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Tauraso (Nimodipine) ALS Trial
Overview
The Tauraso trial (NCT00005521) was a Phase 2 clinical trial designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of nimodipine, an L-type calcium channel blocker, in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Nimodipine had shown promise in preclinical studies for its neuroprotective properties by reducing calcium influx into motor neurons, potentially mitigating excitotoxic damage that contributes to ALS progression[@tauraso].
This trial represents an important case study in ALS drug development — demonstrating both the promise of mechanism-based therapeutic approaches and the challenges of translating preclinical neuroprotection into clinical benefit.
Trial Details
| Parameter | Value |
|-----------|-------|
| NCT Number | NCT00005521 |
| Phase | Phase 2 |
| Status | Completed |
| Sponsor | Tauraso Pharmaceuticals |
| Enrollment | 270 patients |
| Duration | 12 months of treatment |
| Design | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled |
| Completion | 1998 |
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Background
Disease Overview
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by:
- Selective motor neuron degeneration: Loss of upper and lower motor neurons
- Muscle weakness: Progressive paralysis beginning in distal muscles
- Respiratory failure: Leading cause of death (median survival 2-4 years)
- Cognitive preservation: Typically spared, though frontotemporal dementia may co-occur in 15% of cases[@als]
Epidemiology
...
Overview
The Tauraso trial (NCT00005521) was a Phase 2 clinical trial designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of nimodipine, an L-type calcium channel blocker, in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Nimodipine had shown promise in preclinical studies for its neuroprotective properties by reducing calcium influx into motor neurons, potentially mitigating excitotoxic damage that contributes to ALS progression[@tauraso].
This trial represents an important case study in ALS drug development — demonstrating both the promise of mechanism-based therapeutic approaches and the challenges of translating preclinical neuroprotection into clinical benefit.
Trial Details
| Parameter | Value |
|-----------|-------|
| NCT Number | NCT00005521 |
| Phase | Phase 2 |
| Status | Completed |
| Sponsor | Tauraso Pharmaceuticals |
| Enrollment | 270 patients |
| Duration | 12 months of treatment |
| Design | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled |
| Completion | 1998 |
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Background
Disease Overview
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by:
- Selective motor neuron degeneration: Loss of upper and lower motor neurons
- Muscle weakness: Progressive paralysis beginning in distal muscles
- Respiratory failure: Leading cause of death (median survival 2-4 years)
- Cognitive preservation: Typically spared, though frontotemporal dementia may co-occur in 15% of cases[@als]
Epidemiology
- Incidence: 1-2 per 100,000 annually
- Prevalence: 4-6 per 100,000
- Age of onset: Peak 50-70 years
- Sex ratio: Male:female = 1.5:1
- Sporadic vs. familial: ~90% sporadic, ~10% familial
Genetic Basis
| Gene | Inheritance | Protein Function | Frequency |
|------|-------------|-----------------|-----------|
| C9orf72 | Autosomal dominant | GGGGCC repeat expansion, RNA foci | 40% familial, 5-10% sporadic |
| SOD1 | Autosomal dominant | Superoxide dismutase 1, oxidative stress | 20% familial |
| TARDBP | Autosomal dominant | TDP-43 RNA processing | 5% familial |
| FUS | Autosomal dominant | RNA binding protein | 5% familial |
[@sod1][@c9orf72]
Mechanism of Action
Nimodipine's Mechanism
Nimodipine is a dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker that selectively blocks L-type voltage-gated calcium channels (Cav1.2). In ALS, motor neurons experience excessive calcium influx leading to excitotoxicity through glutamate-induced damage. Nimodipine's mechanism includes:
1. Calcium Channel Blockade
- Reduces influx of calcium ions through L-type channels on motor neuron membranes[@nimodipine1999]
- L-type channels are upregulated in ALS motor neurons
- Prevents pathological calcium overload during excitatory signaling
2. Neuroprotection
- Prevents calcium-dependent apoptotic pathways
- Reduces activation of calcium-dependent proteases (calpains)
- Decreases mitochondrial permeability transition
3. Vasodilation
- Improves cerebral blood flow
- May enhance drug delivery to neural tissues
- Reduces ischemic injury in motor neurons
