121 research outputs found
Diagnostic and prognostic value of anti-cN1A antibodies in inclusion body myositis
Inclusion body myositis (IBM) is an acquired idiopathic inflammatory myopathy more commonly seen in individuals aged above 50. Unlike other idiopathic inflammatory myopathies, there is no response to immunosuppression/immunomodulation. The lack of response to such therapies led the focus away from considering IBM as a purely immune-mediated condition. However, the discovery of antibodies against cytosolic 5'-nucleotidase 1A (cN1A) in patients with IBM has reinvig-orated interest in autoimmunity as a key role in its pathogenesis. Over the last decade different methods have been developed to detect anti-cN1A antibodies. There has been an interest in whether these assays can be utilised in the diagnosis of IBM. Furthermore, there has been focus on whether anti-cN1A antibodies can be used to prognosticate and predict the clinical phenotype in IBM. Anti-cN1A antibodies appear to have a high specificity and moderate sensitivity for IBM. There have been some exploratory clinicopathological associations described in seropositive IBM patients, but sample sizes in most studies have been small so far. Antibody testing is yet to be standardised; which somewhat limits our ability to draw robust conclusions from current investi-gations. In this article we review the literature on anti-cN1A antibodies and discuss whether they have a role in clinical practice
Design and rationale for a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase 2/3 trial of oral arimoclomol in inclusion body myositis
Ethical publication statement
We confirm that we have read the Journal’s position on issues involved in ethical publication and affirm that this report is consistent with those guidelines.
Disclosure of conflicts of interest
P.M.M. has received consulting fees and funding support from Orphazyme A/S, paid to his academic institution (University College London), for the oversight and conduct of this study.
R.J.B. has received funding from the FDA Office Orphan Products Development grant for his role in this study.
M.P.M. has no relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
C.S. and T.B. are employees of Orphazyme A/S.
M.G.H. receives research funding from the Medical Research Council UK and has previously acted a consultant for Novartis and for Orphazyme A/S.
M.M.D. is a consultant for Orphazyme and received funding support, paid to his academic institution (University of Kansas Medical Center, Research Institute), from Orphazyme A/S for the oversight and conduct of this study.
Design and rationale for a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase 2/3 trial of oral arimoclomol in inclusion body myositis
Abstract
Introduction/Aims: Inclusion body myositis (IBM) is the most common progressive, debilitating muscle disease in people over the age of 50 years, for whom there is no effective treatment. Here, we present the design and rationale for one of the largest clinical studies conducted in IBM to date, to evaluate the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of arimoclomol, a novel, oral amplifier of the cellular heat shock response.
Methods: This is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group trial conducted at 11 centers in the US and one center in the UK. Eligible patients had a diagnosis of IBM fulfilling European Neuromuscular Centre 2011 criteria, with onset of weakness at > 45 years of age. Enrolled participants were randomized 1:1 to receive either oral arimoclomol citrate 1,200 mg/day or matching placebo for up to 20 months. The primary endpoint is the change from baseline to Month 20 in the IBM functional rating scale (IBMFRS) total score. The secondary efficacy endpoints include evaluations of participants’ functional abilities, strength, and physical health-related quality of life (HRQoL). A sub-study will characterize muscle changes using MRI in a subset of participants.
Discussion: This study will generate important clinical data on a novel therapeutic strategy for patients with IBM, a population with no current treatment options
Efficacy and safety of tafamidis doses in the Tafamidis in Transthyretin Cardiomyopathy Clinical Trial (ATTR-ACT) and long-term extension study.
Aims Tafamidis is an effective treatment for transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy (ATTR-CM) in the Tafamidis in
Transthyretin Cardiomyopathy Clinical Trial (ATTR-ACT). While ATTR-ACT was not designed for a dose-specific
assessment, further analysis from ATTR-ACT and its long-term extension study (LTE) can guide determination of the
optimal dose.
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Methods
and results
In ATTR-ACT, patients were randomized (2:1:2) to tafamidis 80 mg, 20mg, or placebo for 30months. Patients
completing ATTR-ACT could enrol in the LTE (with placebo-treated patients randomized to tafamidis 80 or
20 mg; 2:1) and all patients were subsequently switched to high-dose tafamidis. All-cause mortality was assessed
in ATTR-ACT combined with the LTE (median follow-up 51 months). In ATTR-ACT, the combination of all-cause
mortality and cardiovascular-related hospitalizations over 30 months was significantly reduced with tafamidis 80mg
(P = 0.0030) and 20mg (P = 0.0048) vs. placebo. All-cause mortality vs. placebo was reduced with tafamidis 80mg
[Cox hazards model (95% confidence interval (CI): 0.690 (0.487–0.979), P = 0.0378] and 20mg [0.715 (0.450–1.137),
P = 0.1564]. The mean (standard error) change in N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide from baseline to Month
30 was −1170.51 (587.31) (P = 0.0468) with tafamidis 80 vs. 20 mg. In ATTR-ACT combined with the LTE there
was a significantly greater survival benefit with tafamidis 80 vs. 20 mg [0.700 (0.501–0.979), P = 0.0374]. Incidence
of adverse events in both tafamidis doses were comparable to placebo.
