| Literature DB >> 19278902 |
John Collinge1, Michele Gorham, Fleur Hudson, Angus Kennedy, Geraldine Keogh, Suvankar Pal, Martin Rossor, Peter Rudge, Durre Siddique, Moira Spyer, Dafydd Thomas, Sarah Walker, Tom Webb, Steve Wroe, Janet Darbyshire.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The propagation of prions, the causative agents of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and other human prion diseases, requires post-translational conversion of normal cellular prion protein to disease-associated forms. The antimalarial drug quinacrine (mepacrine) prevents this conversion in vitro, and was given to patients with various prion diseases to assess its safety and efficacy in changing the course of these invariably fatal and untreatable diseases.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19278902 PMCID: PMC2660392 DOI: 10.1016/S1474-4422(09)70049-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lancet Neurol ISSN: 1474-4422 Impact factor: 44.182
Figure 1Trial profile
*Relative with symptomatic inherited prion disease or recipient of blood transfusion. †From September, 2001–June, 2002, six patients received open-label quinacrine in an initial pilot study, and from August, 2002, to March, 2004, 17 more were offered quinacrine or no quinacrine in an extended pilot study (total 23 patients). ‡One originally chose not to take quinacrine but later agreed to randomisation 9 weeks after enrolment and was allocated immediate quinacrine.
Characteristics at enrolment: overall and according to initial choice of quinacrine or not
| Enrolled | 107 (100%) | 32 (100%) | 69 (100%) | |||
| Studies | 0·16 | |||||
| Pilot study | 23 (22%) | 8 (25%) | 9 (13%) | |||
| Main study | 84 (78%) | 24 (75%) | 60 (87%) | |||
| Type of prion disease | 0·06 | .. | ||||
| Sporadic | 45 (42%) | 8 (25%) | 36 (52%) | |||
| Iatrogenic | 2 (2%) | 1 (3%) | 1 (1%) | |||
| Variant | 18 (17%) | 6 (19%) | 10 (14%) | |||
| Inherited | 42 (39%) | 17 (53%) | 22 (32%) | |||
| Median age (years; range) | 56 (14–82) | 55 (17–75) | 58 (19–82) | 0·18 | .. | |
| Non-inherited disease | 60 (14–82) | 60 (17–75) | 62 (19–82) | |||
| Inherited disease | 43 (32–72) | 53 (32–65) | 41 (32–72) | |||
| Median time (months) since first symptoms | 10 (1–140) | 13 (2–118) | 8 (1–140) | 0·04 | .. | |
| Non-inherited disease | 7 (1–50) | 9 (2–19) | 7 (1–50) | |||
| Inherited disease | 26 (3–140) | 25 (4–118) | 27 (3–140) | |||
| Barthel index | 1·89 (0·97–3·62; 0·06) | |||||
| Number assessed | 95 (89%) | 28 (88%) | 67 (97%) | 0·08 | ||
| Median (IQR) | 4 (11–17) | 14 (5–18) | 2 (0–12) | 0·0007 | ||
| MMSE | 1·29 (1·06–1·57; 0·01) | |||||
| Number assessed | 58 (54%) | 26 (81%) | 27 (39%) | 0·0001 | ||
| Median (IQR) | 20 (15–25) | 23 (18–26) | 18 (14–25) | 0·20 | ||
| Median observed/imputed value (IQR) | 7 (0–21) | 22 (7–25) | 0 (0–15) | <0·0001 | ||
| CDR | 0·64 (0·44–0·92; 0·02) | |||||
| Number assessed | 75 (70%) | 27 (84%) | 42 (61%) | 0·02 | ||
| Median (IQR) | 8 (4–12) | 6 (2–8) | 9 (6–13) | 0·01 | ||
| Median observed/imputed value (IQR) | 11 (6–18) | 7 (3–10) | 16 (8–18) | 0·0007 | ||
| GCS | .. | |||||
