17 research outputs found

    Author Correction: A ferroptosis–based panel of prognostic biomarkers for Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

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    Correction to: Scientific Reports https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-39739-5, published online 27 February 201

    Clinical trials in pediatric ALS: a TRICALS feasibility study.

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    Background: Pediatric investigation plans (PIPs) describe how adult drugs can be studied in children. In 2015, PIPs for Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) became mandatory for European marketing-authorization of adult treatments, unless a waiver is granted by the European Medicines Agency (EMA).Objective: To assess the feasibility of clinical studies on the effect of therapy in children (<18 years) with ALS in Europe.Methods: The EMA database was searched for submitted PIPs in ALS. A questionnaire was sent to 58 European ALS centers to collect the prevalence of pediatric ALS during the past ten years, the recruitment potential for future pediatric trials, and opinions of ALS experts concerning a waiver for ALS.Results: Four PIPs were identified; two were waived and two are planned for the future. In total, 49 (84.5%) centers responded to the questionnaire. The diagnosis of 44,858 patients with ALS was reported by 46 sites; 39 of the patients had an onset < 18 years (prevalence of 0.008 cases per 100,000 or 0.087% of all diagnosed patients). The estimated recruitment potential (47 sites) was 26 pediatric patients within five years. A majority of ALS experts (75.5%) recommend a waiver should apply for ALS due to the low prevalence of pediatric ALS.Conclusions: ALS with an onset before 18 years is extremely rare and may be a distinct entity from adult ALS. Conducting studies on the effect of disease-modifying therapy in pediatric ALS may involve lengthy recruitment periods, high costs, ethical/legal implications, challenges in trial design and limited information

    Les enjeux de la loi Léonetti : participation des patients atteints de sclérose latérale amyotrophique à une discussion anticipée sur la réanimation respiratoire et les soins de fin de vie

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    Par respect du principe d’autonomie, les experts rĂ©unis en confĂ©rence de consensus recommandent de discuter de façon anticipĂ©e avec le patient atteint de sclĂ©rose latĂ©rale amyotrophique (SLA) du traitement de la dĂ©faillance respiratoire terminale (accompagner le dĂ©cĂšs par des soins palliatifs ou mettre en place une trachĂ©otomie pour une supplĂ©ance ventilatoire de survie). La loi Leonetti inscrit un droit pour le patient de refuser une trachĂ©otomie s’il la considĂšre dĂ©raisonnable et prescrit aux mĂ©decins de tenir compte des directives anticipĂ©es sur le traitement de la dĂ©faillance respiratoire terminale qu’aura donnĂ© la personne avant son incapacitĂ© Ă  communiquer. Deux Ă©cueils sont Ă  Ă©viter : que la visĂ©e de la relation mĂ©decin/patient soit l’obtention de ces directives anticipĂ©es et que la vulnĂ©rabilitĂ© du patient, avec ses ambivalences possibles, ne soit pas reconnue. Notre Ă©tude a portĂ© sur 35 patients atteints de SLA pour lesquels la question anticipĂ©e d’une rĂ©animation ou de soins palliatifs de fin de vie a pu ĂȘtre posĂ©e. Si la majoritĂ© des patients ont demandĂ© Ă  en ĂȘtre informĂ©, 48 % n’ont jamais pu anticiper. Seulement 20 % ont exprimĂ© des directives anticipĂ©es. Ces rĂ©sultats montrent que la discussion est dĂ©licate et conduit Ă  nous interroger sur la dimension Ă©thique du concept d’autonomie, au-delĂ  de sa formulation principliste : ne peut-on envisager l’incapacitĂ© de se confronter Ă  la question existentielle de la mort possible ? Plus qu’un exercice de respect de l’autonomie de la personne, il s’agit ici d’un exercice de responsabilitĂ© mĂ©dicale.// In accordance with the principle of personal autonomy, expert consensus statements on amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) recommend early engagement with terminal-phase patients on the type of symptomatic treatment to be administered in the event of respiratory failure, since decompensation progresses too rapidly to allow time for a discussion. The French Parliamentary Act on Patients’ Rights and End-of-Life Care (dated 22 April 2005) grants individuals the right to refuse unreasonable treatment and obliges physicians to take account of any prior instructions given by a person before he/she became incapable of communicating. The provision of prior instructions is a very reassuring situation for the physician: the autonomous patient indicates his or her choice of end-of-life care. However, there are two pitfalls which must be avoided: (i) holding a discussion for the sole purpose of obtaining prior instructions and (ii) not acknowledging the patient’s vulnerability. The present study dealt with 35 ALS patients for whom the question of either intensive care or palliative end-of-life care remained open. Even though the great majority of these individuals were keen to know their exact state of health, 48% refused to consider this circumstance and only 20% expressed prior instructions. These results prompted us to question the ethical dimension of the concept of autonomy beyond its founding formulation: can one envisage an incapacity to confront oneself with the existential question of possible death? In 80% of cases, the physician will have to take a care decision in the absence of any prior instructions from the patient. This amounts to more than respecting a person’s autonomy and involves exercising medical responsibility

