Melatonin as a Neuroprotective Therapy in Neonates With HIE Undergoing Hypothermia

Who is this study for? Pediatric patients up to 6 hours old with hypothermia
What treatments are being studied? Melatonin
Status: Recruiting
Location: See all (2) locations...
Intervention Type: Drug, Other, Behavioral
Study Type: Interventional
Study Phase: Early Phase 1
SUMMARY

Hypoxic-Ischemic Encephalopathy (HIE) occurs in 20 per 1000 births. Only 47% of neonates treated with the state of the art therapy (induced systemic hypothermia) have normal outcomes. Therefore, other promising therapies that potentially work in synergy with hypothermia to improve neurologic outcomes need to be tested. One potential agent is melatonin. Melatonin is a naturally occurring substance produced mainly from the pineal gland. Melatonin is widely known for its role in regulating the circadian rhythm, but it has many other effects that may benefit infants with HI injury. Melatonin serves as a free radical scavenger, decreases inflammatory cytokines, and stimulates anti-oxidant enzymes. Therefore, melatonin may interrupt several key components in the pathophysiology of HIE, in turn minimizing cell death and improving outcomes. The research study will evaluate the neuroprotective properties and appropriate dose of Melatonin to give to infants undergoing therapeutic hypothermia for hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy.

Eligibility
Participation Requirements
Sex: All
Maximum Age: Newborn
Healthy Volunteers: f
View:

• Eligible infants are \>36 0/7th weeks gestation,

• pH (cord or neonatal) \<7.0,

• base deficit \>16 mEq/L,

• no available blood gas,

• a cord blood/first hour of life blood gas with pH \> 7.0 and \< 7.15,

• base deficit between 10 and 15.9 mEq/L,

• infants must have a history of an acute perinatal event,

• either a 10-minute Apgar \< 5 or a continued need for ventilation,

• All infants must have signs of encephalopathy within 6 hours of age using the modified Sarnat scoring system,

• neonates cooled within 6 hours of birth will be included in the study.

Locations
United States
Florida
University of Florida
RECRUITING
Gainesville
Florida Hospital for Children
RECRUITING
Orlando
Contact Information
Primary
Alison A McMurray, M.A.M.C.
amcmurra@ufl.edu
3526275016
Backup
Kristine Boykin, BSN
kristineboykin@ufl.edu
3522738706
Time Frame
Start Date: 2016-11
Estimated Completion Date: 2026-03
Participants
Target number of participants: 70
Treatments
Experimental: Participants 1-10
This group will receive a 0.5 mg/kg enteral dose of Melatonin. The first dose will be administered via enteral route within 12 hours of life with a target of 6 hours of life.~The melatonin will be administered as a single dose for the first 5 participants in allowing the investigators to determine if the dosing frequency has the potential to decrease in the elimination with hypothermia. The next 5 subjects who will receive multiple doses if there are not any safety concerns.~Additionally, the participants will have the following test performed: Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), Neurological Outcome Assessment, Pharmacokinetics, and safety monitoring.
Experimental: Participants 11-20
This group will the Melatonin dose of 3 mg/kg enteral, only if the group Participants 1-10 has meet the safety goals. The first dose will be administered via enteral route within 12 hours of life with a target of 6 hours of life.~The melatonin will be administered as a single dose for the first 5 participants in allowing the investigators to determine if the dosing frequency has the potential to decrease in the elimination with hypothermia. The next 5 subjects who will receive multiple doses if there are not any safety concerns.~Additionally, the participants will have the following test performed: Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), Neurological Outcome Assessment, Pharmacokinetics, and safety monitoring.
Experimental: Participants 21-30
This group will receive Melatonin dose of 5 mg/kg enterally, only if the group Participants 11-20 has meet the safety goals. The first dose will be administered via enteral route within 12 hours of life with a target of 6 hours of life.~The melatonin will be administered as a single dose for the first 5 participants in allowing the investigators to determine if the dosing frequency has the potential to decrease in the elimination with hypothermia. The next 5 subjects who will receive multiple doses if there are not any safety concerns.~Additionally, the participants will have the following test performed: Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), Neurological Outcome Assessment, Pharmacokinetics, and safety monitoring.
Related Therapeutic Areas
Sponsors
Collaborators: Thrasher Research Fund
Leads: University of Florida

This content was sourced from clinicaltrials.gov