| Literature DB >> 35160153 |
Jana V P Devos1,2, Yasin Temel1,3, Linda Ackermans1,3, Veerle Visser-Vandewalle4, Oezguer A Onur5, Koen Schruers6, Jasper Smit1,7, Marcus L F Janssen1,8.
Abstract
Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is a neurosurgical treatment with a growing range of indications. The number of clinical studies is expanding because of DBS for new indications and efforts to improve DBS for existing indications. To date, various methods have been used to perform DBS studies. Designing a clinical intervention study with active implantable medical devices has specific challenges while expanding patient treatment. This paper provides an overview of the key aspects that are essential for setting up a DBS study.Entities:
Keywords: deep brain stimulation; feasibility; first-in-human; methodology; safety
Year: 2022 PMID: 35160153 PMCID: PMC8836606 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11030696
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1Result of PubMed searches of (A) number of articles published related to “deep brain stimulation (DBS)” in animal studies (red), human studies (blue), and both (green) and (B) number of case reports on DBS (red) and clinical trials (as defined by the PubMed filters) (green).
Comparison between phases in drug trials and suggested phases in DBS trials.
| Pharmacotherapy | Deep Brain Stimulation | |
|---|---|---|
|
| Discovery and early screening Safety Side effects | Discovery of potential new indications and gathering of first evidence of potential benefits Target Stimulation settings Safety Side effects |
| Evaluate safety | Evaluate safety of selected target | |
| Further evaluate safety | Further evaluate safety | |
| Confirm effectiveness | Confirm effectiveness | |
| Provide additional information after approval, including risks, benefits, and best use | Provide additional information after approval, including risks, benefits, and best use |
Advised guidelines for patient selection and inclusion.
| Criteria | Background | Suggestion |
|---|---|---|
|
| Certainty of the presence of the disorder | All other treatable causes should be ruled out |
|
| Evaluation of suffering depends on indication | Set cut-off score on specific disorder-specific measurement |
| Take daily life functioning into account | ||
|
| All approved general procedures should have been applied and not have made a substantial improvement | Important to list all possible approved treatments and check whether the patient received them and what the gain was |
| Try to provide or refer to treatments that were not tried | ||
| Combine with daily life functioning and severity score for decision | ||
|
| No serious somatic comorbidities and preferably no cognitive deficits | Consultations with multidisciplinary team (general physician, anesthesiologist, neurologists. and psychiatrist) are necessary |
| A balance should be struck between the risks and benefits for each patient | ||
|
| MRI rules and regulations | Consider exclusion of patients with MRI contraindication and no previous information |
|
| No significant pre-existing neuropsychological abnormalities | Exclude patients with significant pre-existing neuropsychological abnormalities in comparison to what can be expected of the general patient population |
| Should be evaluated by a psychiatrist | ||
| If depression or anxiety pre-existed before the disorder onset, and are thus not part or a result of the target disorder, it is advised to exclude the patient | ||
| If it was a consequence of the disorder, it can be counseled until manageable | ||
| When so debilitating that it poses an additional risk for participation in the trial, the patient should be excluded | ||
|
| Evaluation on an individual basis | No specific cut-off score for age should be used |
| Consider patients’ abilities individually | ||
|
| Evaluation on an individual basis | Adhere to (inter)national ethics regulations and guidelines |
| Personal circumstances should not significantly impact the outcome |
Summary of the advised guidelines for patient selection and inclusion.
| Summary of the Suggested Guidelines |
|---|
| Trial registration Registration in an international database |
| Etiology of the disorder Reversible causes should be ruled out |
| Severity of the disorder Use a predetermined cut-off score of a validated measure Include daily life functioning |
| Refractory to existing therapies No substantial improvement with all available treatments (medical and psychological), or debilitating side effects occurred |
| Comorbidities Patient should not have comorbidities with a short life expectancy Preferably no cognitive deficits (unless linked to the indication, such as dementia) |
| Multidisciplinary team A multidisciplinary team, including a neurosurgeon, neurologists and/or psychiatrist, and an anesthesiologist. evaluates potential risks and benefits for each individual before inclusion |
| MRI High-resolution MRI for targeting Patients with a contraindication to undergo MRI should be excluded |
| Neuropsychological and psychiatric evaluation Patients should not have significant pre-existing neuropsychological abnormalities (as expected within the patient population) Exclude patients with depression or anxiety that existed prior to disorder onset Counsel patients with depression or anxiety as a consequence of the disorder before considering inclusion Exclude patients with psychiatric or neuropsychological comorbidities that pose an additional risk for participation |
| Age No specific cut-off for age is advised |
| Power Prove feasibility and effect in order to provide sufficient power in the second phase |
| Randomization and blinding Using a sham condition closely mimicking the real condition Preferably using sham stimulation over sham surgery Using a crossover design because of the expected smaller sample size |
| Stimulation parameters Start adjustments less than two weeks after surgery to avoid interference of temporary lesion effects Stimulation parameters should be adjusted and optimized for each individual Adjustment process may take weeks to months |
| Primary and secondary outcome measures Primarily reporting on safety trough effect, surgical complication, stimulation-induced side effects, and stimulation parameters Quality of life |
| Aftercare Ensure proper long-term aftercare |