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| Name | Class |
|---|---|
| Vanderbilt University Medical Center | OTHER |
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This is a safety study of the molecule VU319 to ascertain pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic data and test cognitive enhancement in healthy volunteers.
Alzheimer's Disease (AD) is a chronic and irreversible neurodegenerative disease characterized by the deterioration of memory and other cognitive functions, progressive impairments in normal daily living, and severe neuropsychiatric symptoms and behavioral disturbances1,2. Currently, there is no available prevention or cure for AD. Therapeutic strategies for the cognitive impairments in AD involve only symptomatic treatments, primarily through enhancement of cholinergic neurotransmission using AChEIs1,2.
This first trial will be First-in-Human single ascending dose (SAD) phase 1 trial in healthy volunteers. One dose will be selected for expansion and evaluation of the effect of food on bioavailability. This Phase I trial, if successful, would serve as the basis for the design of multiple ascending dose (MAD) Phase I trial.
Primary objectives To establish the safety and tolerability of single dose (up to VU319 steady state) VU319 administration in healthy volunteers To establish the maximum tolerated dose of single dose (up to VU319 steady state) VU319 administration in healthy volunteers To characterize the plasma pharmacokinetics and urinary excretion of VU319 and metabolite after single dose oral administration in healthy volunteers Secondary objectives To establish the effect of food on the bioavailability and pharmacokinetic parameters of VU319 in healthy volunteers Exploratory Objectives To gain preliminary evidence that tolerable doses of VU319 engage central M1 receptors by 1) altering/enhancing cognitive performance, and 2) enhancing cortical event related potentials (ERP) as a measure of increased cognitive function in healthy volunteers This will be a double blind, randomized, placebo controlled, and sequential dose escalation in male or female healthy volunteers. Gender will be balanced to the extent possible. Volunteers will receive oral VU319 single dose administration in the fasted state. Subjects meeting entry criteria will be enrolled in successive dose escalating cohorts of 8 subjects each (2 placebo and 6 active drug per dose level). The dose levels will be tested sequentially until the Maximum Tolerated Dose (MTD) is reached, or saturation of exposure occurs, or sustained VU319 plasma level above the safe daily exposure determined from animal toxicokinetic studies is achieved.
The food effect sequence will be double blind, placebo controlled, two sequences, balanced and sequential cross-over in 12 healthy male or female volunteers (2 placebo and 10 active drug). Volunteers will receive oral VU319 single dose administration repeated once under either the fed (i.e. high fatty meal per FDA recommendations) or fasted state. The order of the two periods will be randomized and balanced with 6 subjects receiving treatment in the fed/fast or fast/fed order, respectively.
Clinical safety endpoints include adverse event and symptoms data, vital signs (HR, BP, Respiratory Rate, body weight), 12-lead ECG changes, and laboratory safety assessments (hematology, plasma biochemistry, coagulation, urinalysis).
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dose Escalation of VU319 - Dose 1 | Experimental | Dose Escalation of VU319 |
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| Placebo - Dose 1 | Placebo Comparator | Dose Escalation of Placebo |
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| Single Dose of VU319 under Fed State | Experimental | Single dose of VU319 (50% of the maximum tolerated dose) 30 minutes after a High Fat Standard Breakfast |
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| Single Dose of Placebo under Fed State | Placebo Comparator | Single dose of Placebo 30 minutes after a High Fat Standard Breakfast |
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| Single Dose of VU319 under Fasted State | Experimental | Single dose of VU319 (50% of the maximum tolerated dose) after overnight fast |
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| Single Dose of Placebo under Fasted State |
| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single Dose of VU319 | Drug | Single dose of VU319 |
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| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Incidence of Treatment-Emergent Adverse Events [Safety and Tolerability] | Frequency of adverse events per ascending dose cohort | Change in adverse events frequency from Baseline to 144 hours post drug administration |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Cognitive Battery - Critical Flicker Fusion (CFF) | The Critical Flicker Fusion (CFF) task will be used as a test of vigilance. In an ascending trial, the participant presses a button indicating when the frequency of flashing lights, (beginning at 12 Hz and increasing to 50 Hz), has increased to the point that the lights appear to be no longer flashing but rather appear continuously on ("fused"). In a descending trial, beginning at 50 Hz, the participant presses a button when the frequency of apparently fused lights is decreased such that lights begin to appear to be flashing. The participant needs to respond before the frequency hits the upper or lower limit in each trial. The dependent measure is ascending and descending fusion frequency |
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Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
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| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Paul A Newhouse, MD | Vanderbilt University Medical Center | Principal Investigator |
| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vanderbilt Medical Center | Nashville | Tennessee | 37212 | United States |
| PubMed Identifier | Type | Citation | Retractions |
|---|---|---|---|
| 39660766 | Derived | Poslunsey MS, Wood MR, Han C, Stauffer SR, Panarese JD, Melancon BJ, Engers JL, Dickerson JW, Peng W, Noetzel MJ, Cho HP, Rodriguez AL, Hopkins CR, Morrison R, Crouch RD, Bridges TM, Blobaum AL, Boutaud O, Daniels JS, Kates MJ, Castelhano A, Rook JM, Niswender CM, Jones CK, Conn PJ, Lindsley CW. Discovery of VU0467319: an M1 Positive Allosteric Modulator Candidate That Advanced into Clinical Trials. ACS Chem Neurosci. 2025 Jan 1;16(1):95-107. doi: 10.1021/acschemneuro.4c00769. Epub 2024 Dec 11. |
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D060825 | Cognitive Dysfunction |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D003072 | Cognition Disorders |
| D019965 | Neurocognitive Disorders |
| D001523 | Mental Disorders |
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Double-blind safety study. The pharmacist is unblinded.
