
Management of Pain in Persons With Multiple Sclerosis
Multiple SclerosisPainThe purpose of this study is to see if treatments that include components of self-hypnosis training and cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) can help decrease pain in people with MS.

Clinical Trial Comparing Treatment of Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis (RR-MS) With Two Doses...
Relapsing Remitting Multiple SclerosisTeva is developing a 40 mg/ml GA Injection, administered once daily under the skin, for the treatment of R-R MS. The study drug is a higher dose formulation of Copaxone® (20 mg/ml GA), a marketed medication, approved for the treatment of R-R MS. GA is an immunomodulating drug that has anti inflammatory and neuroprotective properties. The study treatment duration is 12 months.

Phase III Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Study of Copolymer 1 for Relapsing-Remitting...
Multiple SclerosisOBJECTIVES: I. Compare tolerance to and therapeutic impact of copolymer 1, a mixture of synthetic polypeptides, with placebo in patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis.

BENEFIT 15 Long-term Follow-up Study of the BENEFIT and BENEFIT Follow-up Studies
Multiple SclerosisThe purpose of this study is to obtain long-term clinical data from patients approximately 15 years after their first clinical event, who participated in the former BENEFIT 304747 study and were treated at least once within that study. This study will collect clinical information on the disease course, on disability, relapses, cognitive function over time, quality of life, depression, fatigue, resource use, and employment status. In addition, brain MRI is performed.

Emotion Regulation Skills Training for Individuals With MS and Their Support Partners
Multiple SclerosisThis pilot randomized controlled trial investigates a novel, group-based emotion regulation skills training intervention for reducing anxious and depressive symptomatology and improving emotion regulation and problem solving in individuals with MS and the individual's support partners. Participants will be randomized (1:1) to the intervention ("Partnered Emotion Regulation Skills Intervention and Supportive Teaching [PERSIST]") or to the active control (Facilitated Peer Support).

Non-invasive Spinal Cord Stimulation for Spasticity Control and Augmentation of Voluntary Motor...
Multiple SclerosisEpidural spinal cord stimulation (SCS) is currently regarded as one of the most promising intervention methods to improve motor function in individuals with severe spinal cord injury. In parallel, an increasing number of studies is suggesting that noninvasive SCS can improve spasticity and residual motor control in the same subject population. The present study explores whether single sessions of noninvasive SCS would improve walking performance and ameliorate spasticity in individuals with multiple sclerosis.

Brain Activity Changes Following Neuroproprioceptive Physiotherapy in Multiple Sclerosis
Neuronal PlasticityMultiple Sclerosis1 moreImaging methods bring new possibilities for describing the brain plasticity processes that underly the improvement of clinical function after physiotherapy in people with multiple sclerosis (pwMS). The study determined whether facilitation physiotherapy could enhance brain plasticity, compared two facilitation methods, and looked for any relation to clinical improvement in pwMS.

Central Vein Sign: a Diagnostic Biomarker in Multiple Sclerosis
Multiple SclerosisThe need for improved diagnostic methods in Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is widely recognized. Although Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) is a longstanding tool for detecting MS lesions, diagnostic inaccuracies persist. Up to 20% of people diagnosed with MS (1 in 5) are later found not to have the disease. This is highly consequential, as more than two-thirds of misdiagnosed patients are unnecessarily exposed to risks from disease-modifying therapies, which in rare cases can be life-threatening. Moreover, the current standard in MS diagnosis - the McDonald criteria, which combine clinical symptoms and MRI findings - were developed from studies in people with typical clinical presentations of MS. This reduces the specificity of these criteria, rendering them uninformative for the nearly half of MS patients who present to neurologists with atypical or nonclassical symptoms. Timeliness of MS diagnosis is also key, as diagnostic delay is common in cases of relapsing-remitting MS and can carry severe and lifelong consequences. The CentrAl Vein Sign in MS (CAVS-MS) study has been designed to assess whether Central Vein Sign (CVS) criteria can help address some of these unmet diagnostic needs. It will specifically explore the role of presentation type by enrolling a mixed population of patients with typical clinical presentations (n = 200) and those with atypical presentations, including suggestive MRI findings in the absence of neurologic symptoms (n = 200) across North America.

Prospective Stratification of Infectious Risks in Multiple Sclerosis
Multiple SclerosisThis monocentric study is to identify factors that increase the susceptibility for infections and establish a questionnaire-based infection score that allows a prospective stratification for infectious risks in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) (InRIMS-Study). The study will utilize a validated, MS-adapted questionnaire and infection diary from the Airway Infection Susceptibility (AWIS) study in a regularly followed, prospective cohort of MS patients. It is a nested project of the prospective observational Swiss MS Cohort (SMSC) and SUMMIT (Serially Unified Multicenter Multiple Sclerosis Investigation) studies.

Bioequivalence Study of Bafiertam 190 mg and Vumerity® 462 mg Delayed-Release Capsules in Fasting...
Relapsing Remitting Multiple SclerosisA single-dose, randomized, open-label, two-way crossover, two-period, two-sequence, two-treatment, single-center, bioequivalence study of Bafiertam and Vumerity.