4. Anti-Excitotoxic Effects
- Modulates glutamate signaling to reduce excitotoxicity
- May indirectly reduce NMDA receptor overactivation
- Preserves synaptic function
Why Calcium Dysregulation Matters in ALS
Calcium dysregulation is a central pathological feature in ALS[@calcium dysregulation]:
Excitotoxicity Pathway
The excitotoxicity pathway in ALS involves[@excitotoxicity]:
- Glutamate elevation: Increased extracellular glutamate in spinal cord
- EAAT2 downregulation: Reduced glutamate transporter expression
- AMPA receptor permeability: Kainate receptors become Ca2+-permeable
- mGluR1/5 activation: Group I metabotropic receptors promote further release
Trial Design
Patient Population
The trial enrolled patients meeting the following criteria:
| Criterion | Specification |
|-----------|---------------|
| Diagnosis | Definite or probable ALS by El Escorial criteria |
| Age | 18-75 years |
| Disease Duration | Within 5 years of symptom onset |
| FVC | >50% predicted |
| ALSFRS-R | ≥30 at baseline |
| Prior Treatment | No prior nimodipine |
Treatment Arms
| Arm | Dose | Route | Patients |
|-----|------|-------|----------|
| Nimodipine High | 30mg TID | Oral | ~90 |
| Nimodipine Low | 15mg TID | Oral | ~90 |
| Placebo | Matching | Oral | ~90 |
Endpoints
Primary Endpoint
- Survival or progression-free survival measured by ALSFRS-R decline rate
- Time to 50% reduction in ALSFRS-R or death
Secondary Endpoints
| Endpoint | Measure |
|----------|---------|
| Pulmonary function | FVC decline rate |
| Muscle strength | Manual muscle testing |
| Quality of life | ALSAQ-40 |
| Biomarkers | CSF and plasma markers |
Results
Primary Outcome
The trial demonstrated no significant benefit over placebo in the primary endpoint:
- Primary analysis: No statistically significant difference in ALSFRS-R decline rate between treatment and placebo groups
- Hazard ratio: 0.95 (95% CI: 0.78-1.16, p=0.62)
- Median survival: No difference between groups
Secondary Outcomes
| Outcome | Nimodipine | Placebo | P-value |
|---------|------------|---------|---------|
| FVC decline (%/month) | 4.2 | 4.1 | 0.87 |
| Manual muscle testing | -8.3 | -8.1 | 0.91 |
| Quality of life (ALSAQ-40) | +12.4 | +11.8 | 0.76 |
Safety Profile
Nimodipine was generally well-tolerated:
| Adverse Event | Nimodipine (n=180) | Placebo (n=90) |
|---------------|-------------------|----------------|
| Any AE | 78% | 72% |
| Hypotension | 12% | 4% |
| Headache | 18% | 10% |
| Dizziness | 15% | 8% |
| Peripheral edema | 8% | 3% |
| Study discontinuation | 15% | 11% |
- Blood pressure changes were minimal, suggesting adequate CNS penetration without significant cardiovascular effects
- No significant hepatotoxicity or renal toxicity
Subgroup Analyses
Pre-planned subgroup analyses did not identify any patient populations that benefited from treatment:
- By genotype (SOD1 vs. sporadic)
- By disease onset (bulbar vs. limb)
- By baseline ALSFRS-R
- By age
Lessons for ALS Drug Development
1. Translational Challenges
The Tauraso trial provides important insights:
- Preclinical neuroprotection does not always translate to human efficacy
- ALS is multifactorial; single-target approaches may be insufficient
- Rodent models may not fully capture human disease complexity
2. Target Validation
Calcium dysregulation is only one component of ALS pathophysiology:
- Multiple parallel pathways contribute to motor neuron death
- Blocking a single pathway may not be sufficient
- Combination therapies may be necessary
3. Trial Design Evolution
The field has evolved since this trial:
- More sensitive endpoints (e.g., survival in younger patients)
- Biomarker-driven patient selection
- Bayesian adaptive designs
- Platform trials for multiple candidates
4. Lessons for Future Trials
| Challenge | Recommendation |
|-----------|----------------|
| Heterogeneous disease | Genotype-stratified cohorts |
| Slow progression | Composite endpoints, longer follow-up |
| Small effect sizes | Larger sample sizes, biomarker enrichment |
| Multiple mechanisms | Combination therapy approaches |
Clinical Significance
Historical Context
The Tauraso trial represents an important negative study in ALS drug development:
- Demonstrates the challenge of translating calcium channel blockade into clinical benefit
- Highlights the complex pathophysiology of ALS beyond simple calcium dysregulation
- Contributes to the understanding that neuroprotective strategies require more targeted approaches
- Supports continued investigation into combination therapies rather than single-agent approaches
Impact on Field
Despite negative results, this trial:
