REstoring CONsciousness With NEurostimulation of the Central Thalamus: The RECONNECT Study
Purpose
The RE-CONNECT study is an early feasibility study to establish the safety, feasibility, and efficacy of two central thalamic deep brain stimulation targets in patients with chronic disorders of consciousness.
Condition
- Disorders of Consciousness
Eligibility
- Eligible Ages
- Between 18 Years and 55 Years
- Eligible Sex
- All
- Accepts Healthy Volunteers
- No
Inclusion Criteria
- Central nervous system injury of any etiology (e.g., cardiac arrest, traumatic brain injury, ischemic stroke, cerebral hemorrhage, encephalitis) that occurred at least 3 months prior to the eligibility phone call - The participant does not exhibit either of the following behaviors every day: meaningful interaction (defined as intelligible speech and ability to follow verbal commands) or functional object use - A CRS-R based diagnosis of DoC; either Unresponsive Wakefulness Syndrome (UWS) or Minimally Conscious State (MCS- or +). - The participant must have a documented health care proxy or court-appointed guardian - Neurologist and neurosurgeon consensus review of most recent clinical MRI (if no MRI, then most recent CT) determines there is no bilateral subcortical injury preventing precise placement of electrodes (e.g., major injuries to the bilateral thalami or severe and bilateral subcortical anatomical distortions).
Exclusion Criteria
- - Pregnant - Contraindication to brain MRI - Due to transportation requirements, participants whose primary residence (Skilled Nursing Facility, Long Term Acute Care, or home) is outside the Greater Boston metropolitan area - Pre-existing psychiatric, neurological or medical condition that makes the patient, in the opinion of the study team, a poor surgical candidate (e.g., neurodegenerative disorder, significant cardiopulmonary disorder, need for chronic anticoagulation) - Structural abnormality of the chest wall, neck, brain, or skull that makes safe placement of the electrodes, in the opinion of the study team, infeasible or prone to complication - Neurologist and neurosurgeon consensus review of most recent clinical MRI (if no MRI, then most recent CT) determines there is no bilateral diffuse injury to the basal ganglia - Medical contraindications to surgery including: - Chronic infection - Coagulopathy (INR > 1.5, aPTT 45 sec, platelet count < 100 x 103 / uL) - Poorly controlled blood pressure (> 2 episodes during screening phase of blood pressure > 180/110 sustained on repeated measurements) and evidence of cardiovascular disease - Participation in another drug, device or biological trial within 90 days - Current implanted stimulation device (e.g., pacemaker, defibrillator, spinal cord stimulator, deep brain stimulator) - Anticoagulant or anti-platelet medication that cannot be safely stopped for > 2.5 weeks in the peri-operative period
Study Design
- Phase
- Early Phase 1
- Study Type
- Interventional
- Allocation
- Non-Randomized
- Intervention Model
- Crossover Assignment
- Primary Purpose
- Device Feasibility
- Masking
- Double (Participant, Outcomes Assessor)
Arm Groups
| Arm | Description | Assigned Intervention |
|---|---|---|
|
Experimental active stimulation |
Each participant will receive a pre-determined sequence of active stimulation to one of two targets or no stimulation over the course of 10 months. This will be divided into two blocks (each with STIM and OFF periods) targeting each of the two thalamic targets. The order will be reversed in participant 2 relative to participant 1. |
|
|
Sham Comparator no stimulation |
periods of no active stimulation intermixed with active stimulation to one of two targets. |
|
Recruiting Locations
Boston 4930956, Massachusetts 6254926 02115
More Details
- Status
- Recruiting
- Sponsor
- Samuel Snider, MD
Detailed Description
The overall goal is to collect pilot data on the safety, feasibility, and comparative behavioral efficacy of DBS to two specific thalamic targets in patients with disorders of consciousness (DoC): A sub-region of the centromedian/parafascicular nucleus (CM-Pf) and the centrolateral nucleus (CL). The investigators will recruit 2 participants over two years to participate in a single-center, double-blinded, cross-over study. After consent, the investigators will first confirm the stability of the clinical DoC diagnosis during a 1-month screening period. The purpose of this phase is to ensure that participants are not already on a trajectory of clinical improvement. Investigators will then implant two DBS electrodes (PerceptTM; Medtronic) into each thalamus, one targeting the thalamic CM-Pf sub-region and the other targeting the CL nucleus. After a one-month recovery period, investigators will titrate stimulation settings, and participants will then enter a 10-month blinded stimulation phase comprising periods of either continuous daily real (STIM-ON) or sham (STIM-OFF) stimulation delivered separately to each target. One participant will receive CM-Pf stimulation blocks first and CL stimulation blocks second; the other participant will receive the reverse target order (CL then CM-Pf). Investigators will enroll two patients, measuring procedure and device-related adverse and serious adverse events, as well as the feasibility of successfully targeting the CM-Pf sub-region. Finally, investigators will measure and compare the magnitude of CM-Pf versus CL stimulation induced changes on a standardized behavioral scale for evaluating patients with DoC.