Current Environment:

Summary

The VIBRANT study aims to validate biosensors to objectively and directly measure symptoms in Rett syndrome and create confidence in the use of these devices in clinical trials. VIBRANT will use several FDA-cleared wearable biosensors and a non-wearable device to collect symptom data from patients with Rett syndrome for up to 9 weeks. Symptoms of interest include heart rate, breathing, sleep, blood oxygen levels, and movement. Participants will use the biosensors intermittently at home, document device use and symptom status, and will come to the clinic for 1 overnight sleep study. A cohort of up to 10 participants receiving an intervention in a separate clinical trial may also enroll and participate on a custom device schedule for up to 1 year. The study will provide information on the feasibility and ease of use for families at home, biosensor data will be compared to data collected at the same time from the overnight sleep study to demonstrate how well they work in individuals with Rett syndrome, and Emerald will be developed to include movement as a measurable symptom.

Conditions

Rett Syndrome

Recruitment Status

Not yet recruiting

Detailed Description

Clinical trials in Rett syndrome typically use subjective assessment scales to assess changes in symptoms. These scales require observer interpretation and can be subject to bias and placebo effect. They are often not fit for purpose, are adapted from other disorders, are not properly validated for use in Rett and therefore are not optimal tools to accurately and reliably assess symptom change. The VIBRANT study aims to validate biosensors to objectively and directly measure symptoms in Rett syndrome and create confidence in these devices for use in clinical trials. VIBRANT will use several biosensors to collect symptom data from patients with Rett syndrome over 9 weeks. The devices under study include the FDA-cleared devices of RespiraSense for breathing, VV330 ECG patch for heart rate, Kids O2 pulse oximeter ring for blood oxygen levels; and the non-wearable device Emerald for sleep, breathing, and movement. To be eligible, participants will have an MECP2 genetic variant considered causative for the disorder. Participants will come to the clinic for Screening for an eligibility assessment and will learn to use the biosensors. Participants will use the biosensors on an intermittent schedule at home for between approximately 4 to 9 weeks, depending on the device, and will come to the clinic for 1 overnight sleep study during the 9-week observation period. All devices will be used during the overnight sleep study. The data collected by the biosensors will be compared to the data collected from the overnight sleep study to demonstrate how well they work in individuals with Rett syndrome. A cohort of up to 10 participants receiving an intervention in a separate clinical trial may also enroll and participate on a custom device schedule for up to 1 year. The goals of the study are to demonstrate FDA-cleared devices to assess heart rate, breathing, and oxygen saturation can be reliably used in Rett individuals, both adult and pediatric; determine how accurate and reliable the biosensor results are compared to the overnight sleep study, or to other FDA-cleared devices at home; to and to develop Emerald's ability to assess movement.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

diagnosis of Rett syndrome with a causative MECP2 genetic variant
Access to WiFi

Exclusion Criteria:

Inability of participant to sleep alone
prolonged absence from home
medication use that may impact heart rate

Gender

All

Min Age

N/A

Max Age

N/A

Download Date

March 29, 2024

Principal Investigator

This field has been modified from ClinicalTrials.gov to show a contact specific to Boston Children's.

Primary Contact Information

David Lieberman
David.Lieberman@childrens.harvard.edu

This field has been modified from ClinicalTrials.gov to show a contact specific to Boston Children's.

For more information on this trial, visit clinicaltrials.gov.

Contact

For more information and to contact the study team:

Validation of Innovative Biosensors for Rett Autonomic Symptom Tracking NCT06338267 David Lieberman David.Lieberman@childrens.harvard.edu