| Number assessed | 74 (69%) | 19 (59%) | 54 (78%) | 0·06 | ||
| Median (IQR) | 12 (10–14) | 15 (11–15) | 12 (9–14) | 0·001 | ||
| Median observed/imputed value (IQR) | 14 (11–15) | 15 (14–15) | 13 (10–15) | <0·0001 | ||
| ADAS-cog | ||||||
| Number assessed | 37 (35%) | 20 (62%) | 17 (25%) | 0·0004 | ||
| Median (IQR) | 17 (8–29) | 18 (8–26) | 16 (8–32) | 0·95 | .. | |
| BPRS | .. | |||||
| Number assessed | 37 (35%) | 19 (59%) | 18 (26%) | 0·002 | ||
| Median (IQR) | 33 (30–40) | 37 (30–40) | 32 (30–40) | 0·46 | ||
| Rankin scale | ||||||
| Number assessed | 105 (98%) | 32 (100%) | 67 (97%) | 1·00 | ||
| No or slight symptoms (1/2) | 13 (12%) | 5 (16%) | 8 (12%) | 0·0007 | 1·00 (0·09) | |
| Moderate disability (3) | 21 (20%) | 11 (34%) | 9 (13%) | 3·21 (0·71–14·5) | ||
| Moderate to severe disability (4) | 31 (30%) | 12 (38%) | 15 (22%) | 5·20 (0·90–30·0) | ||
| Severe disability (5) | 40 (38%) | 4 (12%) | 35 (52%) | 1·52 (0·17–13·5) | ||
| CIBIC-P | ||||||
| Number assessed | 105 (98%) | 31 (97%) | 68 (99%) | 0·54 | ||
| Normal or borderline (1/2) | 7 (7%) | 1 (3%) | 6 (9%) | 0·0001 | 1·00 (0·07) | |
| Mildly ill (3) | 11 (10%) | 7 (23%) | 4 (6%) | 12·8 (1·06–155) | ||
| Moderately ill (4) | 23 (22%) | 11 (35%) | 10 (15%) | 11·6 (1·04–130) | ||
| Markedly ill (5) | 26 (25%) | 9 (29%) | 14 (21%) | 14·3 (0·91–222) | ||
| Severely ill or the most ill (6/7) | 38 (36%) | 3 (10%) | 34 (50%) | 3·39 (0·13–85·5) | ||
Data are number (%) unless otherwise stated. MMSE=mini-mental state examination. CDR=clinical dementia rating. GCS=Glasgow coma scale. ADAS-cog= Alzheimer's Disease Assessment scale cognitive component. BPRS=brief psychiatric rating scale. CIBIC-P=clinician interview-based impression of change plus carer input.
Includes the first six patients who received quinacrine in a pilot study without the option of no quinacrine who are excluded from comparisons according to choice.
One patient who chose to be randomised at enrolment is included in the chose no quinacrine group (the other randomised patient chose no quinacrine at enrolment, see Results).
Univariate p values from exact tests (categorical) or ranksum (continuous) assessing the effect of each factor on choice of quinacrine or no quinacrine.
Multivariate independent predictors; the best multivariate logistic models adjusted for baseline Rankin score or CIBIC-P and one of Barthel index, MMSE, and CDR; numbers were too small to discriminate further between these predictors; effect on choice of quinacrine versus no quinacrine shown for Rankin and MMSE (OR per 3 units higher) from model including Rankin and MMSE, for CDR and Barthel index (OR per 3 units higher) from model including Rankin and CDR or Barthel index, and for CIBIC-P from a model including CIBIC-P and MMSE (similar results were obtained for other models combining these factors), absence of OR means no evidence of a independent contribution of this factor (p>0·10).
Excluding six patients asymptomatic at enrolment (one chose quinacrine, five chose no quinacrine).
Methods for imputation strategy; number of imputed baseline values: MMSE 48, CDR 30, GCS 32.
Percentages of non-missing values.
