treatment. Methods/design: The double-blind randomized controlled trial will include 48 patients: 24 patients will be randomly assigned to the apomorphine and 24 to the placebo group. Investigators and the patients will be unaware of the nature of the treatment rendered. Primary outcome will be determined as behavioral response to treatment as measured by changes of diagnosis using the Coma Recovery Scale - Revised (CRS-R), while secondary outcome measures will include the Nociception Coma Scale - Revised (NCS-R), Disability Rating Scale (DRS), Wessex Head Injury Matrix (WHIM), circadian rhythm using actimetry, electroencephalography (EEG), positron emission tomography (PET) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). The Glasgow Outcome Scale - Extended (GOS-E) and a phone-adapted version of the CRS-R will be used for long-term follow-up. Statistical analyses will focus on the detection of changes induced by apomorphine treatment at the individual level (comparing data before and after treatment) and at the group level (comparing responders with non-responders). Response to treatment will be measured at four different levels: 1. behavioral response (CRS-R, NCS-R, DRS, WHIM, GOS-E, phone CRS-R), 2. brain metabolism (PET), 3. network connectivity (resting-state fMRI, clinical EEG and high-density EEG) and 4. Circadian rhythm changes (actimetry, body temperature, 24h-EEG). Discussion: Apomorphine is a promising and safe strategy for the treatment of DoC but efficacy, profile of the responding population and underlying mechanism remain to be determined. This trial will provide unprecedented data that will allow to investigate the response to apomorphine using multimodal methods and shed new light on the brain networks targeted by this drug in terms of behavioral response, functional connectivity and metabolism.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
48
Product administered using an external continuous subcutaneous infusion pump.
Product administered using an external continuous subcutaneous infusion pump.
University of Liege
Liège, Liege, Belgium
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITINGHôpital Valdor - ISoSL
Liège, Liège, Belgium
RECRUITINGCentre Hospitalier Neurologique William Lennox
Ottignies-Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium
RECRUITINGVITHAS
Valencia, Spain
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGChange from Baseline Coma Recovery Scale - Revised (CRS-R)
The CRS-R is a standardized validated neurobehavioral scale designed to assess patients with disorders of consciousness. It is divided in 6 subscales: Auditory Function (0-4 points), Visual Function (0-5 points), Motor Function (0-6 points), Oromotor/Verbal Function (0-3 points), Communication (0-2 points), Arousal (0-3 points). The subscores are summed to calculate a total score ranging from 0 to 23 points. Higher scores indicate better functions. More importantly, it provides the patient's diagnosis (coma, UWS, MCS-, MCS+, EMCS) based on the presence of specific items in different subscales (regardless of total score). Analyses will look for changes of diagnosis, changes of total score and changes of each subscore before, during and after apomorphine treatment.
Time frame: up to 90 days (5 CRS-R baseline, 5 CRS-R treatment, 5 CRS-R follow-up)
Change from Baseline Nociception Coma Scale - Revised (NCS-R)
The NCS-R is a standardized validated scale designed to assess the perception of pain in patients with disorders of consciousness unable to functionally communicate. It is divided in 3 subscales: Motor Response (0-3 points), Verbal Response (0-3 points) and Facial Expression (0-3 points). The subscores are summed to calculate a total score ranging from 0 to 9 points. Higher scores indicate a higher perception of pain. Analyses will look for changes of total score and changes of each subscore before, during and after treatment.
Time frame: up to 90 days (5 NCS-R baseline, 5 NCS-R treatment, 5 NCS-R follow-up)
Change from Baseline Disability Rating Scale (DRS)
The DRS is validated scale designed to assess disability including the impairment and handicap of patients. It is divided in 8 subscales: eye-opening (0-3 points), communication ability (0-4 points), motor response (0-5 points), feeding (0-3 points), toileting (0-3 points), grooming (0-3 points), level of functioning (0-5 points) and employability (0-3 points). The subscores are summed to calculate a total score ranging from 0 to 29 points. Higher scores indicate a higher disability. Analyses will look for changes of total score before, during and after treatment.
Time frame: up to 90 days (5 DRS baseline, 5 DRS treatment, 5 DRS follow-up)
Change from Baseline Wessex Head Injury Matrix (WHIM)
The WHIM is validated matrix designed to assess recovery in patients with disorders of consciousness. It is composed of 62 sequential items covering communication ability, cognitive skills and social interaction. The total number of achieved items and the highest achieved item are recorded. Analyses will look for changes of the total number and the highest achieved items before, during and after treatment.
Time frame: up to 90 days (5 WHIM baseline, 5 WHIM treatment, 5 WHIM follow-up)
Change from Baseline Circadian rhythm
Wrist actigraph recorded data on limb movements to calculate circadian rythmycity (measured in minutes) corresponding to the period of the biological temporal rhythms with oscillations around 24 hours.
Time frame: up to 90 days (constant recording from enrollment)
functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI)
MRI functional connectivity using a seed-voxel approach, between regions of interest (here: striatum, globus pallidus interna, thalamus and prefrontal cortex) and the time course from all other brain voxels.
Time frame: up to 90 days (fMRI before treatment initiation and after treatment completion)
Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
Quantification of PET signal using standardized uptake values of fluorodeoxyglucose.
Time frame: up to 90 days (PET before treatment initiation and after treatment completion)
Conventional Electroencephalography (cEEG)
EEG spectral power within fixed bands or dynamic connectivity using median spectral connectivity and graph-theoretic topology metrics (clustering coefficient, path length, modularity and participation coefficient).
Time frame: up to 90 days (4 cEEG baseline, 5 cEEG treatment, 5 cEEG follow-up)
24-hour Electroencephalography (24-h EEG)
24-h EEG recordings to calculate the number of sleep cycles during day and night as well as the duration spent in each phase of sleep.
Time frame: up to 90 days (24-h EEG before treatment initiation and after treatment completion)
High-Density Electroencephalography (HD-EEG)
Multivariate classifier giving the probabilty to have signs of consciousness based on a machine-learning approach using 120 EEG markers.
Time frame: up to 90 days (HD-EEG before treatment initiation and after treatment completion)
Glasgow Outcome Scale - Extended (GOS-E)
The GOS-E is a standardized validated scale designed to assess the the functional outcome of patients with disorders of consciousness. It is a single score ranging from 1 (dead) to 8 (upper good recovery). Higher scores indicate a higher functional recovery. It will be performed remotely by telephone contact with the patient or their relatives. Analyses will look at differences in GOS-E score between responders and non-responders to apomorphine treatment, as well as differences in time within individual patients.
Time frame: from 6 months post-treatment up to 24 months post-treatment (GOS-E at 6 months,12 months and 24 months)
Phone-adapted CRS-R
The phone-adapted CRS-R is a scale designed to assess remotely patients with disorders of consciousness. Unlike the CRS-R, it does not comprise subcores or a total score, but provides the clinical diagnosis of the patient (coma, UWS, MCS-, MCS+, EMCS) using the same diagnostic items as the CRS-R. Analyses will look at differences in Phone-adapted CRS-R diagnosis between responders and non-responders to apomorphine treatment, as well as differences in time within individual patients.
Time frame: from 6 months post-treatment up to 24 months post-treatment (phone-adapted CRS-R at 6 months,12 months and 24 months)
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