Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05601661

Safety and Feasibility of Paired Vagus Nerve Stimulation With Rehabilitation for Improving Upper Extremity Function in People With Cervical Spinal Cord Injury

Safety and Feasibility of Paired Vagus Nerve Stimulation With Rehabilitation for Improving Upper Extremity Function in People With Cervical Spinal Cord Injury: A Pilot Randomized Control Trial.

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
6 (actual)
Sponsor
The University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine the safety and feasibility of pairing vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) with rehabilitation and to determine the efficacy of pairing VNS with rehabilitation.

Detailed description

The current study will evaluate the safety and feasibility of a novel rehabilitation protocol to improve upper limb motor recovery in adults with incomplete cervical SCI. In this double-blinded, randomized, placebo-controlled pilot trial, 8 adults (above 18 years) with cervical SCI will be randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to active VNS paired with rehabilitation or control VNS paired with rehabilitation. All participants will be implanted with a VNS device and randomized to receive either active VNS (0.8mA) or control VNS (0.0 mA) paired with upper limb rehabilitation. All participants will receive three 1.5-hour sessions per week for 6 weeks of in-clinic therapy, followed by a daily, 30 minutes home therapy program for 90 days. The rehabilitation therapy involves repetitive, progressive, task-specific exercises adjusted to the participant's functional level. Participants, assessors, and therapists will maintain blinding until the completion of this phase. After 90 days, in phase II, participants in the control VNS group will cross over to receive active VNS paired with rehabilitation. Safety and feasibility measures are the primary outcomes of this study. Safety measures will include the incidence of surgical and VNS therapy-related events. Feasibility metrics include reporting attrition rate and compliance rate with both in-clinic therapy sessions and home exercise programs. To measure efficacy, change in Graded and Redefined Assessment of Strength, Sensibility, and Prehension from baseline to immediately after 6-week in-clinic treatment and 90-day assessment will be analyzed. Additional clinical outcomes include the Toronto Rehab Institute Hand Function Test, Capabilities of Upper Extremity Questionnaire, spinal cord injury independence self-care measure, and spinal cord injury quality of life. The results of this study will provide valuable information on safety and feasibility and insight into the efficacy of pairing VNS with rehabilitation in people with SCI. Knowledge obtained from this study will lay the groundwork for future large randomized control trials to assess the dosing and effectiveness of pairing VNS with rehabilitation.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEActive VNSAn implantable system consisting of an implantable neurostimulator (model 1001 Implantable Pulse Generator (IPG)) and an implantable lead and electrode (Model 30000 VNS lead) will be used. An external system consisting of an external controller (Model 2000 Wireless Transmitter) and an external software system (computer and Model 4001 Microtransponder SAPS® software) will provide clinical control of settings for the implantable pulse generator (IPG) . All VNS devices (Vivistim System® ) will be provided as a donation by Microtransponder Inc. The device is programmed to stimulate for 0.5s on each button push. After surgical recovery, participants will receive five stimulations in reducing strength (starting at 0.8mA and then reducing to 0.1mA each step) at the beginning of each therapy session, followed by stimulation (0.8 mA)
DEVICESham VNSAn implantable system consisting of an implantable neurostimulator (model 1001 Implantable Pulse Generator (IPG)) and an implantable lead and electrode (Model 30000 VNS lead) will be used. An external system consisting of an external controller (Model 2000 Wireless Transmitter) and an external software system (computer and Model 4001 Microtransponder SAPS® software) will provide clinical control of settings for the implantable pulse generator (IPG) . All VNS devices (Vivistim System® ) will be provided as a donation by Microtransponder Inc. The device is programmed to stimulate for 0.5s on each button push. After surgical recovery, participants will receive five stimulations in reducing strength (starting at 0.8mA and then reducing to 0.1mA each step) at the beginning of each therapy session, followed by stimulation (0 mA)
OTHERArm rehabilitation. The rehabilitation therapy involves arm and hand exercises with objects. The therapist will select these exercises based on movement abilities. Tasks will be selected from six functional task categories: reach and grasp, gross movement, object flipping, simulated eating tasks, inserting objects, and opening containers. Approximately 30-50 repetitions will be performed in each category. On average, 300-500 repetitions will be performed during each session within 1.5-2hours.

Timeline

Start date
2023-06-15
Primary completion
2025-08-16
Completion
2025-08-16
First posted
2022-11-01
Last updated
2025-10-28

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05601661. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.