Agarwal Pinky, Barbano Richard, Moore Henry, Schwartz Marc, Zuzek Aleksej, Sadeghi Marjan, Patel Atul
Evergreen Medical Center, Kirkland, WA, United States.
University of Washington, Seattle, WA, United States.
Front Neurol. 2022 Jun 30;13:914486. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2022.914486. eCollection 2022.
The Cervical Dystonia Patient Registry for Observation of OnabotulinumtoxinA Efficacy (CD PROBE) study (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00836017), a multicenter, prospective, observational registry, was designed to identify real-world practices and outcomes for patients with cervical dystonia (CD) treated with onabotulinumtoxinA (onabotA). This secondary analysis from CD PROBE aims to determine the impact of presentation subtype on onabotA utilization and CD severity.
The study cohort includes those who completed all 3 treatments, 4 office visits, and had data recorded for all assessments. Patient outcomes were assessed with the Cervical Dystonia Impact Profile (CDIP-58), Toronto Western Spasmodic Torticollis Rating Scale (TWSTRS), and determination of CD severity. Treatment interval, dose, and adverse events (AEs) were also recorded. Data were stratified according to prior exposure to botulinum toxins (BoNTs) and analyzed with descriptive statistics.
Torticollis was the most common presentation subtype in the study cohort ( = 350); the proportion of patients with torticollis was highest in those with severe disease. At each treatment, between 40.7 and 65.2% of those categorized as severe shifted to moderate or mild severity after treatment. Sustained improvements in CDIP-58 and TWSTRS were observed regardless of prior exposure to BoNTs. Dosing of onabotA generally increased from injection 1 to injection 3 and tended to be lower for patients naïve to BoNT. Median time interval between injections for the study cohort was 94.0 to 97.5 days. The most common AEs (dysphagia, muscular weakness) and injection intervals were similar between naïve vs. non-naïve patients; there were no serious treatment-related AEs.
This secondary cohort analysis from CD PROBE demonstrates that three repeat treatments with onabotA at intervals consistent with labeling attenuated disease severity and neck pain, resulting in sustained improvements in physician- and patient-reported outcomes. No new safety signals were identified.
用于观察A型肉毒毒素疗效的颈部肌张力障碍患者登记研究(CD PROBE)(ClinicalTrials.gov标识符:NCT00836017)是一项多中心、前瞻性观察性登记研究,旨在确定接受A型肉毒毒素(onabotA)治疗的颈部肌张力障碍(CD)患者的实际治疗方法和疗效。来自CD PROBE的这项二次分析旨在确定表现亚型对onabotA使用情况和CD严重程度的影响。
研究队列包括完成所有3次治疗、4次门诊就诊且所有评估数据均有记录的患者。使用颈部肌张力障碍影响量表(CDIP - 58)、多伦多西部痉挛性斜颈评定量表(TWSTRS)对患者疗效进行评估,并确定CD严重程度。还记录了治疗间隔、剂量和不良事件(AE)。数据根据先前是否接触过肉毒毒素(BoNT)进行分层,并采用描述性统计方法进行分析。
斜颈是研究队列中最常见的表现亚型(n = 350);重度疾病患者中斜颈患者的比例最高。每次治疗时,分类为重度的患者中有40.7%至65.2%在治疗后转变为中度或轻度。无论先前是否接触过BoNT,CDIP - 58和TWSTRS均持续改善。onabotA的剂量通常从第1次注射到第3次注射增加,且初次接触BoNT的患者剂量往往较低。研究队列的注射间隔中位数为94.0至97.5天。初次接触与未接触BoNT的患者之间,最常见的不良事件(吞咽困难、肌肉无力)和注射间隔相似;未出现与治疗相关的严重不良事件。
来自CD PROBE的这项二次队列分析表明,按照药品标签规定的间隔进行3次onabotA重复治疗可减轻疾病严重程度和颈部疼痛,使医生和患者报告的疗效持续改善。未发现新的安全信号。