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Trial Title:
Physical Activity Monitoring in Myasthenia Gravis
NCT ID:
NCT06277830
Condition:
Myasthenia Gravis
Conditions: Official terms:
Myasthenia Gravis
Muscle Weakness
Conditions: Keywords:
telemedicine
wearable sensors
outcome measures
digital health
biomarkers
clinical trials
Study type:
Observational
Overall status:
Recruiting
Study design:
Time perspective:
Cross-Sectional
Intervention:
Intervention type:
Device
Intervention name:
Wearable sensor
Description:
Participants will wear a pendant sensor for 7 days and then participate in an on-site
examination with using a tablet designed to evaluate weakness in MG.
Arm group label:
Adults with autoimmune myasthenia gravis
Other name:
Tablet-based physical examination
Summary:
The goal of this observational study is to evaluate the feasibility of using wearable
sensor and digital technologies to measure motor and speech function in adults with
autoimmune Myasthenia Gravis (MG).
The main question[s] it aims to answer are:
- To measure the correlation of sensor-based measures of motor function with existing
outcome measures including the MG-ADL, MGQOL15r, QMG, MGComposite, and Neuro-QOL
Fatigue scales.
- To develop and validate tablet-based digital assessments of speech and facial
expression and to compare with existing outcome measures.
Participants will wear a pendant sensor for 7 days and then participate in tablet-based
and in-person myasthenia-specific physical examinations. This will be performed in
concert with routine care in the Massachusetts General Hospital MG clinic.
Detailed description:
Myasthenia gravis (MG) is a chronic autoimmune neuromuscular disease characterized by
fluctuating muscle weakness and symptoms that interfere with activities of daily living
and negatively impacts quality of life. MG symptoms are currently assessed in person
through a careful history and physical exam by a neuromuscular disease expert. Such
in-clinic assessments are time-consuming, subjective, only provide a snapshot of a
patient's disease and do not adequately reflect the spectrum of fluctuating weakness and
symptoms. In 2019, NIH funded a rare disease clinical research consortium called MGNet.
The consortium is focused on improved characterization of clinical phenotypes, discovery
of biomarkers, and advancing clinical trial readiness for MG, which would enhance the
development of more effective and personalized treatments. In this Fast Track SBIR
project, BioSensics will collaborate with Massachusetts General Hospital - one of the key
Consortium sites for MGNet - to develop and validate a wearable sensor solution (MGWear)
for continuous remote monitoring of motor symptoms and function in MG patients and also a
secure mobile application (MG app) for automatic assessment of speech and facial
characteristics. The mobile application will also enable the transfer of data from the
wearable device to BioSensics HIPAA-compliant backend cloud called BioDigit Cloud.
The objective of the study is to evaluate the feasibility of using wearable sensor and
digital technologies to measure motor and speech function as well as developing metrics
to measure ocular and facial expression to monitor disease activity and fluctuating
muscle weakness in people with Myasthenia Gravis (MG).To achieve this objective, the
investigators will conduct an observational study is to investigate the correlation
between outcomes as measured by the PAMSys sensor and digital health technologies with
the total score and sub-scores of MG specific outcome measures.
A key application and market for the proposed solution technology is pharmaceutical
clinical trials. Wearable sensors and digital technologies like the technology proposed
here could allow drug developers to test and iterate faster, providing a valuable new
method for evaluating efficacy. Clinically, the proposed solution could be used to
predict an individual's response to immunosuppressive drugs and to improve medication
titration. Such solutions can enable detecting subtle changes in movement-based and
digital biomarkers and provide insight into the phase of clinical disease onset.
Additionally, the growing use of telemedicine to expand access and potentially reduce
costs of high-quality care will require remote assessment strategies. 20% of states in
the US (10 out of 50 states) have no specialized care for MG. Travel time, distance and
cost may limit patients' access to expert care, even in states with identified MG
specialists. The proposed remote monitoring technologies have potential to lessen
barriers to quality care access for MG patients.
Criteria for eligibility:
Study pop:
Adult patients with generalized autoimmune myasthenia gravis who are existing patients in
the Mass General Hospital Neuromuscular Clinic
Sampling method:
Non-Probability Sample
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
- Autoimmune generalized MG with or without history of thymoma, MGFA severity Class
Ila/b, Illa/b or IVa
- Acetylcholine receptor antibody (AChR Ab) or muscle specific kinase receptor
antibody (MuSK Ab) positive.
- Able to provide informed consent (physically/cognitively) and adhere with the
protocol based on investigator's judgement
- Ambulatory, defined as able to independently walk a distance of 10 meters, with or
without assistive device
- Male or female, aged 18-80 years
- Speaks English as primary language
Exclusion Criteria:
- Inability to engage in activities that are essential for independent living, such as
dressing, bathing, toileting, eating independently.
- Neurological or orthopedic problems independent of myasthenia which significantly
affects gait in the investigator's judgement
- Any significant medical, laboratory, or psychiatric condition that, in the judgment
of the investigators, would potentially interfere with the ability to participate in
the study
- Residence in long-term care centers or institutions, nursing facilities, skilled
nursing facilities, or recipients of hospice care, or incarceration
- MGFA severity class IVb (severe bulbar weakness) or V (MG crisis)
- Pregnant or breastfeeding women
- Concurrent participation in an interventional clinical trial (observational studies,
biomarker studies and registries are acceptable)
Gender:
All
Minimum age:
18 Years
Maximum age:
80 Years
Healthy volunteers:
No
Locations:
Facility:
Name:
Massachusetts General Hospital
Address:
City:
Boston
Zip:
02114
Country:
United States
Status:
Recruiting
Contact:
Last name:
Carina Stafstrom, BS
Email:
cstafstrom@mgh.harvard.edu
Contact backup:
Phone:
617-726-5175
Start date:
February 14, 2024
Completion date:
June 2024
Lead sponsor:
Agency:
Massachusetts General Hospital
Agency class:
Other
Collaborator:
Agency:
BioSensics
Agency class:
Industry
Source:
Massachusetts General Hospital
Record processing date:
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on November 12, 2024
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov page:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT06277830