Figure 2Quinacrine use after initiation
Predictors of mortality
| OR (95% CI) | p value | OR (95% CI) | p value | OR (95% CI) | p value | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quinacrine use | 0·52 (0·31–0·86) | 0·01 | 1·10 (0·60–2·01) | 0·76 | 0·98 (0·56–1·71) | 0·94 | |
| Sex | 0·71 (0·45–1·12) | 0·14 | 0·42 (0·25–0·72) | 0·002 | 0·47 (0·28–0·77) | 0·003 | |
| Age (per 10 years) | 1·68 (1·40–2·01) | <0·0001 | 1·31 (1·10–1·56) | 0·002 | 1·32 (1·12–1·57) | 0·001 | |
| Months since first symptoms | 0·70 (0·58–0·85) | 0·0003 | .. | .. | .. | .. | |
| Inherited prion disease | 0·13 (0·07–0·24) | <0·0001 | 0·26 (0·13–0·53) | 0·0002 | 0·24 (0·12–0·47) | <0·0001 | |
| Period of study: pilot | 0·35 (0·18–0·68) | 0·02 | .. | .. | .. | .. | |
| April, 2004, to March, 2005 (main trial) | 1·00 | ||||||
| April, 2005, to December, 2005 | 0·82 (0·47–1·44) | ||||||
| 2006 | 0·85 (0·44–1·64) | ||||||
| MMSE (per 3 units higher) | 0·79 (0·74–0·85) | <0·0001 | .. | .. | .. | .. | |
| Rankin scale | <0·0001 | 0·03 | .. | .. | |||
| No or slight symptoms | 1·00 | 1·00 | |||||
| Moderate disability | 1·03 (0·26–4·11) | 0·45 (0·11–1·89) | |||||
| Moderate to severe disability | 7·35 (2·29–23·6) | 1·45 (0·35–6·08) | |||||
| Severe disability | 14·9 (4·65–47·5) | 2·52 (0·56–11·3) | |||||
| GIC | <0·0001 | .. | .. | .. | .. | ||
| Normal, borderline, mildly ill | 1·00 | ||||||
| Moderately ill | 2·33 (0·78–6·96) | ||||||
| Markedly ill | 8·54 (3·05–23·9) | ||||||
| Severely ill | 17·1 (5·97–49·2) | ||||||
| Amongst the most ill | 18·0 (6·18–52·3) | ||||||
| Barthel index (per 3 units higher) | 0·65 (0·57–0·73) <0·0001 | .. | .. | .. | 0·80 (0·67–0·96) | 0·02 | |
| CDR (per 3 units higher) | 1·68 (1·46–1·93) <0·0001 | .. | 1·25 (1·02–1·52) | 0·03 | 1·19 (0·98–1·45) | 0·08 | |
| GCS (per 3 units higher) | 0·39 (0·31–0·49) <0·0001 | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | |
MMSE=mini-mental state examination. GIC=global impression of change. CDR=clinical dementia rating, GCS=Glasgow coma scale.
Unstratified adjusted model: numbers were too small to unambiguously identify independent predictors.
Time-updated variable: whether a patient had already taken quinacrine in PRION-1 versus never or not yet initiated.
For asymptomatic patients (n=6), months since first symptoms imputed as 2 years more than the maximum observed.
All patients classed “normal” or “borderline” by GIC (n=7) were alive at the end of the study, and therefore to fit models this group is combined with the mildly ill (n=11). Absence of OR means no evidence of a significant independent contribution of this factor (p>0·10).
Figure 3Survival
Unadjusted survival from enrolment (A). Survival from enrolment by baseline Rankin score (B). Survival from first symptoms by type of human prion disease (C).
Overall response based on neurological rating scales
| Total | Last seen alive | Last seen dead | Total | Last seen alive | Last seen dead | Total | Last seen alive | Last seen dead | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Response | 1 (0/1) | 1 (0/1) | .. | 4 (1/3) | 3 (0/3) | 1 (1/0) | 4 (1/3) | 3 (0/3) | 1 (1/0) |
| Stable | 17 (7/10) | 10 (1/9) | 7 (6/1) | 4 (2/2) | 1 (0/1) | 3 (2/1) | 3 (2/1) | 1 (0/1) | 2 (2/0) |
| Deterioration | 24 (15/9) | 7 (3/4) | 17 (12/5) | 28 (10/18) | 11 (1/10) | 17 (9/8) | 24 (7/17) | 11 (1/10) | 13 (6/7) |
| Baseline data only | 29 (27/2) | .. | 29 (27/2) | 4 (4/0) | .. | 4 (4/0) | .. | .. | .. |
| Total | 71 (49/22) | 18 (4/14) | 53 (45/8) | 40 (17/23) | 15 (1/14) | 25 (16/9) | 31 (10/21) | 15 (1/14) | 16 (9/7) |
Data are number (number with non-inherited disease/number with inherited disease). For each individual rating scale, response was predefined in the protocol as an increase of 3 units on the mini-mental state examination, 2 units on the Barthel index, or 2 units on the Glasgow coma scale, and a decrease of 1 unit on the Rankin scale, 3 units on clinical dementia rating (CDR), 1 unit on global impression of change (GIC), 10 units on Alzheimer's Disease Association-cognitive component, and 6 units on the brief psychiatric rating scale. Deterioration was defined as the inverse (decrease or increase respectively); those not meeting criteria for either response or deterioration were defined as stable. Overall response is defined as response on two or more of the neurological rating scales, without deterioration on any other scores measured at the same timepoint at any time during follow-up.
