Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02450253

Perfusion by Arterial Spin Labelling Following Single Dose Tadalafil in Small Vessel Disease (PASTIS) Trial

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
55 (actual)
Sponsor
St George's, University of London · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
55 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Could Tadalafil improve blood flow in deep brain tissue and potentially improve cognitive function in patients with cerebral small vessel disease

Detailed description

Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) is the primary cause of vascular cognitive impairment (VCI), which in its most severe form manifests as vascular dementia (VaD). SVD is a fibrous thickening of small penetrating arteries in deep brain nuclei (basal ganglia, thalami) and subcortical white matter.Clinical studies suggest that pure VCI/VaD contributes approximately 8-15% of dementia in older people Reduced CBF is well established in VCI. Improved blood flow in the vasculature of the deep white and grey matter is therefore an attractive mechanism for slowing the pathology of VCI and is a valuable biomarker for an initial proof of concept study. To increase the likelihood of success in a full scale clinical trial of tadalafil in VCI, this study will test the effects of single dose tadalafil on cerebral blood flow in subjects with SVD using ASL-MRI. A strict definition of SVD will be used that combines clinical and MRI criteria. Phosphodiesterase-5 (PDE5) specifically degrades cGMP within cells; limiting activation of protein kinase G. Guanylyl cyclase enzymes generate cGMP, downstream from NOS-nitric oxide signalling. PDE5 inhibitors in SVD. PDE5 blockade is a plausible strategy to improve local cerebral blood flow (CBF), in the deep brain areas afflicted by SVD. By augmenting the NO-cGMP-PKG pathway, PDE5i drugs are expected to be vaso-relaxant in small artery myocytes. In patients with pulmonary hypertension sildenafil improved cerebral vascular reactivity in response to hypercapnic challenge, indicative of an improvement in neurovascular coupling. Similar increased reactivity was recorded 60 min after administration of sildenafil in ED patients. By contrast, healthy volunteers showed no change in MCA blood flow following sildenafil, similar to healthy rodents, where vasodilation occurred only at high concentrations of drug. Overall it appears that PDE5i may have little effect on "healthy" cerebral arteries in rodents and humans. Prior human studies have been single dose studies of PDE5i in healthy humans, have only used sildenafil and have in general estimated CBF from Middle Cerebral Artery (MCA) blood flow using Trans Cranial Doppler (TCD). MCA blood flow may not reflect local blood flow in the microvasculature of the deep white and deep grey matter. One study examined the effect of single dose sildenafil on CBF using SPECT in patients with vascular risk factors with or without a history of stroke. Non-stroke patients exhibited an overall increase in CBF. However, no distinction was made in this study between large vessel and lacunar stroke. In summary, pre-clinical studies support a CBF-enhancing action of PDE5i in cerebrovascular disease, while human studies to date have been limited to sildenafil and have not specifically addressed effects on CBF in people with SVD. Tadalafil (Cialis®) is widely-used as an oral agent for sexual dysfunction. As an inhibitor of the enzyme PDE5, tadalafil has a well-established pharmacological profile as a small vessel vasodilator. Side-effect profile and pharmacokinetics are well known and the drug is well-tolerated in the target population, over a range of oral doses and regimens. The choice of tadalafil over other PDE5 inhibitors (such as sildenafil, Viagra®) is based on potency, selectivity for PDE5, plasma half-life and documented brain penetration. Phosphodiesterase-5 (PDE5) specifically degrades cGMP within cells; limiting activation of protein kinase G. Guanylyl cyclase enzymes generate cGMP, downstream from NOS-nitric oxide signalling. The PDE5 inhibitor sildenafil (Viagra®; discovered at Pfizer, Sandwich UK) raised the profile of PDE5 as a therapeutic target. Tadalafil (Cialis®; licence holder: Eli Lilly) is widely prescribed on an "as required" basis for ED in men. It is also licensed for regular daily use at a dose of 5 mg for benign prostatic hyperplasia and 40 mg for pulmonary hypertension. Tadalafil is well tolerated and its side effect profile is well-established

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGTadalafilsingle dose, 20 mg capsule p.o.
DRUGPlacebosingle dose, matching capsule p.o.
BEHAVIORALCognitive functioning testsCognitive function tests will be performed prior to MRI scan 1 performed prior to IMP dosing on 2 occasions as patient will act as their own control
BEHAVIORALNeuropsychological testsNeuropsychological tests will be performed prior to pre IMP dose MRI scan \& then parallel V2 of the tests repeated 3-5 post IMP dose and before 2nd MRI scan. Participants act as own controls as 1 IMP occasion will be placebo- 2nd IMP occasion will be active. 7-30 days apart
OTHERMRI Scan - Arterial Spin LabellingPre and post IMP dose on 2 occasions to detect difference in blood flow in deep brain 4 MRI scans in total

Timeline

Start date
2015-09-01
Primary completion
2018-01-25
Completion
2018-01-25
First posted
2015-05-21
Last updated
2022-10-27

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02450253. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.