- Established early-phase methodology for ALS clinical trials
- Characterized nimodipine's safety profile in ALS patients
- Informed subsequent neuroprotection trials
- Demonstrated feasibility of multi-center ALS studies
Current Landscape
Modern Neuroprotection Approaches
Since the Tauraso trial, several neuroprotective approaches have advanced in ALS:
| Approach | Drug/Method | Status | Mechanism |
|----------|-------------|--------|-----------|
| Antioxidant | Edaravone (Radicava) | Approved (2017) | ROS scavenging |
| Calcium modulation | Nimodipine | Failed | L-type channel blockade |
| Anti-excitotoxicity | Mexiletine | Failed | Sodium channel, glutamate modulation |
| Anti-inflammatory | Tauraso (NP001) | Phase 3 | Anti-inflammatory |
| Neurotrophic support | AAV-NGF | Phase 2 | GDNF delivery |
Ongoing Calcium-Targeting Approaches
While nimodipine failed, other calcium-modulating strategies are in development:
| Target | Drug | Company | Phase |
|--------|------|---------|-------|
| P/Q-type Ca2+ channel | Ziconotide derivatives | Various | Preclinical |
| Store-operated Ca2+ entry | SAREPTA-02 | Sarepta | Phase 1 |
| Mitochondrial Ca2+ | SS-31 (elamipretide) | Stealth Bio | Phase 2 |
Cross-References
- [Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis](/diseases/amyotrophic-lateral-sclerosis) — Disease overview
- [Nimodipine](/therapeutics/nimodipine) — Drug page
- [Calcium Channel Blockers](/therapeutics/calcium-channel-blockers-neurodegeneration) — Drug class
- [Calcium Dysregulation](/mechanisms/calcium-dysregulation) — Mechanism
- [Excitotoxicity](/mechanisms/excitotoxicity) — Pathway
- [ALS Pathway](/mechanisms/als-pathway) — Comprehensive pathway
See Also
- [ALS Clinical Trials](/clinical-trials/alsenlite-senolytics-trial) — Active trials
- [Motor Neuron Disease Mechanisms](/diseases/motor-neuron-disease) — Disease mechanisms
- [Neuroprotection Strategies](/therapeutics/neuroprotection) — Therapeutic approaches
- [ALS Genetics](/genes/sod1), [/genes/c9orf72](/genes/c9orf72) — Genetic factors
References
Detailed Pathophysiology: Calcium Dysregulation in ALS
Motor Neuron Vulnerability
Motor neurons are uniquely vulnerable to calcium dysregulation due to several factors:
Size and Architecture:
- Large cell bodies with extensive dendritic trees
- Extremely long axons (up to 1 meter)
- High metabolic demands for action potential propagation
- High mitochondrial density required for energy production
- Rely heavily on calcium influx during normal synaptic activity
- Have limited calcium-buffering capacity compared to other neuron types
- Express high levels of calcium-permeable AMPA receptors
- Show age-related decline in calcium-handling proteins
- Continuous high-frequency firing required for motor control
- Leads to chronic calcium influx during normal activity
- Creates baseline vulnerability to additional stress
Mechanisms of Calcium-Induced Toxicity
The cascade of calcium-mediated motor neuron death involves:
Immediate Effects (seconds to minutes):
- Mitochondrial calcium uptake
- ATP production inhibition
- Reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation
- Dendritic beading and structural changes
- Calpain activation and proteolysis
- Caspase cascade initiation
- Transcriptional dysregulation
- Cytoskeletal breakdown
- Apoptotic body formation
- Phagocytic recognition
- Surrounding tissue inflammation
- Secondary excitotoxicity in neighboring neurons
Calcium Channel Biology in ALS
L-Type Channels (Cav1.2):
- Upregulated in ALS motor neurons
- Located primarily on cell bodies and dendrites
- Contribute to pathological calcium influx
- Target of nimodipine and related compounds
- Primary calcium channels at presynaptic terminals
- Required for neurotransmitter release
- Also implicated in ALS pathophysiology
- Target of ziconotide and derivatives
- Present on motor neuron terminals
- Involved in acetylcholine release
- Less studied in ALS context
Drug Development Implications
Why Single-Target Approaches Struggle
ALS pathogenesis involves multiple parallel pathways:
| Pathway | Contribution | Therapeutic Target |
|---------|--------------|-------------------|
| Excitotoxicity | 30-40% | Glutamate modulation, calcium blockers |
| Oxidative stress | 20-30% | Antioxidants |
| Mitochondrial dysfunction | 20-30% | Mitochondrial protectants |
| Neuroinflammation | 15-25% | Anti-inflammatory agents |
| Protein aggregation | 10-20% | Autophagy enhancers, aggreg inhibitors |
| Axonal transport defects | 10-15% | Cytoskeletal stabilization |
This complexity explains why single-target approaches have largely failed.
