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Simplified, Scalable, 24-hour Adaptive DBS in Parkinson's Disease

NCT07398157 · University of California, San Francisco
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Official title
Subgaleal Cortical Electrodes in Patients With Parkinson's Disease Undergoing Deep-brain Stimulation Therapy for Sensing and Adaptive Deep-brain Stimulation Over a 24-hour Period.
About this study
Parkinson's disease (PD) affects 1% of people over 60 years old, is highly disabling and represents a large economic burden. Therapeutic options include dopaminergic replacement and conventional DBS (cDBS) for advanced disease. However, cDBS therapy is currently unresponsive to the dynamic clinical states of patients, resulting in suboptimal control of symptoms during the day. Adaptive DBS (aDBS) seeks to solve this through personalized dynamic modulation of stimulation according to neural signals. Early studies of aDBS (completed by Drs Little, Starr and other research groups) provide proof-of-principle that aDBS can improve motor symptoms and reduce side-effects. Our team has also tested fully embedded, chronic naturalistic aDBS in a randomized, blinded study to show improvements in daytime motor symptoms and quality of life compared to cDBS. Further, the investigators have also recently validated sleep stage specific Non Rapid Eye Movement (NREM) aDBS, that increased cortical slow waves (linked to slowed disease progression). However, full leveraging of these highly promising therapies is currently limited by: 1) Lack of practical (minimally invasive) methods for chronic cortical recordings. 2) Complexity of programming aDBS due to a large parameter space. 3) Fluctuations in neural signals on multiple time scales, including circadian changes and long-term non-stationarity of signals. Our long-term goal is to advance aDBS from specialist research laboratories to real-world clinics through efficient, scalable implementation with the following advances: 1) Reduce risk and complexity of chronic cortical sensing by placing cortical leads in the subgaleal space rather than inside the cranium. 2) Utilize machine learning (ML) and data-driven biomarker and optimization techniques to minimize aDBS programming complexity. 3) Optimize aDBS across the full 24hr cycle - including sleep, with methods for long-term updating of aDBS settings. The study device will be the rechargeable, sensing and aDBS enabled, newly commercially available Medtronic Percept RC DBS system; connected to subgaleal frontal cortex leads and to directional basal ganglia leads. Our UG3 stage will support regulatory approval for Percept RC subgaleal aDBS. In UH3- 1, the investigators will implant 24 PD patients, optimize cDBS, and identify subgroups for daytime and nighttime aDBS. In UH3-2 the investigators will obtain in-clinic and at-home daytime naturalistic neural recordings and perform a blinded evaluation of data-driven chronic aDBS versus cDBS, for treatment of daytime motor fluctuations. In UH3-3, the investigators will obtain in-clinic (sleep lab) and at-home nighttime naturalistic recordings and perform a blinded evaluation of chronic sleep aDBS versus cDBS, to improve NREM sleep duration and increase slow wave amplitude. The investigators anticipate that these techniques will be the basis for a simple "turnkey" aDBS controller, to enable widespread, simple, scaleable and personalized aDBS for the full 24 hr cycle in PD, and provide a rational foundation for adaptive neuromodulation in other neurological and psychiatric diseases.
Eligibility criteria
Inclusion criteria 1. Age 25-75. 2. Diagnosis of idiopathic PD. 3. Patient has undergone appropriate therapy with oral medications with inadequate relief as determined by a movement disorders neurologist (Dr. Bledsoe). 4. Patient has requested surgical intervention with deep brain stimulation for their disorder or previous enrollment in sponsored IDE (G220241) to use Percept PC wired to subgaleal sensing, if patients have ongoing daytime fluctuations or sleep dysfunction despite cDBS optimization. 5. Normal preoperative brain MRI. 6. Absence of significant cognitive impairment (score of 24 or greater on the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA). 7. Signed informed consent. 8. Motor UPDRS-III off medication score 25 to 65 and a \>35% improvement with levodopa, predominant rigid/bradykinetic symptoms (ratio of off-medication UPDRS-III limb rigidity/bradykinesia scores to limb tremor scores of \>1.2). 9. Motor fluctuations despite optimized medical therapy with at least 2 hours per day of either "off" time, or "on" with dyskinesias. 10. Ability to comply with study follow-up visits for brain recording, testing of closed-loop stimulation, and clinical assessment. Exclusion criteria 1. Coagulopathy, uncontrolled hypertension, heart disease, or other medical condition considered to place the patient at elevated risk for surgical complications. 2. Patient meets criteria for a psychogenic movement disorder. 3. Pregnancy: all women of childbearing potential will have a negative urine pregnancy test prior to undergoing their surgical procedure. 4. Significant untreated depression (BDI-II score \>20) History of suicidal attempt or active suicidal ideation (Yes to #2-5 on C-SSRS). 5. Any personality or mood symptoms that study personnel believe will interfere with study requirements. 6. Patient who requires electroconvulsive therapy, repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation, or diathermy, implanted neurostimulators and MR-incompatible metallic implants, previous craniotomy on the side of the intended subgaleal implant, and drug or alcohol abuse. 7. Patients who experience adverse effects that are undesirable and detrimental to the health of subjects from DBS or other similar neurostimulators
Study design
Enrollment target: 24 participants
Allocation: non_randomized
Masking: double
Age groups: adult, older_adult
Timeline
Starts: 2026-04-09
Estimated completion: 2031-11-30
Last updated: 2026-05-05
Interventions
Device: Medtronic Percept Deep Brain Stimulation (cDBS)Device: Medtronic Percept Deep Brain Stimulation (daytime aDBS)Device: Medtronic Percept Deep Brain Stimulation (nighttime aDBS)
Primary outcomes
  • Change in number of bothersome movement and/or sleep episodes on adaptive deep brain stimulation compared to open-loop deep brain stimulation (Baseline, aDBS testing, and during Blinded Assessment)
Sponsor
University of California, San Francisco · other
With: National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Contacts & investigators
ContactClinical Research Coordinator · contact · sebastian.liu@ucsf.edu · 5175152739
ContactResearch Manager · contact · sarah.wang@ucsf.edu
InvestigatorSimon Little · principal_investigator, University of California, San Francisco
InvestigatorPhilip Starr · principal_investigator, University of California, San Francisco
All locations (1)
University of California San FranciscoRecruiting
San Francisco, California, United States
Simplified, Scalable, 24-hour Adaptive DBS in Parkinson's Disease · TrialPath