At a glance
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Image Parkinson's Disease Progression Study
In Brief
A Phase 2 clinical trial evaluating Rasagiline, Placebo, and 3 other interventions for Parkinson's Disease. Completed, enrolled 96 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative brain disorder that impairs the ability to perform functions such as grooming, dressing, cooking, and other activities of daily living. PD affected between 4.1 and 4.6 million people worldwide in 2005, and it is projected that up to 9.3 million people will be affected by 2030. Although current pharmacological therapies provide beneficial effects on motor symptoms of the disease (tremor, rigidity, and bradykinesia), intolerable disability eventually develops in most patients. A disease-modifying therapy that slows disease progression is a major unmet medical need in PD. Numerous agents have neuroprotective effects in pre-clinical laboratory models, but none have been shown to have indisputable disease-modifying effects in clinical trials for patients with PD. The purpose of this research study is to investigate how the brain and motor behavior changes in PD over time in response to rasagiline which is a monoamine oxidase-B(MAO-B) inhibitor. The drug rasagiline will be tested in this study as the MAO-B inhibitor. Rasagiline has been prescribed for many years to treat symptomatic Parkinson's disease. It is FDA approved for the treatment of Parkinson's disease but has not been shown to slow disease progression. The outcome and impact of this study will provide the first evaluation of MAO-B inhibitors at slowing the progression of the nigrostriatal pathway using advanced Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) and functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) methods in PD.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
Rasagiline will be taken for one year at the dose of 1mg a day. and subjects will undergo functional and structural brain imaging to determine if rasagiline is slowing the progression of Parkinson's Disease in the brain.
A placebo tablet will be taken for one year, once a day, and at the same dose of 1mg. subjects will undergo functional and structural brain imaging to be compared with the group taking the rasagiline intervention.
This test will be performed at baseline and one year.
This test will be performed at baseline and one year.
This test will be performed at baseline and one year.