| Placebo Comparator |
Single dose of placebo after overnight fast |
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| Dose Escalation of VU319 - Dose 2 | Experimental | Dose Escalation of VU319 |
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| Dose Escalation of VU319 - Dose 3 | Experimental | Dose Escalation of VU319 |
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| Dose Escalation of VU319 - Dose 4 | Experimental | Dose Escalation of VU319 |
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| Dose Escalation of VU319 - Dose 5 | Experimental | Dose Escalation of VU319 |
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| Placebo - Dose 2 | Placebo Comparator | Dose Escalation of Placebo |
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| Placebo - Dose 3 | Placebo Comparator | Dose Escalation of Placebo |
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| Placebo - Dose 4 | Placebo Comparator | Dose Escalation of Placebo |
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| Placebo - Dose 5 | Placebo Comparator | Dose Escalation of Placebo |
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| Single Dose Placebo | Drug | Single dose of placebo |
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| Fed State | Other | drug is given 30 minutes after a high fat breakfast |
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| Fasted State | Other | drug is given after an overnight fast |
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| Dose Escalation of VU319 | Drug | dose levels of the cohorts will be increased step wise |
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| Placebo Dose Escalation | Drug | dose levels of the cohorts will be increased step wise |
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| Baseline, 5 hours post drug administration |
| Cognitive Battery - Choice Reaction Time (CRT) | The Choice Reaction Time (CRT) task from the Milford Test Battery will be used. In this task, the subject holds their index finger on a "home" key and monitors an arc of LED lights in front of them. When one of the lights illuminates, the subject lifts their finger from the home key and pushes a key corresponding to the light, thus extinguishing it. The subject then returns their finger to the home key for the next trial. This widely used version of the CRT allows total RT to be broken down into recognition and motor components. The dependent measure are total reaction time (RT), recognition RT, motor RT. | Baseline, 5 hours post drug administration |
| Cognitive Battery - Spatial Selective Attention (Posner Task) | A version of the Posner Task of attentional orienting will be used to assess the ability of subjects to disengage attention and shift to a new target. Subjects will be asked to press a button corresponding to the side of the screen on which a stimulus appears. Before the stimulus, a cue will indicate the side on which the stimulus will next appear. This cue will be valid 80% of the time. The validity effect (change in reaction time between valid and invalidity - cued trials). | Baseline, 5 hours post drug administration |
| Cognitive Battery - Continuous Performance Test (Conners) | The Conners Continuous Performance Task (CPT). Participants see a string of letters appearing one at a time on a computer screen. Stimuli appear for 300 msec with a response period of 2 sec for a total of 120 trials. Subjects are instructed to press a button whenever a letter appears on the computer screen and they are to not make a response when they see an A followed by an X. The dependent measures are omission and commission errors, hit reaction time, hit RT SE. | Baseline, 5 hours post drug administration |
| Cognitive Battery - Working Memory (N-Back Test) | The N-Back Test will be used as a test of verbal working memory. In this task, the subject views a string of consonant letters (except L, W, and Y), one every 3 seconds. Four conditions are presented: 0-back, 1-back, 2-back and 3-back. In each of the 1-back, 2-back, and 3-back conditions, the task is to decide whether the letter currently presented matches the letter that has been presented 1, 2, or 3 back in the sequence. The dependent measures are sensitivity (d') and bias (C) across load conditions (0-3 back). | Baseline, 5 hours post drug administration |
| Cognitive Battery - The Selective Reminding Task (SRT) | The Selective Reminding Task (SRT) is a multi-trial verbal list-learning task allowing the examination of acquisition, encoding and retrieval. This standard test has been widely used in studies of cognitive impairment and offers measures of storage into and retrieval from both short term and long-term memory and intrusion errors. In addition to the measures of recall, recall failure, and consistency we add a long-delay (20 min.) recall trial and a recognition trial to assess discrimination and response bias. This task shows excellent predictive validity and test-retest reliability. We have 10 equivalent forms that are balanced for imagery and frequency to insure enough equivalent forms for the multiple repeated administrations necessary in this study. The dependent measures are total (8 trials) word recall and recall failure consistency. | Baseline, 5 hours post drug administration |