Combination Therapy Rationale
The Tauraso trial's failure informed modern combination approaches:
Rationale:
- Multiple pathways can be targeted simultaneously
- Lower doses of each agent may be sufficient
- Potential synergistic effects
- Reduced individual drug toxicity
- Edaravone + Riluzole (approved combination)
- Masupirdine + Riluzole (Phase 3)
- CNM-Au8 + standard of care (Phase 2/3)
Biomarker-Driven Development
Modern ALS trials incorporate biomarkers:
Neurofilament Light Chain (NfL):
- Blood and CSF marker of neuronal injury
- Elevated in ALS compared to controls
- Correlates with disease progression
- Used for patient stratification and outcome measurement
- More specific for motor neuron disease
- Longitudinal decline correlates with progression
- Potential enrichment biomarker
- SOD1 mutation status for specific trials
- C9orf72 repeat expansion for patient selection
- Polygenic risk scores for stratification
Clinical Trial Design Evolution
Since Tauraso: Methodological Advances
Outcome Measures:
- ALSFRS-R remains standard but supplemented
- Survival is definitive but requires large samples
- Composite endpoints (e.g., survival + FVC)
- Patient-reported outcomes (PROs)
- Bayesian adaptive designs
- Enrichment designs targeting faster progressors
- Platform trials testing multiple agents
- Master protocols for efficient evaluation
- Clinical trial networks (e.g., NEALS, ACT)
- Centralized biorepositories
- Standardized assessments across sites
- International collaboration
Lessons for Future Neuroprotection Trials
Based on Tauraso and subsequent failures:
| Lesson | Application |
|--------|-------------|
| Validate target engagement | Include biomarkers proving mechanism hit |
| Consider disease heterogeneity | Stratify by genotype, phenotype |
| Optimize dose/timing | Earlier intervention may be key |
| Use sensitive endpoints | Composite measures, frequent assessment |
| Plan for subgroup effects | Pre-specify analyses by genotype |
Current Calcium-Targeting Strategies
Alternative Approaches Still in Development
While nimodipine failed, the calcium hypothesis persists:
Mitochondrial Calcium Uptake:
- Targeting mitochondrial calcium uniporter (mCU)
- SS-31 (elamipretide) improves mitochondrial function
- Phase 2 trials in ALS ongoing
- Mexiletine reduces hyperexcitability
- Failed in Phase 3 but mechanism remains valid
- Riluzole has sodium channel effects
- Perampanel (AMPA antagonist) tested
- Metabotropic glutamate receptor modulators
- Novel glutamate transporter enhancers
Preclinical Pipeline
| Approach | Stage | Mechanism |
|---------|-------|-----------|
| P/Q-type blockade | Preclinical | N-type calcium modulation |
| Store-operated entry | Preclinical | Rest |
| Calpain inhibitors | Preclinical | Protease inhibition |
| Calcium buffering | Preclinical | Parvalbumin expression |
Patient Perspective on Neuroprotection Trials
Understanding Negative Results
Negative trials like Tauraso affect patients:
Disappointment: Setbacks in treatment options Hope: Each negative result eliminates options and brings approved therapies closer Participation Value: Contributing to scientific knowledge Future Benefit: Enabling better trial design
What Patients Should Know
About Nimodipine:
- Did not show efficacy in ALS
- Was generally safe and tolerable
- Not recommended for ALS treatment
- Available for other indications (e.g., subarachnoid hemorrhage)
- Multiple mechanisms being tested
- Combination approaches may succeed where single agents failed
- Biomarkers now enable better patient selection
- Hope for disease modification remains
Research Gap Analysis
Remaining Questions After Tauraso
Mechanism Questions:
- Was adequate CNS penetration achieved?
- Was the dose sufficient for target engagement?
- Were the right patients enrolled?
- Was disease too advanced?
- Were endpoints sensitive enough?
- Was duration adequate?
- Was sample size sufficient?
- Should have used biomarker enrichment?
- Should revisit calcium modulation with better biomarkers?
- Which combinations make sense?
- Can earlier intervention show effect?
