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RECRUITING
NCT04855396

The Biomarkers in the Hyperbaric Oxygen Brain Injury Treatment Trial (BioHOBIT)

Sponsor: University of Michigan

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

There are no therapeutic agents that have been shown to improve outcomes from severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). Critical barriers to progress in developing treatments for severe TBI are the lack of: 1) monitoring biomarkers for assessing individual patient response to treatment; 2) predictive biomarkers for identifying patients likely to benefit from a promising intervention. Currently, clinical examination remains the fundamental tool for monitoring severe TBI patients and for subject selection in clinical trials. However, these patients are typically intubated and sedated, limiting the utility of clinical examinations. Validated monitoring and predictive biomarkers will allow titration of the dose of promising therapeutics to individual subject response, as well as make clinical trials more efficient by enabling the enrollment of subjects likely to benefit. Glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), neurofilament light chain (NfL) and high sensitivity c-reactive protein (hsCRP) are promising biomarkers that may be useful as 1) monitoring biomarkers; 2) predictive biomarkers in severe TBI trials. Although the biological rationale supporting their use is strong, significant knowledge gaps remain. To address these gaps in knowledge, we propose an ancillary observational study leveraging an ongoing severe TBI clinical trial that is not funded to collect biospecimen. The Hyperbaric Oxygen in Brain Injury Treatment (HOBIT) trial, a phase II randomized control clinical trial that seeks to determine the dose of hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) that that has the highest likelihood of demonstrating efficacy in a phase III trial. The proposed study will: 1) validate the accuracy of candidate monitoring biomarkers for predicting clinical outcome; 2) determine the treatment effect of different doses of HBOT on candidate monitoring biomarkers; and 3) determine whether there is a biomarker defined subset of severe TBI that responds favorably to HBOT. This proposal will: 1) inform a go/no-go decision for a phase III trial of HBOT by providing adjunctive evidence of the effect of HBOT on key biological pathways through which HBOT is hypothesized to affect outcome; 2) provide evidence to support further study of the first monitoring biomarkers of severe TBI; 3) increase the likelihood of success of a phase III trial by identifying the sub-population of severe TBI likely to benefit from HBOT; 4) create a repository of TBI biospecimen which may be accessed by other investigators. This study is related to NCT04565119

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

16 Years - 65 Years

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

150

Start Date

2021-01-19

Completion Date

2027-08-31

Last Updated

2025-06-27

Healthy Volunteers

No

Locations (11)

UCSD Medical Center - Hillcrest Hospital

San Diego, California, United States

St. Mary's Medical Center

West Palm Beach, Florida, United States

University of Iowa Hospitals & Clinics

Iowa City, Iowa, United States

University of Kentucky Hospital

Lexington, Kentucky, United States

University of Maryland Medical Center

Baltimore, Maryland, United States

Detroit Receiving Hospital

Detroit, Michigan, United States

Hennepin County Medical Center

Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States

University of Nebraska Medical Center

Omaha, Nebraska, United States

Duke University Hospital

Durham, North Carolina, United States

OSU Wexner Medical Center

Columbus, Ohio, United States

Hamilton General Hospital

Hamilton, Ontario, Canada