📖

Creatine ALS Trial

active
wiki page Created: 2026-04-02T07:19:04 By: crosslink-migration Quality: 50% ✓ SciDEX ID: wiki-clinical-trials-creatine-als
📖 Wiki Page
clinical1017 wordssynced 2026-04-02

Overview

Creatine, a naturally occurring compound found in muscle and brain tissue, was evaluated in a large Phase 3 clinical trial for the treatment of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The rationale was based on the hypothesis that supplementing energy metabolism might protect motor neurons from the energetic dysfunction observed in ALS[@creatine2006].

Creatine is a naturally occurring amino acid derivative that plays a critical role in cellular energy homeostasis. Through its conversion to phosphocreatine, it serves as a rapidly mobilizable reserve of high-energy phosphate groups for the regeneration of ATP. This function is particularly important in tissues with high energy demands, such as skeletal muscle and brain.

Trial Details

  • NCT Number: NCT00145574 (also associated with sodium phenylbutyrate trial)
  • Phase: Phase 3
  • Status: Completed (Results published)
  • Sponsor: National Institutes of Health (NIH), ALS Association
  • Drug: Creatine monohydrate
  • Dosage: 10 grams daily (5g twice daily)
  • Patient Population: Adults with clinically definite or probable ALS (El Escorial criteria)
  • Duration: 12 months
  • Enrollment: 1100 patients (largest ALS trial at the time)

Background and Rationale

Energy Dysfunction in ALS

Multiple lines of evidence support the role of energy dysfunction in ALS:

...
📖 View canonical wiki page →
Related Entities
clinical-trials-creatine-als
Metadataorigin_type: v1_polymorphic_backfill
slugclinical-trials-creatine-als
kg_node_idNone
entity_typeclinical
origin_typev1_polymorphic_backfill
source_tablewiki_pages
wiki_page_idwp-2ef97d50d77f
__merged_from{'merged_at': '2026-05-13', 'unprefixed_id': 'clinical-trials-creatine-als'}
_schema_version1
📊 Evidence Profile Foundational
Evidence Balance
+0%
Certainty
100%
Debates
0
Incoming
35
Outgoing
231
0 supporting 0 contradicting 0 neutral
View full evidence profile →
Public annotations (0)Annotate on Hypothes.is →
No public annotations yet.