19 research outputs found

    Antiretroviral Therapy-Associated Acute Motor and Sensory Axonal Neuropathy

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    Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) has been reported in HIV-infected patients in association with the immune reconstitution syndrome whose symptoms can be mimicked by highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART)-mediated mitochondrial toxicity. We report a case of a 17-year-old, HIV-infected patient on HAART with a normal CD4 count and undetectable viral load, presenting with acute lower extremity weakness associated with lactatemia. Electromyography/nerve conduction studies revealed absent sensory potentials and decreased compound muscle action potentials, consistent with a diagnosis of acute motor and sensory axonal neuropathy. Lactatemia resolved following cessation of HAART; however, neurological deficits minimally improved over several months in spite of immune modulatory therapy. This case highlights the potential association between HAART, mitochondrial toxicity and acute axonal neuropathies in HIV-infected patients, distinct from the immune reconstitution syndrome

    The quick motor function test: a new tool to rate clinical severity and motor function in Pompe patients

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    Pompe disease is a lysosomal storage disorder characterized by progressive muscle weakness. With the emergence of new treatment options, psychometrically robust outcome measures are needed to monitor patients’ clinical status. We constructed a motor function test that is easy and quick to use. The Quick Motor Function Test (QMFT) was constructed on the basis of the clinical expertise of several physicians involved in the care of Pompe patients; the Gross Motor Function Measure and the IPA/Erasmus MC Pompe survey. The test comprises 16 items. Validity and test reliability were determined in a cohort of 91 Pompe patients (5 to 76 years of age). In addition, responsiveness of the scale to changes in clinical condition over time was examined in a subgroup of 18 patients receiving treatment and 23 untreated patients. Interrater and intrarater reliabilities were good (intraclass correlation coefficients: 0.78 to 0.98 and 0.76 to 0.98). The test correlated strongly with proximal muscle strength assessed by hand held dynamometry and manual muscle testing (rs= 0.81, rs=0.89), and showed significant differences between patient groups with different disease severities. A clinical-empirical exploration to assess responsiveness showed promising results, albeit it should be repeated in a larger group of patients. In conclusion, the Quick Motor Function Test can reliably rate clinical severity and motor function in children and adults with Pompe disease

    Suitability of external controls for drug evaluation in Duchenne muscular dystrophy

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    OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the suitability of real-world data (RWD) and natural history data (NHD) for use as external controls in drug evaluations for ambulatory Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). METHODS: The consistency of changes in the 6-minute walk distance (Δ6MWD) was assessed across multiple clinical trial placebo arms and sources of NHD/RWD. Six placebo arms reporting 48-week Δ6MWD were identified via literature review and represented 4 sets of inclusion/exclusion criteria (n = 383 patients in total). Five sources of RWD/NHD were contributed by Universitaire Ziekenhuizen Leuven, DMD Italian Group, The Cooperative International Neuromuscular Research Group, ImagingDMD, and the PRO-DMD-01 study (n = 430 patients, in total). Mean Δ6MWD was compared between each placebo arm and RWD/NHD source after subjecting the latter to the inclusion/exclusion criteria of the trial for baseline age, ambulatory function, and steroid use. Baseline covariate adjustment was investigated in a subset of patients with available data. RESULTS: Analyses included ∼1,200 patient-years of follow-up. Differences in mean Δ6MWD between trial placebo arms and RWD/NHD cohorts ranged from -19.4 m (i.e., better outcomes in RWD/NHD) to 19.5 m (i.e., worse outcomes in RWD/NHD) and were not statistically significant before or after covariate adjustment. CONCLUSIONS: We found that Δ6MWD was consistent between placebo arms and RWD/NHD subjected to equivalent inclusion/exclusion criteria. No evidence for systematic bias was detected. These findings are encouraging for the use of RWD/NHD to augment, or possibly replace, placebo controls in DMD trials. Multi-institution collaboration through the Collaborative Trajectory Analysis Project rendered this study feasible

    Feasibility and Reproducibility of Echocardiographic Measures in Children with Muscular Dystrophies.

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    BACKGROUND: Cardiac disease is a major cause of death in muscular dystrophies. The use of feasible and reproducible echocardiographic measures of cardiac function is critical to advance the field of therapeutics for dystrophic cardiomyopathy. METHODS: Participants aged 8 to 18 years with genetically confirmed Duchenne (DMD), Becker (BMD) or limb girdle (LGMD) muscular dystrophies were enrolled at five centers and a standardized echocardiogram (echo) was performed. Measures of systolic and diastolic function and speckle tracking echo (STE) derived cardiac strain were reviewed independently by two central readers. Furthermore, echo measures from DMD participants were compared to retrospective aged matched controls from a single site to assess measures of myocardial function. RESULTS: 48 participants (mean age of 13.3±2.7 years) were enrolled. Shortening fraction (SF%) had a greater inter-observer correlation (intra-class correlation coefficient; ICC=0.63) compared to ejection fraction (EF%; ICC=0.49). One reader could only measure EF% in 53% of participants. Myocardial performance index (MPI) measured by pulse wave Doppler and tissue Doppler imaging showed similar ICCs (0.55 and 0.54). STE showed a high ICC (0.96). Focusing on DMD participants (n=33), significantly increased mitral A wave velocities, lower E/A ratios and lower TDI mitral lateral E’ velocities were observed compared to age matched controls. STE demonstrated subclinical myocardial dysfunction with decreased average circumferential and longitudinal strain in 3 distinct subgroups: DMD participants with normal SF%; DMD participants with age <13 years; and DMD participants with MPI<0.40 compared to controls. CONCLUSIONS: In a muscular dystrophy cohort, assessment of cardiac function is feasible and reproducible using SF%, diastolic measures and MPI. Cardiac strain measures identified early myocardial disease in DMD
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