Purpose

The goal of the study is to generate a biorepository of longitudinal biofluids-blood (plasma and serum), cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) and urine linked to genetics and longitudinal clinical information that are made available to the research community. To accomplish these goals, we will enroll 800 Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) patients and 200 healthy controls from sites globally, over a 5 year time frame. Additionally, speech and motor function and spirometry measures will be collected bi-weekly in a subset of participants. ALS participants will be asked to come to the clinic for 5 study visits approximately every 4 months. Healthy participants will be coming for 2 study visits with a 12-month interval between visits. These samples and clinical information will be stored in a de-identified manner and made available for investigators to use in future research studies.

Conditions

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Over 18 Years
Eligible Genders
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Yes

Criteria

ALS Participants:

1. Age 18 or older.

2. A diagnosis of ALS in accordance with Gold Coast criteria.

3. Full Vital Capacity (FVC) of ≥30% or at the discretion of the Principal Investigator
for the participant's predicted value for gender, height, and age at the time of
screening.

4. Ability to provide informed consent and understand the purpose and risks of the
study.

5. Ability to comply with study procedures and assessments, in the opinion of the
Principal Investigator.

Healthy Control Participants:

1. Age 18 or older.

2. No history of neurological disease, in the opinion of the Principal Investigator.

3. No known ALS- associated genetic mutations at the time of consent.

4. Ability to provide informed consent and understand the purpose and risks of the
study.

5. Ability to comply with study procedures and assessments, in the opinion of the
Principal Investigator.

Study Design

Phase
Study Type
Observational [Patient Registry]
Observational Model
Other
Time Perspective
Other

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis ALS This is a global, multi-center study of ALS participants and healthy controls that will have up to 20 sites globally. Target enrollment will be approximately 1000 participants with 800 ALS participants and 200 healthy control cases. Research participants with suspected, possible, probable, probable- laboratory supported, and definite Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), according to the revised El Escorial Criteria (EEC) or with a diagnosis based on the Gold Coast Criteria will be seen at the Screening/Baseline Visit(s) (Visit 1) and follow-up will occur at approximate 4-month internals for up to 5 visits per participant.
Healthy Healthy control participants will have a neurological exam to confirm non-neurologic disease status and participants will have one follow up visit approximately 12 months after their baseline visit. Upon consenting for participation, all study participants will undergo the activities and biofluid collections at each visit.

Recruiting Locations

Georgetown University
Georgetown, District of Columbia 20007
Contact:
Cassie Holmes, NP
cjh278@georgetown.edu

More Details

Status
Recruiting
Sponsor
Target ALS Foundation, Inc.

Study Contact

Laura Dugom, MPH
919-440-2073
laura.dugom@targetals.org

Detailed Description

An industry wide survey performed by Dr. Lyle Ostrow at Johns Hopkins University indicated that longitudinal biofluids linked to detailed clinical information are critical to continued drug development for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), with CSF being the top biofluid often lacking in longitudinal sample biorepositories. There have been prior efforts for longitudinal collection of biofluids matched to clinical information, but those sample sets are limited in size and quickly utilized by the research community. Based upon input from industry leaders, we propose the creation of a Target ALS longitudinal biofluids biorepository linked to patient genetic and clinical information. Given the heterogeneous clinical and biologic nature of ALS, a repository of longitudinal samples linked to clinical and genetic information is essential to help identify and verify ALS biomarkers (1,2). Recent studies to identify ALS biomarkers have used longitudinal samples from either the sporadic patient population or from those that harbor genetic mutations known to cause ALS but are not yet symptomatic (3,4). Beyond exploring the relationship between known causative genes and candidate biomarkers, the Target ALS Postmortem Core has collected postmortem ALS tissue samples that have been used to generate large transcriptomic databases that are linked to whole genome sequencing information. These data have been valuable at finding new subtypes of ALS linked to transcriptomic profiles from the tissue samples (5). The current study utilizes some of the medical centers participating in the Target ALS Postmortem Core to create a longitudinal biofluids repository form living ALS patients and health controls. A select number of participating sites will have a portion of ALS participants (approx. 150) have the option to take part in at home speech measures. Additionally, a select number of participating sites will also take part in at- home spirometry measures for approximately 100 ALS participants and approximately 50 healthy case control participants, for a total of 150 participants. The added feature of these at- home measures are to further evaluate the potential for at home measures in future clinical trials and ability to obtain enriched speech and vital capacity measures to correlate to downstream biomarker studies using biofluid or genetic data. There is a growing interest in the use of at home speech analytics to classify and monitor ALS patients, with recent studies indicating the value for these at home measures in both clinical research and clinical trial settings (6-8). Our study will not only expand upon these early findings but also include at home spirometry measures of vital capacity to evaluate the ability to obtain reliable vital capacity measures at home. Our proposed study will provide valuable longitudinal biofluids linked to clinical information, genetic data, at-home speech measures, and vital capacity measures for use in future research studies. Target ALS has planned to generate proteomic, lipidomic and metabolomic datasets using the longitudinal biofluids collected in this study. Inclusion of samples with racial and ethnic diversity will further strengthen study outcomes to be applied to ALS communities more broadly. These de-identified samples and clinical information will be available to investigators throughout the world to enhance ALS research and ultimately improved treatments for ALS. There is a long history of benefit for biorepositories with linked clinical data to be instrumental in research progress. Most studies that identify biomarkers or validate biomarkers for human diseases typically require banked samples that are linked to clinical information to determine sensitivity and specificity of the biomarker for that disease or to demonstrate change over the course of the disease.

Notice

Study information shown on this site is derived from ClinicalTrials.gov (a public registry operated by the National Institutes of Health). The listing of studies provided is not certain to be all studies for which you might be eligible. Furthermore, study eligibility requirements can be difficult to understand and may change over time, so it is wise to speak with your medical care provider and individual research study teams when making decisions related to participation.