NCT04496609 Assessment of the Efficacy and Safety of EESS in Patients With Incomplete Spinal Cord Injuries
| NCT ID | NCT04496609 |
| Status | Recruiting |
| Phase | — |
| Sponsor | Hopital Foch |
| Condition | Spinal Cord Injuries |
| Study Type | INTERVENTIONAL |
| Enrollment | 14 participants |
| Start Date | 2021-07-12 |
| Primary Completion | 2028-07-12 |
Eligibility & Interventions
Eligibility Fast-Check
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What to Expect as a Participant
You will actively receive the study intervention — which may be a drug, biologic, device, or procedure.
This trial targets 14 participants in total. It began in 2021-07-12 with a primary completion date of 2028-07-12.
⚠ This information is for research awareness only. Always consult your physician before joining any clinical trial. Participation is voluntary and you may withdraw at any time.
Brief Summary
Neurological disability caused by traumatic lesions of the spinal cord is a significant challenge for medicine and society. These lesions, leading to sublesional central nervous system dysfunction, include sensorimotor, vesico-sphincter and genito-sexual disorders. To date, there is no treatment that enables spinal cord function to be restored. Preclinical studies have been able to demonstrate the recovery of locomotor activity with a combination of locomotor training, pharmacological intervention and epidural electrical stimulation of the lumbosacral spinal cord (EESS) in adult rats with spinal cord transection. An American team have recently been able to show that EESS, combined with locomotor training, caused neurological improvement in four paraplegic patients, with electromyographic muscular activation patterns similar to those observed during walking. In fact, these authors also showed an improvement, under stimulation, of the VS and GS functions, but with no detailed documentation. Starting with a conceptual and preclinical rationale, and with proof of clinical concept demonstrated in several reported cases, we propose a clinical trial with an original cross-over design to validate the hypothesis that EESS combined with training in patients with incomplete spinal cord injuries would, with a good tolerance profile, allow motor, vesico-sphincter (VS) and genito-sexual (GS) disorders to be restored in patients with incomplete spinal cord injuries.
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: * Aged between 18 and 65 years inclusive * Male or female * Incomplete ASIA B or C spinal cord lesion with level of lesion located above T10 (sensation preserved below level of lesion) * Absence of significant motor deficit of the upper limbs or recovered motor deficit (muscular score ≥ 4/5) * Patient with spinal cord injury at least 2 years old and considered stable not walking * Spinal cord lesion determined by spinal cord MRI (intramedullary hypersignal) * Patient who can benefit from an iterative rehabilitation programme * Patient with stable health condition with no cardiopulmonary disease * Patient with orthopaedic condition compatible with verticality and walking * Persistence of adductor reflexes up to L2 * Patient with no current neuromodulation implant: spinal cord neurostimulator, brain, peripheral nerve or intrathecal treatment * Patient with no coagulopathy, cardiac risk factors or other medical risk factors significant for surgery * Local anatomical conditions compatible with implantation of the epidural electrode (determined by MRI of the spinal cord) * Person who benefits from or is entitled to a social security scheme * Having provided signed informed consent Exclusion Criteria: * Significant cerebral lesion on a previous cerebral MRI * Psychiatric or cognitive disorder history (known or detected during the consultation with the psychologist) * Protected adult patients * Pregnant (determined by a negative pregnancy test) or breastfeeding women * Respiratory failure (vital capacity \< 50%) (surgery in prone position) * Repeated urinary infections (≥3 per year) * Planned absence that may hinder participation in the study (travelling abroad, relocation, imminent moving) * Patients with spasms (PENN scale \> 2) * Cauda equina syndrome * Patients presenting with a contraindication to an MRI being carried out: i) pacemaker, ii) non-MRI-compatible heart valve, iii) clips, stents, coils, etc. that are not MRI-compatible, iv) cochlear implant, v) metal foreign body, etc.) * Patients presenting with a contraindication to MEPs being carried out (notably wearing of ferromagnetic material, heart stimulator) * Patients on oral anticoagulants * Patients with botulinic toxin injection * Patients with bedsore * Undernourished patients (BMI \< 19)
Contact & Investigator
Béchir Jarraya, MD
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
Hôpital Foch
Frequently Asked Questions
Who can join the NCT04496609 clinical trial?
This trial is open to participants of all sexes, aged 18 Years or older, up to 65 Years, studying Spinal Cord Injuries. Full inclusion and exclusion criteria are listed in the Eligibility Criteria section. Always confirm your eligibility with the research team before applying.
Is NCT04496609 currently recruiting?
Yes, NCT04496609 is actively recruiting participants. Contact the research team at b.jarraya@hopital-foch.com for enrollment information.
Where is the NCT04496609 trial being conducted?
This trial is being conducted at Garches, France, Suresnes, France.
Who is sponsoring the NCT04496609 clinical trial?
NCT04496609 is sponsored by Hopital Foch. The principal investigator is Béchir Jarraya, MD at Hôpital Foch. The trial plans to enroll 14 participants.