Fawcett J W, Curt A, Steeves J D, Coleman W P, Tuszynski M H, Lammertse D, Bartlett P F, Blight A R, Dietz V, Ditunno J, Dobkin B H, Havton L A, Ellaway P H, Fehlings M G, Privat A, Grossman R, Guest J D, Kleitman N, Nakamura M, Gaviria M, Short D
Cambridge University Centre for Brain Repair, Robinson Way, Cambridge, UK.
Spinal Cord. 2007 Mar;45(3):190-205. doi: 10.1038/sj.sc.3102007. Epub 2006 Dec 19.
The International Campaign for Cures of Spinal Cord Injury Paralysis (ICCP) supported an international panel tasked with reviewing the methodology for clinical trials in spinal cord injury (SCI), and making recommendations on the conduct of future trials. This is the first of four papers. Here, we examine the spontaneous rate of recovery after SCI and resulting consequences for achieving statistically significant results in clinical trials. We have reanalysed data from the Sygen trial to provide some of this information. Almost all people living with SCI show some recovery of motor function below the initial spinal injury level. While the spontaneous recovery of motor function in patients with motor-complete SCI is fairly limited and predictable, recovery in incomplete SCI patients (American spinal injury Association impairment scale (AIS) C and AIS D) is both more substantial and highly variable. With motor complete lesions (AIS A/AIS B) the majority of functional return is within the zone of partial preservation, and may be sufficient to reclassify the injury level to a lower spinal level. The vast majority of recovery occurs in the first 3 months, but a small amount can persist for up to 18 months or longer. Some sensory recovery occurs after SCI, on roughly the same time course as motor recovery. Based on previous data of the magnitude of spontaneous recovery after SCI, as measured by changes in ASIA motor scores, power calculations suggest that the number of subjects required to achieve a significant result from a trial declines considerably as the start of the study is delayed after SCI. Trials of treatments that are most efficacious when given soon after injury will therefore, require larger patient numbers than trials of treatments that are effective at later time points. As AIS B patients show greater spontaneous recovery than AIS A patients, the number of AIS A patients requiring to be enrolled into a trial is lower. This factor will have to be balanced against the possibility that some treatments will be more effective in incomplete patients. Trials involving motor incomplete SCI patients, or trials where an accurate assessment of AIS grade cannot be made before the start of the trial, will require large subject numbers and/or better objective assessment methods.
国际脊髓损伤瘫痪治疗运动组织(ICCP)支持一个国际专家小组,该小组负责审查脊髓损伤(SCI)临床试验的方法,并就未来试验的开展提出建议。这是四篇论文中的第一篇。在此,我们研究了脊髓损伤后的自发恢复率以及对在临床试验中取得具有统计学意义的结果所产生的影响。我们重新分析了Sygen试验的数据以提供部分此类信息。几乎所有脊髓损伤患者在最初脊髓损伤水平以下都显示出一定程度的运动功能恢复。虽然运动完全性脊髓损伤患者的运动功能自发恢复相当有限且可预测,但不完全性脊髓损伤患者(美国脊髓损伤协会损伤分级量表(AIS)C级和D级)的恢复更为显著且高度可变。对于运动完全性损伤(AIS A/AIS B),大多数功能恢复发生在部分保留区,并且可能足以将损伤水平重新分类为较低的脊髓节段。绝大多数恢复发生在最初3个月内,但少量恢复可持续长达18个月或更长时间。脊髓损伤后会出现一些感觉恢复,其时间进程与运动恢复大致相同。根据先前关于脊髓损伤后自发恢复程度的数据(通过ASIA运动评分变化衡量),功效计算表明,随着研究在脊髓损伤后延迟启动,为使试验取得显著结果所需的受试者数量会大幅下降。因此,对于损伤后尽早给予最有效的治疗进行试验,所需的患者数量将比在后期时间点有效的治疗试验更多。由于AIS B级患者比AIS A级患者显示出更大的自发恢复,因此纳入试验所需的AIS A级患者数量更少。这一因素必须与某些治疗在不完全性患者中可能更有效的可能性相权衡。涉及运动不完全性脊髓损伤患者或在试验开始前无法准确评估AIS分级的试验,将需要大量受试者和/或更好的客观评估方法。