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Conclusion Tafamidis, both 80 and 20mg, effectively reduced mortality and cardiovascular-related hospitalizations in patients
with ATTR-CM. The longer-term survival data and the lack of dose-related safety concerns support tafamidis 80mg
as the optimal dose.
Clinical Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01994889; NCT02791230post-print369 K
Culprit-Vessel Percutaneous Coronary Intervention Followed by Contralateral Angiography Versus Complete Angiography in Patients With St-Elevation Myocardial Infarction
In patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction, delay in door-to-balloon time strongly increases mortality rates. To our knowledge, no randomized studies to date have focused on reducing delays within the catheterization laboratory.
We performed a retrospective analysis of all patients who presented with ST-elevation myocardial infarction at our institution from July 2006 through June 2010, looking primarily at time differences between percutaneous coronary intervention in the culprit vessel on the basis of ECG criteria, followed by contralateral angiography (Group 1), versus complete coronary angiography followed by culprit-vessel percutaneous intervention (Group 2).
There were 49 patients in Group 1 and 57 patients in Group 2. No major differences in baseline characteristics were observed between the groups, except a higher prevalence of diabetes mellitus in Group 2. There was a statistically significant difference between Groups 1 and 2 in door-to-balloon time (median and interquartile range, 75 min [61–89] vs 87 min [70–115], P=0.03, respectively) and access-to-balloon time (12 min [9–18] vs 21 min [11–33], P=0.0006, respectively). Five Group 1 patients (10%) with inferior myocardial infarction had a contralateral culprit vessel. There were no differences in mortality rate or ejection fraction at the median 1-year follow-up. Four patients in Group 1 and 3 patients in Group 2 were referred for coronary artery bypass grafting after percutaneous intervention.
This study suggests that performing culprit-vessel percutaneous intervention on the basis of electrocardiographic criteria, followed by angiography in patients with anterior ST-elevation myocardial infarction, might be the preferred approach, given the door-to-balloon time that is saved
Effect of long-term tafamidis treatment on health-related quality of life in patients with transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy
Short report[Abstract]
Aims: To evaluate the effect of long-term tafamidis treatment on health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in patients with transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy (ATTR-CM) enrolled in the Tafamidis in Transthyretin Cardiomyopathy Clinical Trial (ATTR-ACT) and long-term extension (LTE) study.
Methods and results: We examined change from baseline in Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire overall summary (KCCQ-OS) and clinical summary (KCCQ-CS) scores in patients who received tafamidis meglumine 80 mg for 30 months in ATTR-ACT and tafamidis (meglumine 80 mg or bioequivalent free acid 61 mg) for 30 months in the LTE study, and in patients who received placebo for 30 months in ATTR-ACT and tafamidis for 30 months in the LTE study. In ATTR-ACT, 176 and 177 patients were randomized to tafamidis 80 mg and placebo, respectively. Patients who continuously received tafamidis had a 6- to 7-point reduction in least squares (LS) mean (standard error) KCCQ-OS and KCCQ-CS scores at month 30 (-6.25 [1.53] and -7.48 [1.39]), with little or no further decline over the next 30 months (-5.92 [1.77] and -9.21 [1.88] at month 60). Patients who received placebo in ATTR-ACT had a 20-point reduction in LS mean KCCQ-OS and KCCQ-CS scores at month 30 (-19.60 [1.94] and -19.90 [2.01]), but the decline slowed after initiating tafamidis (-24.70 [3.04] and -25.30 [3.36] at month 60).
