Title

Neuroprotection With Phenytoin in Optic Neuritis
A Phase II Double Blind, Randomized, Placebo Controlled Trial of Neuroprotection With Phenytoin in Acute Optic Neuritis
  • Phase

    Phase 2
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Completed No Results Posted
  • Intervention/Treatment

    phenytoin ...
  • Study Participants

    92
Optic neuritis is caused by inflammation of the optic nerve and causes loss of vision in the affected eye. It is often associated with multiple sclerosis. Loss of vision after an attack of optic neuritis is caused by damage to the nerve fibres in the optic nerve. There are a number of factors that contribute to nerve fibre damage including increased levels of sodium within them, so blocking sodium entry could help to protect them against damage.

The purpose of this study is determine whether phenytoin (which blocks sodium entry into cells) can protect against loss of nerve fibres and prevent loss of vision after optic neuritis.
Demyelinating optic neuritis is the most common cause of acute reversible visual loss in young adults of Northern European Origin. There is a strong association with multiple sclerosis and up to 75% of British adults with acute clinically isolated optic neuritis go on to develop MS during long term follow up. Equally, 70% of MS patients have clinical evidence if optic nerve involvement during the course of their illness.

The pathology of the acute inflammatory lesion is comparable to the plaques found elsewhere in the CNS in MS. The retina and optic nerve therefore represent a discrete compartment of the CNS affected by the disease process that can be easily studied using a combination of clinical, electrophysiological and imaging techniques.

There is good evidence that axonal and neuronal degeneration are the primary pathological processes leading to irreversible disability in MS. Experimental models have demonstrated numerous mechanisms of axonal loss including adaptive changes in the demyelinated axonal membrane, in particular increased density of sodium channels leading to increased concentrations of intraaxonal sodium ions. Partial blockade of voltage gated sodium channels with drugs such as phenytoin has been shown to be neuroprotective in several experimental models of inflammatory axonal injury.

The retinal nerve fibre layer is unique in the CNS in that it is not myelinated and therefore is an ideal biomarker for the processes of neurodegeneration and neuroprotection.

Imaging of the retinal nerve fibre layer using optical coherence tomography and of the optic nerve using MRI both demonstrate that acute optic neuritis is associated with significant volume loss, and this correlates well with impaired visual function.

The primary aim of this trial is to assess whether sodium channel blockade with phenytoin has a neuroprotective effect on axonal loss after an attack of acute demyelinating optic neuritis. Secondary aims are to assess whether phenytoin improves visual outcome and remyelination and to assess the safety of the treatment.

90 patients with acute optic neuritis will be recruited into a double blind placebo controlled trial in which patients will be randomly allocated to receive either phenytoin or placebo for 3 months. Recruitment will take place at two trial sites in Sheffield and London. The trial is powered to detect a 50% beneficial effect on the primary outcome measure. Outcome will be measured at entry and after 6 months.Bias will be minimized by blinding assessing physicians and patients using active and placebo treatment of identical appearance.
Study Started
Nov 30
2011
Primary Completion
Dec 31
2014
Study Completion
Mar 31
2015
Last Update
Sep 09
2015
Estimate

Drug Phenytoin

Phenytoin will be loaded using at total dose of 15mg/kg (rounded to the nearest 100mg) divided into three equal doses given once daily for 3 days.This will be followed by a daily maintenance dose of 4mg/kg once a day (rounded up to the nearest 50mg, with a maximum dose of 300mg)for 13 weeks.Phenytoin levels will be taken at 1 and 3 months.

  • Other names: Phenytoin sodium, Epanutin (Flynn Pharma)

Drug Placebo

placebo identical in appearance to active IMP (phenytoin)

phenytoin Experimental

active arm of trial 1:1 allocation active versus placebo

placebo Placebo Comparator

1:1 allocation active versus placebo

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Diagnosis of acute optic neuritis
Visual acuity in affected eye ≤ 6/12
Corrected vision in normal eye ≥ 6/6
No history of optic neuritis or other ocular disease in either eye
≤ 14 days since onset of visual loss

Exclusion Criteria:

Contraindication or known allergy to Phenytoin
Contraindication to MRI
Use of a calcium channel or sodium channel blocker in the past 2 months
Corticosteroid use in the past 2 months
Tysabri infusion in the past 3 months
MS with major temperature dependent disability
Relapsing remitting MS of greater than 10 yrs duration or EDSS>3
Pregnancy
Breast Feeding
Significant cardiac, renal or liver abnormalities
No Results Posted