    Paradoxical response of VEGF expression to hypoxia in CSF of patients with ALS

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    Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is implicated in motor neurone degeneration. In normal individuals, hypoxia is known to induce an overexpression of VEGF, as measured in CSF. We show that patients with ALS do not manifest this VEGF overexpression in the presence of hypoxia. Although VEGF gene expression is mainly stimulated by hypoxia, we have measured lower VEGF levels in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from hypoxaemic patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) than in CSF from normoxaemic patients with ALS. In contrast, hypoxaemic neurological controls displayed higher levels than normoxaemic neurological controls. There was a negative correlation between VEGF levels and the severity of hypoxaemia in patients with ALS, suggesting deregulation of VEGF in ALS

    The value of magnetic resonance imaging as a biomarker for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: a systematic review

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    International audienceBackground: Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal, rapidly progressive neurodegenerative disease that mainly affects the motor system. A number of potentially neuroprotective and neurorestorative disease-modifying drugs are currently in clinical development. At present, the evaluation of a drug's clinical efficacy in ALS is based on the ALS Functional Rating Scale Revised, motor tests and survival. However, these endpoints are general, variable and late-stage measures of the ALS disease process and thus require the long-term assessment of large cohorts. Hence, there is a need for more sensitive radiological biomarkers. Various sequences for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain and spinal cord have may have value as surrogate biomarkers for use in future clinical trials. Here, we review the MRI findings in ALS, their clinical correlations, and their limitations and potential role as biomarkers.Methods: The PubMed database was screened to identify studies using MRI in ALS. We included general MRI studies with a control group and an ALS group and longitudinal studies even if a control group was lacking.Results: A total of 116 studies were analysed with MRI data and clinical correlations. The most disease-sensitive MRI patterns are in motor regions but the brain is more broadly affected.Conclusion: Despite the existing MRI biomarkers, there is a need for large cohorts with long term MRI and clinical follow-up. MRI assessment could be improved by standardized MRI protocols with multicentre studies

    Phenotype and genotype analysis in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis with TARDBP gene mutations.

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    International audienceOBJECTIVE: To describe the phenotype and phenotype-genotype correlations in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) with TARDBP gene mutations. METHODS: French TARDBP+ patients with ALS (n = 28) were compared first to 3 cohorts: 737 sporadic ALS (SALS), 192 nonmutated familial ALS (FALS), and 58 SOD1 + FALS, and then to 117 TARDBP+ cases from the literature. Genotype-phenotype correlations were studied for the most frequent TARDBP mutations. RESULTS: In TARDBP+ patients, onset was earlier (p = 0.0003), upper limb (UL) onset was predominant (p = 0.002), and duration was longer (p = 0.0001) than in patients with SALS. TARDBP+ and SOD1+ groups had the longest duration but diverged for site of onset: 64.3% UL onset for TARDBP+ and 74.1% on lower limbs for SOD1+ (p < 0.0001). The clinical characteristics of our 28 patients were similar to the 117 cases from the literature. In Caucasians, 51.3% of had UL onset, while 58.8% of Asians had bulbar onset (p = 0.02). The type of mutation influenced survival (p < 0.0001), and the G298S1, lying in the TARDBP super rich glycine-residue domain, was associated with the worst survival (27 months). CONCLUSION: Differences in phenotype between the groups as well as the differential influence of TARBDP mutations on survival may help physicians in ALS management and allow refining the strategy of genetic diagnosis

    MRI of the cervical spinal cord predicts respiratory dysfunction in ALS

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    Abstract For patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), the primary therapeutic goal is to minimize morbidity. Non-invasive ventilation improves survival. We aim to assess whether Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) of the cervical spinal cord predicts the progression of respiratory disorders in ALS. Brain and spinal MRI was repeatedly performed in the SOD1G86R mouse model, in 40 patients and in healthy controls. Atrophy, iron overload, white matter diffusivity and neuronal loss were assessed. In Superoxide Dismutase-1 (SOD1) mice, iron accumulation appeared in the cervical spinal cord at symptom onset but disappeared with disease progression (after the onset of atrophy). In ALS patients, the volumes of the motor cortex and the medulla oblongata were already abnormally low at the time of diagnosis. Baseline diffusivity in the internal capsule was predictive of functional handicap. The decrease in cervical spinal cord volume from diagnosis to 3 months was predictive of the change in slow vital capacity at 12 months. MRI revealed marked abnormalities at the time of ALS diagnosis. Early atrophy of the cervical spinal cord may predict the progression of respiratory disorders, and so may be of value in patient care and as a primary endpoint in pilot neuroprotection studies
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