Response compared with baseline at all visits from week 37 through 113 (last seen alive).
Response at one or two visits only followed by deterioration before date last seen alive or death.
Details of responders
| Died week 52 | Yes | Sporadic | 4 | 11→13 | 4→3 | .. | .. | .. |
| Alive week 167 | Yes | Inherited | 17, 40 | .. | 3→2 | 4→3 | .. | .. |
| Alive week 104 | Yes | Inherited | 11 | .. | 3→2 | .. | 42→25 | .. |
| Alive week 65 | Yes | Inherited | 4, 28 | .. | 3→2 | 4→3 | 39→25 | .. |
| Alive week 113 | No | Inherited | 24–113 | .. | 4→3 | 4→2-3 | .. | 10→12–15 |
High scores are favourable on Glasgow coma scale and Barthel index and low scores are favourable on Rankin scale, global impression of change (GIC), and brief psychiatric rating scale.
Weeks after quinacrine initiation for those with response on quinacrine, otherwise weeks from enrolment.
One intervening visit without response.
Three intervening visits without response. Missing data indicate no change or value not measured.
Grade 3 or 4 and serious adverse events and reactions, and adverse events leading to quinacrine discontinuation or dose reduction
| On | Off | On | Off | On | Off | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rash | 2 (2) | 9 | |||||
| Yellow skin | 1 | ||||||
| Dry skin | 1 | ||||||
| Grand mal convulsion or seizure | 2 (2) | 1 (1) | 2 (2) | 1 | |||
| Haematemesis | 1 (1) | 2 | |||||
| Haematuria and haematemesis | 1 (1) | 1 | 1 (1) | 1 | |||
| Abdominal wall abscess | 1 | 1 | 1 | ||||
| Diarrhoea | 1 | ||||||
| Nausea | 1 (1) | 3 | |||||
| Nausea and delirium | 1 | ||||||
| Nausea and diarrhoea | 1 | ||||||
| Nausea and diarrhoea and high alanine aminotransferase concentrations | 1 | ||||||
| Nausea and paraesthesia | 1 | ||||||
| Vomiting and dysphagia | 1 | 1 | 1 | ||||
| Vomiting and aspiration pneumonitis | 1 (1) | 1 (1) | 1 | ||||
| Aspiration pneumonia | 2 | 2 | 1 | ||||
| Liver-function test abnormal | 2 (2) | 2 | |||||
| Alanine aminotransferase increased | 3 (3) | 16 | |||||
| Aspartate aminotransferase increased | 2 | ||||||
| Alkaline phosphatase increased | 2 | ||||||
| Lower-respiratory-tract infection | 1 | 1 | 1 | ||||
| Pneumonia bacterial and lung consolidation | 1 | 1 | |||||
| Urinary-tract infection bacterial | 1 | ||||||
| Suicide attempt | 1 | 1 | 1 | ||||
| Fracture and pneumothorax traumatic | 1 | ||||||
| Laceration | 1 | 1 | |||||
| Aggression | 1 | 1 | |||||
| Abnormal behaviour | 1 | ||||||
| Agitation and somnolence | 1 | ||||||
| Other | 3 | ||||||
| Total events | 9 (5) | 5 | 4 (2) | 2 | 17 (11) | 5 | 53 |
| Rate per 100 patient-months | 2·9 (1·6) | 0·7 | 1·8 (0·9) | 0·3 | 5·5 (3·6) | 0·7 | 25·4 |
| Total patients | 7 (4) | 4 | 4 (2) | 2 | 16 (10) | 4 | 30 |
Data are number of events, with those judged as probably or possibly related to quinacrine in parentheses. Difference between on and off quinacrine in rate of all reported serious adverse events (p=0·006) and all grade 3/4 adverse events (p<0·0001). All reported serious adverse events were also grade 3 or 4 events except for haematemesis (grade 2) and vomiting and aspiration pneumonitis (reported as grade 1 vomiting and dyspnoea but judged grade 4 aspiration pneumonitis at independent review).
Serious adverse events during the main trial were reviewed by an independent trial physician (one aspiration pneumonia during the pilot study was not reviewed).
While taking quinacrine or within 30 days of stopping.
Acquired pigmented retinopathy, abnormal EEG, and hyponatraemia.