There is currently no effective treatment in ALS. Oxidative stress, probably interacting with other neurodegenerative processes, is hypothesized to play a leading role in pathogenesis. These include mechanisms that promote glutamate excitotoxicity, mitochondrial dysfunction and axonal dysfunction. In a transgenic mouse model of fALS that develops a disease with a clinical phenotype similar to ALS, dietary vitamin E supplementation delayed disease onset and slowed progression, although it did not prolong survival. When used as an experimental therapy in human trials, vitamin E did not affect survival significantly, but possibly slowed ALS progression. Two large, prospective epidemiologic studies suggest that longterm use of vitamin E supplements could be inversely associated with risk of ALS or ALS death. In another study, higher baseline serum α-tocopherol was associated with lower subsequent risk of ALS. A modest, non-significant protective effect from supplementation was seen in subjects with baseline serum α-tocopherol levels below median levels. In the current study, we aim to investigate the effects of tocotrienols in patients with ALS, particularly in delaying disease progression as well as assessing its safety profile in this group of patients.
Inclusion Criteria:
- Patients who have a decrease of 1 to 4 points on the ALSFRS-R score during the
12-weeks observation period prior to screening and enrollment
- Patients of less than 2 years after the diagnosis of ALS.
- Patients without respiratory symptoms (orthopnea, dyspnea)
- Capable of giving signed informed consent
Exclusion Criteria:
- Patients who have developed respiratory failure necessitating ventilation
- Patients who have developed unsafe swallowing necessitating enteral feeding tube
insertion
- Patients with other neurodegenerative disease such as Parkinson's disease and
significant mental health illness
- Patients with certain concomitant diseases which may affect the assessment of
safety/efficacy i.e. malignancy within the last 5 years, congestive heart disease,
liver disease, kidney failure, bleeding disorders and other autoimmune diseases etc.
- Pregnant, lactating, and probably pregnant patients.
- Patients taking vitamin E tocopherol or tocotrienols supplements within 1 month from
screening and randomisation.
- Patients who have participated in other trials within 12 weeks before consent, or who
are participating in other clinical trials at present.
- Women of child bearing potential or nursing mother, unless they are willing to
practice effective contraceptive measures.