Conclusion: Tafamidis reduced HRQoL decline in patients with ATTR-CM. Patients continuously treated with tafamidis for 60 months demonstrated stabilized HRQoL. In patients who initially received placebo in ATTR-ACT, tafamidis reduced the decline in HRQoL during the LTE study
Measurement properties of the Inclusion Body Myositis Functional Rating Scale
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the validity, reliability, responsiveness and meaningful change threshold of the Inclusion Body Myositis (IBM) Functional Rating Scale (FRS). METHODS: Data from a large 20-month multicentre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial in IBM were used. Convergent validity was tested using Spearman correlation with other health outcomes. Discriminant (known groups) validity was assessed using standardised effect sizes (SES). Internal consistency was tested using Cronbach's alpha. Intrarater reliability in stable patients and equivalence of face-to-face and telephone administration were tested using intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) and Bland-Altman plots. Responsiveness was assessed using a standardised response mean (SRM). An receiver operator characteristic (ROC) curve anchor-based approach was used to determine clinically meaningful IBMFRS change. RESULTS: Among the 150 patients, mean (SD) IBMFRS total score was 27.4 (4.6). Convergent validity was supported by medium to large correlations (rs modulus: 0.42-0.79) and discriminant validity by moderate to large group differences (SES=0.51-1.59). Internal consistency was adequate (overall Cronbach's alpha: 0.79). Test-retest reliability (ICCs=0.84-0.87) and reliability of telephone versus face-to-face administration (ICCs=0.93-0.95) were excellent, with Bland-Altman plots showing good agreement. Responsiveness in the worsened group defined by various external constructs was large at both 12 (SRM=-0.76 to -1.49) and 20 months (SRM=-1.12 to -1.57). In ROC curve analysis, a drop in two IBMFRS total score points was shown to represent a meaningful decline. CONCLUSIONS: When administered by trained raters, the IBMFRS is a reliable, valid and responsive tool that can be used to evaluate the impact of IBM and its treatment on physical function, with a 2-point reduction representing meaningful decline. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT02753530
Genotype and Phenotype of Transthyretin Cardiac Amyloidosis: THAOS (Transthyretin Amyloid Outcome Survey)
Background Transthyretin amyloidosis (ATTR) is a heterogeneous disorder with multiorgan involvement and a genetic or nongenetic basis. Objectives The goal of this study was to describe ATTR in the United States by using data from the THAOS (Transthyretin Amyloidosis Outcomes Survey) registry. Methods Demographic, clinical, and genetic features of patients enrolled in the THAOS registry in the United States (n = 390) were compared with data from patients from other regions of the world (ROW) (n = 2,140). The focus was on the phenotypic expression and survival in the majority of U.S. subjects with valine-to-isoleucine substitution at position 122 (Val122Ile) (n = 91) and wild-type ATTR (n = 189). Results U.S. subjects are older (70 vs. 46 years), more often male (85.4% vs. 50.6%), and more often of African descent (25.4% vs. 0.5%) than the ROW. A significantly higher percentage of U.S. patients with ATTR amyloid seen at cardiology sites had wild-type disease than the ROW (50.5% vs. 26.2%). In the United States, 34 different mutations (n = 201) have been reported, with the most common being Val122Ile (n = 91; 45.3%) and Thr60Ala (n = 41; 20.4%). Overall, 91 (85%) of 107 patients with Val122Ile were from the United States, where Val122Ile subjects were younger and more often female and black than patients with wild-type disease, and had similar cardiac phenotype but a greater burden of neurologic symptoms (pain, numbness, tingling, and walking disability) and worse quality of life. Advancing age and lower mean arterial pressure, but not the presence of a transthyretin mutation, were independently associated with higher mortality from a multivariate analysis of survival. Conclusions In the THAOS registry, ATTR in the United States is overwhelmingly a disorder of older adult male subjects with a cardiac-predominant phenotype. Val122Ile is the most common transthyretin mutation, and neurologic phenotypic expression differs between wild-type disease and Val122Ile, but survival from enrollment in THAOS does not. (Transthyretin-Associated Amyloidoses Outcome Survey [THAOS]; NCT00628745
Targeting Protein Homeostasis in Sporadic Inclusion Body Myositis
Sporadic inclusion body myositis (sIBM) is the commonest severe myopathy in patients over age 50. Previous therapeutic trials have targeted the inflammatory features of sIBM, but all have failed. Since protein dyshomeostasis may also play a role in sIBM, we tested the effects of targeting this feature of the disease. Using rat myoblast cultures, we found that up-regulation of the heat shock response with Arimoclomol reduced key pathological markers of sIBM in vitro. Furthermore, in mutant valosin-containing protein VCP mice, which develop an inclusion body myopathy (IBM), treatment with Arimoclomol ameliorated disease pathology and improved muscle function. We therefore evaluated the safety and tolerability of Arimoclomol in an investigator-lead, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, proof-of-concept patient trial and gathered exploratory efficacy data which showed that Arimoclomol was safe and well tolerated. Although Arimoclomol improved some IBM-like pathology in vitro and in vivo in the mutant VCP mouse, we did not see statistically significant evidence of efficacy in this proof of concept patient trial
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