Literature DB >> 10872756

A critical appraisal of the reporting of the National Acute Spinal Cord Injury Studies (II and III) of methylprednisolone in acute spinal cord injury.

W P Coleman1, D Benzel, D W Cahill, T Ducker, F Geisler, B Green, M R Gropper, J Goffin, P W Madsen, D J Maiman, S L Ondra, M Rosner, R C Sasso, G R Trost, S Zeidman.   

Abstract

From the beginning, the reporting of the results of National Acute Spinal Cord Injury Studies (NASCIS) II and III has been incomplete, leaving clinicians in the spinal cord injury (SCI) community to use or avoid using methylprednisolone in acute SCI on the basis of faith rather than a publicly developed scientific consensus. NASCIS II was initially reported by National Institutes of Health announcements, National Institutes of Health facsimiles to emergency room physicians, and the news media. The subsequent report in the New England Journal of Medicine implied that there was a positive result in the primary efficacy analysis for the entire 487 patient sample. However, this analysis was in fact negative, and the positive result was found only in a secondary analysis of the subgroup of patients who received treatment within 8 hours. In addition, that subgroup apparently had only 62 patients taking methylprednisolone and 67 receiving placebo. The NASCIS II and III reports embody specific choices of statistical methods that have strongly shaped the reporting of results but have not been adequately challenged or or even explained. These studies show statistical artifacts that call their results into question. In NASCIS II, the placebo group treated before 8 hours did poorly, not only when compared with the methylprednisolone group treated before 8 hours but even when compared with the placebo group treated after 8 hours. Thus, the positive result may have been caused by a weakness in the control group rather than any strength of methylprednisolone. In NASCIS III, a randomization imbalance occurred that allocated a disproportionate number of patients with no motor deficit (and therefore no chance for recovery) to the lower dose control group. When this imbalance is controlled for, much of the superiority of the higher dose group seems to disappear. The NASCIS group's decision to admit persons with minor SCIs with minimal or no motor deficit not only enables statistical artifacts it complicates the interpretation of results from the population actually sampled. Perhaps one half of the NASCIS III sample may have had at most a minor deficit. Thus, we do not know whether the results of these studies reflect the severely injured population to which they have been applied. The numbers, tables, and figures in the published reports are scant and are inconsistently defined, making it impossible even for professional statisticians to duplicate the analyses, to guess the effect of changes in assumptions, or to supply the missing parts of the picture. Nonetheless, even 9 years after NASCIS II, the primary data have not been made public. The reporting of the NASCIS studies has fallen far short of the guidelines of the ICH/FDA and of the Evidence-based Medicine Group. Despite the lucrative "off label" markets for methylprednisolone in SCI, no Food and Drug Association indication has been obtained. There has been no public process of validation. These shortcomings have denied physicians the chance to use confidently a drug that many were enthusiastic about and has left them in an intolerably ambiguous position in their therapeutic choices, in their legal exposure, and in their ability to perform further research to help their patients.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10872756     DOI: 10.1097/00002517-200006000-00001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Spinal Disord        ISSN: 0895-0385


  48 in total

1.  Use of steroids for acute spinal cord injury must be reassessed.

Authors:  D Short
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2000-11-11

2.  Methylprednisolone for acute spinal cord injury: not a standard of care.

Authors:  Herman Hugenholtz
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  2003-04-29       Impact factor: 8.262

3.  High dose methylprednisolone in the immediate management of acute, blunt spinal cord injury: what is the current practice in emergency departments, spinal units, and neurosurgical units in the UK?

Authors:  A E Frampton; C A Eynon
Journal:  Emerg Med J       Date:  2006-07       Impact factor: 2.740

Review 4.  Inflammation and its role in neuroprotection, axonal regeneration and functional recovery after spinal cord injury.

Authors:  Dustin J Donnelly; Phillip G Popovich
Journal:  Exp Neurol       Date:  2007-06-30       Impact factor: 5.330

5.  Moving beyond depression: Excessively closed science hurts.

Authors:  Fred H Geisler
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2008-03-22

6.  Early acute management in adults with spinal cord injury: a clinical practice guideline for health-care professionals.

Authors: 
Journal:  J Spinal Cord Med       Date:  2008       Impact factor: 1.985

7.  The incomplete picture of incomplete spinal cord injury.

Authors:  Robert E Ayer; Farbod Asgarzadie
Journal:  Transl Stroke Res       Date:  2011-11-12       Impact factor: 6.829

Review 8.  Neuroprotection and acute spinal cord injury: a reappraisal.

Authors:  Edward D Hall; Joe E Springer
Journal:  NeuroRx       Date:  2004-01

9.  Effects of methylprednisolone and ganglioside GM-1 on a spinal lesion: a functional analysis.

Authors:  Márcio Oliveira Penna Carvalho; Tarcisio Eloy Pessoa de Barros Filho; Marcos Antonio Tebet
Journal:  Clinics (Sao Paulo)       Date:  2008-06       Impact factor: 2.365

10.  Continuous brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) infusion after methylprednisolone treatment in severe spinal cord injury.

Authors:  Daniel H Kim; Tae-Ahn Jahng
Journal:  J Korean Med Sci       Date:  2004-02       Impact factor: 2.153

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