Departments of Pediatrics and Neurology The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Philadelphia Pennsylvania.
Bruce Lefroy Centre Murdoch Childrens Research Institute Parkville Victoria Australia.
Ann Clin Transl Neurol. 2016 Jul 25;3(9):684-94. doi: 10.1002/acn3.332. eCollection 2016 Sep.
Friedreich ataxia (FRDA) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder of adults and children. This study analyzed neurological outcomes and changes to identify predictors of progression and generate power calculations for clinical trials.
Eight hundred and twelve subjects in a natural history study were evaluated annually across 12 sites using the Friedreich Ataxia Rating Scale (FARS), 9-Hole Peg Test, Timed 25-Foot Walk, visual acuity tests, self-reported surveys and disability scales. Cross-sectional outcomes were assessed from recent visits, and longitudinal changes were gaged over 5 years from baseline.
Cross-sectional outcomes correlated with measures of disease severity. Age, genetic severity (guanine-adenine-adenine [GAA] repeat length), and testing site predicted performance. Serial progression was relatively linear using FARS and composite measures of performance, while individual performance outcomes were nonlinear over time. Age strongly predicted change from baseline until removing the effects of baseline FARS scores, when GAA becomes a more important factor. Progression is fastest in younger subjects and subjects with longer GAA repeats. Improved coefficients of variation show that progression results are more reproducible over longer assessment durations.
While age predicted progression speed in simple analyses and may provide an effective way to stratify cohorts, separating the effects of age and genetic severity is difficult. Controlling for baseline severity, GAA is the major determinant of progression rate in FRDA. Clinical trials will benefit from enrollment of younger subjects, and sample size requirements will shrink with longer assessment periods. These findings should prove useful in devising gene therapy trials in the near future.
弗里德里希共济失调(FRDA)是一种进行性的成人和儿童神经退行性疾病。本研究分析了神经学结果和变化,以确定进展的预测因素,并为临床试验提供效力计算。
在 12 个地点,812 名自然史研究中的受试者每年使用弗里德里希共济失调评定量表(FARS)、9 孔钉测试、定时 25 英尺步行、视力测试、自我报告调查和残疾量表进行评估。横断面结果来自最近的就诊,纵向变化则从基线开始 5 年内进行评估。
横断面结果与疾病严重程度的衡量标准相关。年龄、遗传严重程度(鸟嘌呤-腺嘌呤-腺嘌呤[GAA]重复长度)和测试地点预测了表现。使用 FARS 和综合表现衡量标准,序列进展相对线性,而个体表现结果随时间呈非线性。年龄在去除基线 FARS 评分的影响之前强烈预测了从基线开始的变化,此时 GAA 成为更重要的因素。年龄较小的受试者和 GAA 重复较长的受试者进展速度最快。改进的变异系数表明,随着评估持续时间的延长,进展结果更具可重复性。
虽然年龄在简单分析中预测了进展速度,并且可能提供了一种有效的分层方法,但年龄和遗传严重程度的影响很难分开。控制基线严重程度后,GAA 是 FRDA 进展率的主要决定因素。临床试验将受益于招募年龄较小的受试者,并且随着评估期的延长,样本量要求将会减少。这些发现对于设计未来不久的基因治疗试验将是有用的。