Kolb Stephen J, Coffey Christopher S, Yankey Jon W, Krosschell Kristin, Arnold W David, Rutkove Seward B, Swoboda Kathryn J, Reyna Sandra P, Sakonju Ai, Darras Basil T, Shell Richard, Kuntz Nancy, Castro Diana, Parsons Julie, Connolly Anne M, Chiriboga Claudia A, McDonald Craig, Burnette W Bryan, Werner Klaus, Thangarajh Mathula, Shieh Perry B, Finanger Erika, Cudkowicz Merit E, McGovern Michelle M, McNeil D Elizabeth, Finkel Richard, Iannaccone Susan T, Kaye Edward, Kingsley Allison, Renusch Samantha R, McGovern Vicki L, Wang Xueqian, Zaworski Phillip G, Prior Thomas W, Burghes Arthur H M, Bartlett Amy, Kissel John T
Department of Neurology, The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, OH.
Department of Biological Chemistry & Pharmacology, The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, OH.
Ann Neurol. 2017 Dec;82(6):883-891. doi: 10.1002/ana.25101. Epub 2017 Dec 8.
Infantile-onset spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is the most common genetic cause of infant mortality, typically resulting in death preceding age 2. Clinical trials in this population require an understanding of disease progression and identification of meaningful biomarkers to hasten therapeutic development and predict outcomes.
A longitudinal, multicenter, prospective natural history study enrolled 26 SMA infants and 27 control infants aged <6 months. Recruitment occurred at 14 centers over 21 months within the NINDS-sponsored NeuroNEXT (National Network for Excellence in Neuroscience Clinical Trials) Network. Infant motor function scales (Test of Infant Motor Performance Screening Items [TIMPSI], The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Infant Test for Neuromuscular Disorders, and Alberta Infant Motor Score) and putative physiological and molecular biomarkers were assessed preceding age 6 months and at 6, 9, 12, 18, and 24 months with progression, correlations between motor function and biomarkers, and hazard ratios analyzed.
Motor function scores (MFS) and compound muscle action potential (CMAP) decreased rapidly in SMA infants, whereas MFS in all healthy infants rapidly increased. Correlations were identified between TIMPSI and CMAP in SMA infants. TIMPSI at first study visit was associated with risk of combined endpoint of death or permanent invasive ventilation in SMA infants. Post-hoc analysis of survival to combined endpoint in SMA infants with 2 copies of SMN2 indicated a median age of 8 months at death (95% confidence interval, 6, 17).
These data of SMA and control outcome measures delineates meaningful change in clinical trials in infantile-onset SMA. The power and utility of NeuroNEXT to provide "real-world," prospective natural history data sets to accelerate public and private drug development programs for rare disease is demonstrated. Ann Neurol 2017;82:883-891.
婴儿型脊髓性肌萎缩症(SMA)是婴儿死亡最常见的遗传原因,通常导致2岁前死亡。该人群的临床试验需要了解疾病进展并识别有意义的生物标志物,以加速治疗开发并预测结果。
一项纵向、多中心、前瞻性自然史研究纳入了26例6个月以下的SMA婴儿和27例对照婴儿。在由美国国立神经疾病和中风研究所(NINDS)赞助的NeuroNEXT(神经科学临床试验卓越国家网络)网络内的14个中心,历时21个月进行招募。在6个月前以及6、9、12、18和24个月时评估婴儿运动功能量表(婴儿运动表现筛查项目测试 [TIMPSI]、费城儿童医院婴儿神经肌肉疾病测试和艾伯塔婴儿运动评分)以及假定的生理和分子生物标志物,分析其进展、运动功能与生物标志物之间的相关性以及风险比。
SMA婴儿的运动功能评分(MFS)和复合肌肉动作电位(CMAP)迅速下降,而所有健康婴儿的MFS迅速增加。在SMA婴儿中发现TIMPSI与CMAP之间存在相关性。首次研究访视时的TIMPSI与SMA婴儿死亡或永久性有创通气联合终点的风险相关。对携带2份SMN2拷贝的SMA婴儿至联合终点生存情况的事后分析表明,死亡时的中位年龄为8个月(95%置信区间,6, 17)。
这些SMA和对照结果测量数据描绘了婴儿型SMA临床试验中有意义的变化。证明了NeuroNEXT提供“真实世界”前瞻性自然史数据集以加速针对罕见病的公共和私营药物开发项目的能力和效用。《神经病学纪事》2017年;82:883 - 891。