Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, ON, Canada; Applied Health Research Center, St. Michael's Hospital, Unity Health Toronto, ON, Canada.
Encoded Therapeutics, Inc., South San Francisco, CA, USA.
Epilepsy Behav. 2021 Sep;122:108198. doi: 10.1016/j.yebeh.2021.108198. Epub 2021 Jul 17.
Dravet syndrome (DS) is an intractable developmental and epileptic encephalopathy significantly impacting affected children and their families. A novel, one-time, adeno-associated virus (AAV)-mediated gene regulation therapy was designed to treat the underlying cause of DS, potentially improving the full spectrum of DS manifestations. To ensure the first-in-human clinical trial addresses meaningful outcomes for patients and families, we examined their perspectives, priorities, goals, and desired outcomes in the design phase through a mixed methods approach (quantitative and qualitative). We conducted a non-identifiable parent caregiver survey, shared through a patient advocacy organization (n = 36 parents; children age ≤6 years). Parents were also engaged via three group discussions (n = 10; children age 2-20 years) and optional follow-up in-depth individual interviews (n = 6). Qualitative data analysis followed an inductive interpretive process, and qualitative researchers conducted a thematic analysis with a narrative approach. Survey results revealed most children (94%) were diagnosed by age 1, with onset of seizures at mean age 6.2 months and other DS manifestations before 2 years. The most desired disease aspects to address with potential new disease-modifying therapies were severe seizures (ranked by 92% of caregivers) and communication issues (development, expressive, receptive; 72-83%). Qualitative results showed the need for trial outcomes that recognize the impact of DS on the whole family. Parents eventually hope for trials including children of all ages and were both excited about the potential positive impact of a one-time disease-modifying therapy and mindful of potential long-term implications. Participants reflected on the details and risks of a clinical trial design (e.g., sham procedures) and described the different factors that relate to their decision to participate in a trial. Their main aspirations were to stop neurodevelopmental stagnation, to reduce seizures, and to reduce the impact on their families' wellbeing. To our knowledge, this is the first study within a patient-oriented research framework that specifically explored parents' needs and perceptions regarding clinical trials of a potential disease-modifying therapy for children with a severe, developmental disease, such as DS.
德拉韦综合征(DS)是一种严重的发育性和癫痫性脑病,对受影响的儿童及其家庭有重大影响。一种新的、一次性的腺相关病毒(AAV)介导的基因调控疗法被设计用来治疗 DS 的根本原因,从而有可能改善 DS 所有表现的治疗效果。为了确保首次人体临床试验为患者及其家庭带来有意义的结果,我们通过混合方法(定量和定性)在设计阶段检查了他们的观点、优先事项、目标和期望的结果。我们进行了一项不可识别的父母护理人员调查,通过一个患者权益组织(n=36 名家长;孩子年龄≤6 岁)进行分享。还通过三个小组讨论(n=10;孩子年龄 2-20 岁)和可选的后续深入个人访谈(n=6)与家长进行了接触。定性数据分析遵循归纳解释过程,定性研究人员采用叙述方法进行主题分析。调查结果显示,大多数儿童(94%)在 1 岁前被诊断出患有 DS,发病年龄平均为 6.2 个月,2 岁前出现其他 DS 表现。最希望通过潜在的新疾病修饰疗法解决的疾病方面是严重的癫痫发作(92%的护理人员)和沟通问题(发育、表达、接受;72-83%)。定性结果表明,需要有能识别 DS 对整个家庭影响的临床试验结果。父母最终希望包括所有年龄段的儿童参与试验,他们对一次性疾病修饰疗法的潜在积极影响感到兴奋,并对潜在的长期影响保持警惕。参与者思考了临床试验设计的细节和风险(例如,假手术),并描述了与他们参与试验的决定有关的不同因素。他们的主要愿望是阻止神经发育停滞,减少癫痫发作,并减少对家庭幸福感的影响。据我们所知,这是首个在以患者为导向的研究框架内进行的研究,专门探讨了父母对潜在疾病修饰疗法治疗严重发育性疾病(如 DS)儿童的临床试验的需求和看法。