Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Unknown

UnknownNCT05280600

Developing Advanced Neuroimaging for Clinical Evaluation of Autoimmune Encephalitis

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
75 (estimated)
Sponsor
King's College London · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
8 Years – 24 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Autoimmune encephalitis is brain inflammation caused by the immune system mistakenly reacting against proteins in the brain. The commonest form is called NMDAR-antibody encephalitis (N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antibody encephalitis), a rare condition which mainly affects children and young people and causes difficulties in memory, thinking and mental health which can have significant long-term impacts on education, employment and quality of life. In this project we will use advanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to measure changes in the structure, function and chemistry of the brains of children and young people who are in early recovery from NMDAR-antibody encephalitis and other forms of immune-mediated encephalitis. We will investigate if MRI measurements in patients differ from those in healthy people, and if they can help predict patient outcome one year later, assessed by tests of memory, thinking, mental health and functioning in daily life.

Detailed description

This study aims to develop non-invasive, in vivo measures of neurobiological dysfunction derived from the overarching hypothesis that dysfunction of inhibitory interneurons alters the cerebral concentrations of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and glutamate (Glu) and underlies T2 changes and deficient connectivity in functional networks in early recovery from NMDAR-antibody encephalitis. Our ambition is to identify the best potential prognostic biomarkers from these neurometabolite measurements and structural and functional MRI. Our primary objective is to test the following specific hypotheses in children and young people with NMDAR-antibody encephalitis: * Hypothesis 1: GABA is decreased, and Glu increased, on MR spectroscopy of the medial temporal lobe and medial prefrontal cortex in NMDAR-antibody encephalitis. * Hypothesis 2: Local GABA and Glu are correlated with (i) resting-state functional MRI (fMRI) based functional connectivity and (ii) parameter map-based microstructural changes. Specifically, we hypothesise that (i) GABA is positively correlated and Glu inversely correlated with functional connectivity, assessed by whole-brain mapping of the default mode network and seed-based analysis of hippocampal-frontal connectivity; and (ii) Glu is positively correlated and GABA inversely correlated with median T2 values within the hippocampus. * Hypothesis 3: Local neurometabolites, network measures and microstructural changes predict cognitive, psychiatric and functional outcome at one year. Specifically, we hypothesise that medial temporal Glu, GABA and hippocampal T2 predict memory performance, and prefrontal Glu and GABA predict attention, executive function and fluid intelligence.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERNot applicable - non-interventional studyNot applicable - non-interventional study

Timeline

Start date
2022-05-19
Primary completion
2024-02-28
Completion
2026-02-28
First posted
2022-03-15
Last updated
2023-10-06

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05280600. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.