| Event-Related Potentials | Statistical analysis will focus on a priori selected electrode clusters corresponding to frontal, central, and parietal midline locations (Fz, Cz, Pz in 10-20 notation), which will be confirmed using spatial Principal Components Analysis. Mean amplitudes of the P300 and P600 responses will be calculated within 250-400ms (frontal P3a), 300-500ms (parietal P300), and 500-800ms (parietal P600) temporal windows. These a priori selected windows will also be confirmed using temporal Principal Components Analysis. Repeated measures Analysis of Variance will be used to examine drug-related effects on stimulus processing. The ANOVA design will include Stimulus (2) x Electrode (3) x Test time (2) within-subject factors. To assess the effect of experimental group membership (placebo vs. active) in performance on these tasks, Group (2) will be used as the between-subject factor. | Baseline, 6 hours post drug administration |
| Behavioral Measure - Profile of Mood State (POMS) | The Profile of Mood States (POMS) is a relatively new psychological rating scale used to assess transient, distinct mood states. This scale was developed by McNair, Droppleman, and Lorr (1971). Advantages of using this assessment include the simplicity of administration and ease of participant understanding. Another feature of the assessment that is notable is POMS psychological states can be assessed quickly due to the simplicity of the test. POMS can be administered and measured through written or online forums. The POMS measures six different dimensions of mood swings over a period of time. These include: Tension or Anxiety, Anger or Hostility, Vigor or Activity, Fatigue or Inertia, Depression or Dejection, Confusion or Bewilderment. A five-point scale ranging from "not at all" to "extremely" is administered by experimenters to patients to assess their mood states. | Baseline, 4 hours post drug administration |
| Behavioral Measure - Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) | Persons having or suspected of having schizophrenia or other psychotic disorder manifest the disorder in multiple ways. The BPRS assesses the level of 24 symptom constructs such as hostility, suspiciousness, hallucination, and grandiosity. It is particularly useful in gauging the efficacy of treatment in patients who have moderate to severe psychoses. It is based on the clinician's observations of the patient's behavior. The rater enters a number for each symptom construct that ranges from 1 (not present) to 7 (extremely severe). The time necessary to complete the interview and scoring can be as little as 20-30 minutes. | Baseline, 1, 3, and 7 hour post drug administration |
| Behavioral Measure - Subject Visual Analogue Scale (SVAS) | Subject Visual Analog Scales (VAS) will be used consisting of a series of items such as "drowsiness" or "psychomotor agitation" scored on 100 mm lines scored by the subject. | Baseline, 4 hours post drug administration |
| Behavioral Measure - Observer Visual Analogue Scale (SVAS) | Observer Visual Analog Scales (VAS) will be used consisting of a series of items such as "drowsiness" or "psychomotor agitation" scored on 100 mm lines scored by the investigator. | Baseline, 1, 3, and 7 hour post drug administration |
| Behavioral Measure - Stanford Sleepiness Scale | To collect a spectrum of sleepiness indicators across a day, the SSS is administered at two-hour intervals, usually during the waking part of the day. To correlate objective measures and subjective feelings of sleepiness, the SSS may also be administered immediately before and after naps during a multiple sleep latency test. The SSS uses the following numeric scale:
| Baseline, 14 times over 36 hours post drug administration |
| Behavioral Measure - Physical Symptom Checklist | A checklist of 22 physical symptoms. Each item is rated 1 to 4, with 1 being none and 4 being severe. Total score range from 22 to 88. | Baseline, 1, 2, 3, 5, 9 hour after administration |
| Behavioral Measure - Suicide Behaviors Questionnaire (SBQ-R) | It consists of four questions. Each of the four questions addresses a specific risk factor: the first concerns presence of suicidal thoughts and attempts, the second concerns frequency of suicidal thoughts, the third concerns the threat level of suicidal attempts, and the fourth concerns likelihood of future suicidal attempts. The first item has often been used on its own in order to assign individuals to a suicidal and a non-suicidal control group for studies. A total score of 7 and higher in the general population and a total score of 8 and higher in patients with psychiatric disorders indicates significant risk of suicidal behavior. | Baseline, 4 hours post drug administration |