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Active Not RecruitingNCT06095271

MultiSCRIPT-Cycle 1: Personalized Medicine in Multiple Sclerosis - Pragmatic Platform Trial Embedded Within the SMSC

A Multicenter, Randomized Pragmatic Platform Trial Embedded Within the Swiss Multiple Sclerosis Cohort (SMSC) on Neurofilament Light Chain Monitoring Added to Usual Care to Inform Personalized Treatment Decisions in Multiple Sclerosis

Status
Active Not Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
920 (actual)
Sponsor
University Hospital, Basel, Switzerland · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This is a randomized pragmatic clinical trial fully embedded in the Swiss Multiple Sclerosis Cohort to assess whether sNfL biomarker monitoring improves patient-relevant outcomes and care of patients with relapsing-remitting (RR)MS by either increasing the proportion of patients with no evidence of disease activity (EDA) or by improving patients' health-related quality of life.

Detailed description

The course of multiple sclerosis (MS) is highly heterogenous with a large variability in symptoms, severity and response to treatment. A large majority of persons with MS are treated with disease modifying therapies (DMTs). DMTs can dramatically reduce even almost suppress relapses and occurrence of new lesions in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) by weakening the immune system but which in turn may cause side effects such as opportunistic infections with prolonged treatment duration and intensity of the immunosuppression. A more personalized approach to MS therapy is urgently needed to treat patients as little as possible but as much as necessary and at the right time. Such tailored strategies cannot be made without detailed information on treatment response and disease activity. Levels sNfL, which is released in the blood following neuroaxonal damage, has been shown to be associated with future MS disease activity, disability worsening, MRI activity and treatment response. sNfL might therefore be helpful for a patient-tailored treatment adaptation (e.g., escalation or de-escalation) ensuring disease stability, fewer adverse events and better quality of life. While sNfL is increasingly used as a marker of treatment response, its use in routine care is not yet widely established. The SMSC is an observational study across 8 Swiss leading MS centers including \>1600 participants with MS with a median follow-up of \>5.7 years. The MultiSCRIPT project aims to use this real-world data infrastructure to systematically evaluate patient-relevant benefits resulting from innovations in MS patient care. MultiSCRIPT goes beyond a unique trial but aims to be a sustainable learning system in which accumulating data from successive pragmatic randomized trials (i.e., learning cycles) enable the continuous generation of new hypotheses on how treatment and care strategies can be further personalized to treat patients as little as possible but as much as necessary at the right time. By being nested within the already existing and ongoing SMSC, this research infrastructure embedded in clinical care offers an unique opportunity to efficiently conduct a nationwide real-life evaluation of new care strategies, at low costs, and fostering evaluation and direct translation of effective innovations into usual care to improve patient outcome and quality of life. MultiSCRIPT-Cycle 1 is the first learning cycle.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTserum Neurofilament Filament Light chain (sNfL) monitoringthe intervention consist of a blood draw and providing the sNfL information to the treating physician

Timeline

Start date
2023-02-05
Primary completion
2026-11-01
Completion
2027-05-01
First posted
2023-10-23
Last updated
2025-05-11

Locations

8 sites across 1 country: Switzerland

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06095271. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

MultiSCRIPT-Cycle 1: Personalized Medicine in Multiple Sclerosis - Pragmatic Platform Trial Embedded Within the SMSC (NCT06095271) · Clinical Trials Directory