Actively Recruiting
Safety of a Strategy Combining Etanercept Administration With Repeated Contrast Ultrasound in Patients With Alzheimer's Disease
Led by Fondation Ophtalmologique Adolphe de Rothschild · Updated on 2026-05-12
5
Participants Needed
1
Research Sites
189 weeks
Total Duration
On this page
AI-Summary
What this Trial Is About
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a clinico-pathological entity combining multiple and varied neuropathological lesions with characteristic abnormal accumulations (amyloid Beta (Aβ) plaques and neurofibrillary degeneration (NFD)), neuroinflammation, as well as neuronal and synaptic suffering. To date, only symptomatic treatments are available, with no proven effect on neuropathological lesions or on the clinical course of the disease. Anti-TNF alpha could be a therapeutic agent of choice in the treatment of central nervous sytem (CNS) diseases with an inflammatory component, such as AD. Unfortunately, their high molecular weight prevents them from passively crossing the blood brain barrier (BBB). In a pilot study published in 2006, etanercept was administered intrathecally to AD patients with encouraging clinical effects. Transient opening of the tight junctions between the endothelial cells of the BBB by delivering High Intensity Focalised Ultrasounds (HIFU) in combination with an intravenous injection of microbubbles is a strategy that could improve bioavailability. Studies suggest that the oscillation of microbubbles in the ultrasound field generates microcurrents that induce shear forces responsible for a transient opening of the BBB. Ultrasound can be focused or unfocused and open the BBB diffusely or selectively over defined regions of the brain. This technique was first used to open the BBB in humans in 2001. Transient opening of the BBB is also thought to modulate the immune response in the CNS, leading to a reduction in the intracerebral load of Aβ. In an Alzheimer's mouse model, several studies using ultrasound devices to open the BBB have shown a reduction in the intracerebral load of Aβ (up to 75%) and an improvement in the memory faculties and cognitive performance of the animals. In humans, two clinical trials have assessed the safety of using ultrasound-assisted BBB disruption devices in AD patients. These were the Sonocloud® (Carthera) and ExAblate® (InSightec) devices. The Sonocloud® device is an extra-dural ultrasound emitter implanted under local anaesthetic. Enrolment was completed in October 2020, but the results of the trial are not yet available (NCT03119961). The phase I study on 5 patients evaluating the ExAblate® device coupled with the injection of gas microbubbles demonstrated reversible opening of the BBB with no serious adverse effects for the patients. No effect on intracerebral Aβ load or cognitive or behavioural improvement was demonstrated. The ExAblate® device is not implantable and is therefore less invasive than the Sonocloud® device. However, it requires MRI monitoring and the transducers used often generate high levels of heat, requiring the use of a water cooling system to avoid the risk of transducer deterioration. In this project, our aim is to assess the safety of using a non-focused ultrasound device, the General Electric VIVID S70 clinical device (CE mark G1 023782 0112 ), to perform BBB ruptures in patients suffering from AD, combined with the administration of etanercept, whose bioavailability would thus be improved.
CONDITIONS
Official Title
Safety of a Strategy Combining Etanercept Administration With Repeated Contrast Ultrasound in Patients With Alzheimer's Disease
Who Can Participate
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if you...
- Positive diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease according to IWG2 criteria
- Biological profile supporting Alzheimer's disease
- Age between 50 and 85 years
- Affiliated with or beneficiary of a social insurance scheme
- Mild Alzheimer's disease with little or no impact on autonomy, MMSE score 20 or higher at inclusion
- Fazekas score less than or equal to 1
- Have a family member or person at home to monitor adverse events
- Sufficient command of the French language to perform neuropsychological tests
- Underwent a full neuropsychological assessment within the last 6 months
- Stable anticholinesterase treatment for at least 3 months if applicable
- Signed informed consent from the patient and trusted support person
You will not qualify if you...
- Previous treatment with anti-TNF alpha drugs (e.g., etanercept)
- Other causes of major neurocognitive disorder
- Participation in another drug study
- Absolute contraindication to MRI (e.g., pacemaker, implantable stimulator, metallic foreign body in the eye)
- Contraindication to lumbar puncture
- History of bleeding disorders
- Severe chronic respiratory disease
- Use of anticoagulant therapy
- Right-to-left heart shunt or severe pulmonary arterial hypertension
- Known cerebral vascular disease (Fazekas score greater than 1), stroke sequelae
- Treatment with Anakinra, abatacept, or sulfasalazine
- Major surgery within 28 days before study start
- Allergy to gadolinium or contrast agents used in brain imaging, including severe kidney failure
- Allergy to xylocaine
- Epilepsy or use of drugs lowering seizure threshold
- Major depressive syndrome despite treatment or psychotic symptoms
- MRI showing active neurological disease or major brain hemorrhage
- Non-menopausal women
- Legal protection measures other than guardianship or curatorship
- Optic neuritis
- Multiple sclerosis symptoms
- Live vaccines within 4 weeks before starting etanercept
- History of hepatitis B or C
- Recent acute coronary syndrome or unstable ischemic heart disease
- History of recurrent or chronic infections or severe uncontrolled diabetes
- Hypersensitivity to etanercept or its components
- Sepsis or risk of sepsis
- Active or chronic infection
- Hypersensitivity to SonoVue (ultrasound contrast agent)
- Uncontrolled hypertension
- Respiratory distress syndrome
- Cardiovascular instability contraindicating dobutamine use
- Severe pulmonary arterial pressure over 90 mmHg
AI-Screening
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Trial Site Locations
Total: 1 location
1
Fondation Adolphe de Rothschld
Paris, France, 75019
Actively Recruiting
Research Team
A
Amélie Yavchitz
CONTACT
J
Jean Claude SADIK, PHD
CONTACT
How is the study designed?
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Masking
NONE
Allocation
NA
Model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary Purpose
TREATMENT
Number of Arms
1
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