Actively Recruiting
Monthly Monitoring of Plasma NfL in Treated Relapsing-remitting Multiple Sclerosis to Detect Persistent Infraclinical Disease Activity
Led by Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Nīmes · Updated on 2026-03-27
84
Participants Needed
2
Research Sites
259 weeks
Total Duration
On this page
AI-Summary
What this Trial Is About
Reference MRI scan is recommended 6 months after treatment onset in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), and follow-up scans at 12 months later to monitor subclinical activity. When monitoring treatment response in patients treated with disease modifying treatments (DMTs), the measurement of new or enlarging T2/FLAIR hyperintense lesions (NELs) is the preferred MRI method supplemented by contrast-enhancing lesions (CELs) for monitoring treatment response. However, some studies have suggested the deposition of gadolinium-based contrast agents in the basal ganglia and dentate nucleus of patients who underwent serial MRI acquisitions. Although significant clinical consequences of these deposits have not been demonstrated, further studies are required to better understand the potential long-term biological and clinical effects of gadolinium administration. To circumvent this potential risk, several recommendations suggested avoiding unnecessary use of gadolinium for follow-up scans. New sequences are also developed to replace gadolinium injection for the detection of active lesions. Moreover, MRI remains costly and time-consuming. In addition, systematic yearly MRI monitoring is not adapted to detect silent active lesions. This can delay identification of treatment failure and increase the risk of relapses and disability worsening, especially in the context of escalation therapy. Therefore, biological markers could allow more frequent analysis of disease activity and detect treatment failure earlier than classical clinical and MRI monitoring. Their use would greatly help clinicians to switch for high efficacy treatments (HET) and avoid potential relapses. Measurement of a structural axonal protein, neurofilament, in serum or plasma has shown promise as a marker of neuroaxonal injury and a measure of treatment response. In MS, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) neurofilament-light chain (NfL) is also increased and is positively associated with MRI lesion load and disability scores and is a marker of treatment response. WThe study authors hypothesize that monthly plasma neurofilament-light chain (pNfL) monitoring can sensitively highlight subclinical (radiological disease activity) RDA by performing early MRI scans to confirm EDA and lead to timely treatment escalation. The main objective of this study is to compare the time to EDA in both arms (monthly pNfL monitoring vs. standard care with regular MRI scans), in patients with EDA.
CONDITIONS
Official Title
Monthly Monitoring of Plasma NfL in Treated Relapsing-remitting Multiple Sclerosis to Detect Persistent Infraclinical Disease Activity
Who Can Participate
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if you...
- Patient with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) according to 2017 McDonald's criteria
- Disease onset less than 10 years ago
- Evidence of active RRMS (relapse and/or new/enlarging T2/FLAIR lesions and/or contrast-enhancing lesions) within the past 24 months based on MRI
- Treated with moderate efficacy treatments (MET: IFN, GA, TE, fumarates) for less than 24 months
- Standard MRI follow-up scan performed less than 90 days before inclusion
- Clinically stable disease for at least 30 days before inclusion
- Patients in observational studies or cohorts (e.g., OFSEP, PROMISE) are eligible
- Women with reproductive potential must have a negative pregnancy test at inclusion and use effective contraception during the trial
- Ability to adhere to study visit schedule
- Signed informed consent
- Affiliated with or beneficiary of a health insurance plan
You will not qualify if you...
- Pregnant or breastfeeding women
- Unable to undergo brain and/or spinal cord MRI scans
- Unwilling to have monthly blood draws
- Treated with high efficacy treatments (S1P agonists, natalizumab, ocrelizumab, ofatumumab, rituximab, alemtuzumab, cladribine, mitoxantrone)
- Relapse within 6 months prior to inclusion
- Presence of contrast-enhancing lesions within 3 months before inclusion
- Progressive multiple sclerosis
- Unable to provide informed consent or understand study information
- Currently participating in therapeutic research or within exclusion period of experimental drug (five half-lives)
- Under judicial protection or adult guardianship
- Female patients not willing to use effective birth control during the trial if of reproductive potential
AI-Screening
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Trial Site Locations
Total: 2 locations
1
CHU de Nice
Nice, France
Actively Recruiting
2
CHU de Nîmes
Nîmes, France
Actively Recruiting
Research Team
E
Eric Thouvenot
CONTACT
How is the study designed?
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Masking
NONE
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Model
PARALLEL
Primary Purpose
OTHER
Number of Arms
2
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