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UnknownNCT05959850

A Double-blind Randomised, Placebo-controlled Clinical Trial to Test Ambroxol Treatment in ALS

AMBroxol Therapy for ALS (AMBALS) Trial: a Double-blind, Randomised, Placebo-controlled Phase 2 Clinical Trial of Ambroxol for ALS

Status
Unknown
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
50 (estimated)
Sponsor
The Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 85 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Ambroxol is a simple cough medicine that is predicted to slow ALS disease progression. This study aims to investigate if ambroxol in high doses is effective in treating ALS. This study will be carried out across 5 research sites in Australia (2 NSW, 1 VIC, 1 SA and 1 TAS), where newly diagnosed ALS patients will be asked to participate. Participation will be over a 32-week period, where they will come in for a 4-week screening, 24-week treatment, and 4-week end of study safety follow-up period. The participants will receive either the placebo or drug solution that they will take three times a day, up-dosing each week until they reach the maximum dose or highest dose they can tolerate. Throughout the study their disease progression will be assessed using tests, questionnaires, and blood biomarkers.

Detailed description

This study is a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled phase 2 clinical trial, to assess the safety, tolerability and efficacy of ambroxol therapy in ALS patients by using electrophysiological and functional measures to detect preservation of motor units. The study design will have participants be randomised to either ambroxol or placebo at a 2:1 ratio (ambroxol (n=34) and placebo (n=16)). Participants randomised to the active arm will receive various doses of ambroxol in solution, taken orally, three times a day. Doses will be increased pending a safety review for each participant. The doses will be 180mg per day, 260mg per day, 540mg per day, 900mg per day, and 1260 mg per day. Each week safety bloods will be performed to assess tolerance to the dose. Participants randomised to the control arm will receive a placebo for the duration of the study. Disease progression will be assessed by the following, time to event (death, need for tracheostomy, the need for gastrostomy feeding or non-invasive ventilation support (≥12 hours a day in a 24-hour period), or ≥6-point progression (ALS functional rating score-revised).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGAmbroxolParticipants in the study will receive varying doses of ambroxol in solution, 3 times per day. Doses will be increased pending a safety review, up to a maximum of 1260mg/day. Blood tests will be conducted weekly to assess tolerance. Compliance will be monitored by returning used bottles. The study will last 32 weeks, including 24 weeks of drug administration and follow-up visits. After the final follow-up, there will be an end of study safety visit occurring 4 weeks later. The total time of participation will be 32 weeks. This includes a screening visit up to 4 weeks prior to Baseline, then a Baseline visit, followed by 24 weeks of follow-up (3x in clinic follow-up visits). These 24 weeks will be the drug administration period, meaning that the total duration of drug administration is 24 weeks. Following this drug administration and follow-up period, there will be an EoS safety-follow up visit that will occur 4 weeks after the final follow-up visit (28 weeks from baseline).
DRUGPlaceboParticipants randomised to the control arm will receive a placebo for the duration of the study. The placebo will look and taste like ambroxol, but will have no active ingredient. Participants will not be told which arm they have been randomised to. The placebo will primarily be a glucose solution, however it will also have flavouring (e.g. bitters) and colouring, so as to make it look and taste like ambroxol, to maintain blinding.

Timeline

Start date
2023-06-13
Primary completion
2024-06-01
Completion
2024-12-01
First posted
2023-07-25
Last updated
2023-09-07

Locations

5 sites across 1 country: Australia

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05959850. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.