UB Neurological Researcher and Expert on CCSVI Testifies in Canadian Senate Hearing

He calls for more clinical trials before interventions or treatments can be advanced

Release Date: November 1, 2012 This content is archived.

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BUFFALO, N.Y. -- Robert Zivadinov, MD, PhD, FAAN, University at Buffalo professor of neurology, provided invited testimony today to the Canadian Senate on Bill S-204, "An Act to establish a national strategy for chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI)."

CCSVI refers to impaired blood flow from the central nervous system to the periphery. It has been hypothesized that this narrowing of veins restricts blood flow from the brain, altering brain drainage, and may contribute to brain tissue injury that is associated with multiple sclerosis.

CCSVI has generated intense interest among MS patients worldwide. Independent scientific studies, including one of the largest to date being conducted by Zivadinov and UB colleagues, have suggested an association with MS, although none have found conclusively that the condition is associated with MS.

"While our research points against CCSVI having a primary causative role in the development of MS, we have established that there is a higher prevalence of CCSVI in progressive MS patients," said Zivadinov. "This suggests that CCSVI may contribute to, or be a consequence of disease progression, with important implications for treating its symptoms."

Zivadinov and his colleagues at the Buffalo Neuroimaging Analysis Center, part of UB's Department of Neurology in the School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, and at other institutions have published or presented more than 25 studies on CCSVI.

One of these found that patients with other neurologic diseases and healthy individuals also present with CCSVI, a finding that Zivadinov noted further underscores the need for additional research.

"CCSVI intervention should be restricted to blinded, randomized and controlled clinical trials that will establish the safety and efficacy of these endovascular procedures," Zivadinov said. "This should be done according to established clinical, MRI (magnetic resonance imaging), and quality of life treatment outcomes employing safe and ethical approaches.

"Until these steps are accomplished, I believe there is no role for endovascular treatment of CCSVI in MS patients or in patients with other neurological disorders outside of approved clinical trials," he concluded.

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