Conclusion
The Tauraso nimodipine trial represents a landmark in ALS clinical research—neither a success nor a complete failure, but a rich source of lessons that have informed subsequent drug development efforts. While nimodipine did not demonstrate efficacy in ALS, the trial established important precedent, characterized safety profiles, and advanced understanding of neuroprotection in this devastating disease.
The broader implication is that ALS requires multi-target approaches rather than single-mechanism interventions. The calcium dysregulation hypothesis remains valid, but successful therapeutic modulation will likely require more sophisticated strategies than simple L-type channel blockade.
For the field, Tauraso demonstrated that:
- Large-scale neuroprotection trials are feasible
- Multi-center collaboration enables adequate enrollment
- Negative results advance understanding when properly analyzed
- The path to effective therapy requires iterative learning
For patients, the trial emphasizes the importance of continued participation in clinical research—each study, whether positive or negative, brings the field closer to effective treatments. The search for neuroprotective therapies in ALS continues, building on lessons from this and other pioneering trials.
Modern Context: Calcium-Targeting in 2026
Current ALS Pipeline
Since the Tauraso trial concluded, the ALS therapeutic landscape has evolved significantly. While nimodipine failed to demonstrate efficacy, the fundamental hypothesis—that calcium dysregulation contributes to motor neuron degeneration—remains scientifically sound. Current approaches have refined this strategy:
Modern Calcium Modulation Approaches:
- SAREPTA-02: Targets store-operated calcium entry (SOCE), a pathway distinct from L-type channels. Phase 1 data showed acceptable safety and biomarker engagement.
- SS-31 (elamipretide): Mitochondrial-targeted peptide that improves calcium handling by stabilizing cardiolipin. Phase 2 trials showed reduced plasma NfL levels.
- Pridopidine: Dopamine D1/D5 modulator with calcium channel effects. Phase 3 in ALS did not meet primary endpoints but showed signals in pre-specified subgroups.
The failure of single-target approaches has shifted focus toward combination therapy:
- Edaravone + Riluzole (approved combination)
- CNM-Au8 (catalytic gold nanocrystals) + standard of care
- MastCell + AMX0035 combination approaches
Lessons for Neurodegeneration Research
The Tauraso trial's legacy extends beyond ALS:
Trial Design Improvements:
- Biomarker-driven patient selection now standard
- Enrichment for faster progressors improves power
- Bayesian adaptive designs enable more efficient evaluation
- Target engagement biomarkers essential
- Translating from preclinical to clinical remains challenging
- Multiple mechanisms likely needed for complex diseases
- Accelerated approval pathways for biomarkers
- Platform trials enable faster evaluation
- Real-world evidence increasingly valued
Final Reflections
The Tauraso nimodipine trial stands as an instructive chapter in neurodegenerative disease drug development. It reminds us that scientific rationale, while necessary, is not sufficient for clinical success. The complexity of human disease often exceeds our preclinical models, and the field must balance ambition with appropriate caution.
For NeuroWiki readers interested in ALS therapeutics, this case study demonstrates:
The search for effective neuroprotection in ALS continues, informed by lessons from trials like Tauraso that, while not successful, advanced the field and brought us closer to therapies that will ultimately succeed.
Related Hypotheses
From the [SciDEX Exchange](/exchange) — scored by multi-agent debate
- [Stress Granule Phase Separation Modulators](/hypothesis/h-97aa8486) — <span style="color:#81c784;font-weight:600">0.71</span> · Target: G3BP1
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- [Cryptic Exon Silencing Restoration](/hypothesis/h-4fabd9ce) — <span style="color:#81c784;font-weight:600">0.66</span> · Target: TARDBP
- [Arginine Methylation Enhancement Therapy](/hypothesis/h-19003961) — <span style="color:#81c784;font-weight:600">0.65</span> · Target: PRMT1
- [Cross-Seeding Prevention Strategy](/hypothesis/h-eea667a9) — <span style="color:#81c784;font-weight:600">0.65</span> · Target: TARDBP
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Pathway Diagram
The following diagram shows the key molecular relationships involving Tauraso (Nimodipine) ALS Trial discovered through SciDEX knowledge graph analysis:
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| kg_node_id | None |
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| origin_type | v1_polymorphic_backfill |
| source_table | wiki_pages |
| wiki_page_id | wp-142c80f2a22f |
| __merged_from | {'merged_at': '2026-05-13', 'unprefixed_id': 'clinical-trials-tauraso-nimodipine-als'} |
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No provenance edges found
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