Propranolol for familial cerebral cavernous malformation (Treat_CCM): study protocol for a randomized controlled pilot trial
Author:
Lanfranconi SilviaORCID, , Scola Elisa, Bertani Giulio Andrea, Zarino Barbara, Pallini Roberto, d’Alessandris Giorgio, Mazzon Emanuela, Marino Silvia, Carriero Maria Rita, Scelzo Emma, Faragò Giuseppe, Castori Marco, Fusco Carmela, Petracca Antonio, d’Agruma Leonardo, Tassi Laura, d’Orio Piergiorgio, Lampugnani Maria Grazia, Nicolis Enrico Bjorn, Vasamì Antonella, Novelli Deborah, Torri Valter, Meessen Jennifer Marie Theresia Anna, Al-Shahi Salman Rustam, Dejana Elisabetta, Latini Roberto
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs) are vascular malformations characterized by clusters of enlarged leaky capillaries in the central nervous system. They may result in intracranial haemorrhage, epileptic seizure(s), or focal neurological deficits, and potentially lead to severe disability. Globally, CCMs represent the second most common intracranial vascular malformation in humans, and their familial form (FCCMs) accounts for one-fifth of cases. Neurosurgical excision, and perhaps stereotactic radiosurgery, is the only available therapeutic option. Case reports suggest that propranolol might modify disease progression.
Methods
Treat_CCM is a prospective, randomized, open-label, blinded endpoint (PROBE), parallel-group trial involving six Italian clinical centres with central reading of brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and adverse events. Patients with symptomatic FCCMs are randomized (2:1 ratio) either to propranolol (40–80 mg twice daily) in addition to standard care or to standard care alone (i.e. anti-epileptic drugs or headache treatments). The primary outcome is intracranial haemorrhage or focal neurological deficit attributable to CCMs. The secondary outcomes are MRI changes over time (i.e. de novo CCM lesions, CCM size and signal characteristics, iron deposition, and vascular leakage as assessed by quantitative susceptibility mapping and dynamic contrast enhanced permeability), disability, health-related quality of life, depression severity, and anxiety (SF-36, BDI-II, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory).
Discussion
Treat_CCM will evaluate the safety and efficacy of propranolol for CCMs following promising case reports in a randomized controlled trial. The direction of effect on the primary outcome and the consistency of effects on the secondary outcomes (even if none of them yield statistically significant differences) of this external pilot study may lead to a larger sample size in a definitive phase 2 trial.
Trial registration
ClinicalTrails.gov, NCT03589014. Retrospectively registered on 17 July 2018.
Funder
Agenzia Italiana del Farmaco
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Pharmacology (medical),Medicine (miscellaneous)
Reference44 articles.
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