| Literature DB >> 24119230 |
Robin Lachmann1, Benedikt Schoser.
Abstract
Pompe disease/glycogen storage disease type II, is a rare, lysosomal storage disorder associated with progressive proximal myopathy, causing a gradual loss of muscular function and respiratory insufficiency. Studies of patients with late-onset Pompe disease have used endpoints such as the 6-minute walking test (6MWT) and forced vital capacity (FVC) to assess muscular and respiratory function during disease progression or treatment. However, the relevance of these markers to late-onset Pompe disease and the minimal clinically important difference (MCID) for these endpoints in late-onset Pompe disease have not yet been established. A literature search was carried out to identify studies reporting the MCID (absolute and relative) for the 6MWT and FVC in other diseases. The MCIDs determined in studies of chronic respiratory diseases were used to analyze the results of clinical studies of enzyme replacement therapy in late-onset Pompe disease. In 9 of the 10 late-onset Pompe disease studies reviewed, changes from baseline in the 6MWT were above or within the MCID established in respiratory diseases. Clinical improvement was perceived by patients in 6 of the 10 studies. In 6 of the 9 late-onset Pompe disease studies that reported FVC, the changes from baseline in percentage predicted FVC were above or within the MCID established in respiratory diseases and the difference was perceived as either an improvement or stabilization by patients. However, applying the 6MWT and FVC MCIDs from studies of chronic respiratory diseases to late-onset Pompe disease has several important limitations. Outcome measures in muscular dystrophies include composite measures of muscle function and gait, as well as Rasch-designed and validated tools to assess disease-related quality of life and activities of daily living. Given that the relevance to patients with late-onset Pompe disease of the 6MWT or FVC MCIDs established for chronic respiratory diseases is unclear, these measures should be evaluated specifically in late-onset Pompe disease and alternative outcome measures more specific to neuromuscular disease considered.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24119230 PMCID: PMC4015278 DOI: 10.1186/1750-1172-8-160
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Clinical relevance of 6MWD changes in patients with chronic respiratory disease and late-onset Pompe disease
| [ | COPD | 112 | 371 ± 129 | | | | 54 | 15 | | “Awareness of the smallest difference in walking distance that is noticeable to patients may help clinicians interpret effectiveness of treatments” |
| [ | IPF | 826 | 392 ± 109 | | | | 24–45 | 6–11 | | “6MWT is a reliable, valid and responsive measure of exercise tolerance in IPF” |
| [ | CAD after ACS | 81 | ~480 | Week 8: 553 | 73 ± 57 | 15 | 25 | 5 | “same” to “a little bit better” | “A MCID of 25 m will help practitioners interpret changes in 6MWD in patients with CAD after ACS” |
| [ | PAH | 405 | 343 ± 77 | | | | ~33 | 10 | | “The MID of 33 m helps assess treatment responses during trials of specific PAH therapies and sample size calculations” |
| [ | COPD | 460 | 361 ± 112 | | | | 35 | 10 | | “The low correlations between 6MWT and patient-reported anchors questions whether a minimal important difference exists” |
| [ | DMD | 18 | 357 | 1 year: 300 | −57 | 16 | Above | Above | No | “The 6MWD changes at 1 year confirm the validity of this endpoint and emphasize that preserving ambulation must remain a major goal of DMD therapy” |
| [ | DMD | 21 | 366 ± 83 | 1 week: 364 ± 87 | −2 | <1 | Below | Below | No | “Modified 6MWT is feasible and safe, documents disease-related limitations on ambulation, is reproducible, and offers a new outcome measure for DMD natural history and therapeutic trials” |
| [ | PAH | 213 | 330 ± 74 | Week 16: 366 | 36 | 11 | Within | Above | No | “Treatment increased the time to clinical worsening” |
| [ | MPS | 22 | 319 ± 131 | Week 26: 339 ± 127 | 20 | 6 | Below | Within | No | “Treatment translated into clinically important improvements in physical capacity (6MWT)” |
| [ | Pompe | 60 | 332 ± 127 | Week 78: 358 ± 141 | Week 78: 25 | 8 | Within | Within | No | |
| [ | Pompe | 5 | 64 | 3 years: 184 | 120 | 188 | Above | Above | “same” to “somewhat better” | |
| [ | Pompe | 58 | 320 ± 161 | 1–3 years: 383 ± 178 | 63 | 20 | Above | Above | “same” to “a little bit better” | |
| [ | Pompe | 22 | 341 ± 150 | 1 year: 393 ± 157 | 52 | 15 | Within | Above | “same” to “a little bit better” | |
| [ | Pompe | 21 | 312 ± 166 | 3 years: 326 ± 175 | 14 | 5 | Below | Within | No | |
| [ | Pompe | 17 | 117 (median) | 3 years: 265 | 148 | 126 | Above | Above | “same” to “somewhat better” | |
| [ | Pompe | 11 | 246 ± 185 | 1.5–2 years: 295 ± 195 | 49 | 20 | Within | Above | “same” to “a little bit better” | |
| [ | Pompe | 1 | 320 | 4 months: 500 | 180 | 56 | Above | Above | “same” to “much better” | |
| [ | Pompe | 1 | ~375 | 32 months: 353 | −44 | 11 | Within | Above | No | |
| [ | Pompe | 2 | 1 pt: 660 | 6 months: 700 | 40 | 6 | Within | Within | Maybe “same” to “a little bit better” | |
*Absolute MCID defined as 24–54 m based on the range described by Redelmeier et al. [22] and du Bois et al. [23].
†Relative MCID defined as 5–10% based on range described by du Bois et al. [23], Gremeaux et al. [24], Mathai et al. [25], and Puhan et al. [26].
According to the publication by Redelmeier et al. [22] in patients with COPD, patients change their rating from “same” to “a little bit better” with an increase of 40 m in the 6MWT; from “same” to “somewhat better” with an increase of 100 m; and from “same” to “much better” with an increase of approximately 180 m. For a patient to rate the change from “same” to “a little bit worse”, the decrease in the 6MWT needs to be 70 m.
ACS acute coronary syndrome, CAD coronary artery disease, COPD chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diff. difference, DMD Duchenne muscular dystrophy, IPF idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, MCID minimal clinically important difference, MPS mucopolysaccharidosis I, 6MWD 6MWT distance, 6MWT 6-minute walking test, PAH pulmonary arterial hypertension, pt patient, SD standard deviation.
Figure 16MWD in healthy adults and late-onset Pompe patients (untreated and those receiving treatment) [[37]]. 6MWD in healthy adults (black dot) [17], untreated late-onset Pompe patients (red line, data extracted from van der Ploeg et al. [18]), and across several studies of Pompe patients receiving alglucosidase alfa treatment [12-14,18,31,32,35]. Adapted with permission from [37] © 2013, Springer Science + Business Media. 6MWD, 6-minute walking test distance.
Clinical relevance of FVC changes in patients with chronic respiratory disease and late-onset Pompe disease
| [ | IPF | 1156 | 70 ± 13 | | | | 2–6 | 3–9 | |
| [ | IPF | 84 | 73 ± 19 | | 5–10 | 7–14 | | | |
| >10 | >14 | | | | |||||
| [ | IPF | | 67 ± 12 | | 7–12 | 10–18 | | | |
| ≥12 | ≥18 | | | | |||||
| [ | MPS | 22 | 48 ± 15 | Week 26: 53 ± 19 | 5 | 10 | Within | Above | “much better” |
| [ | Pompe | 60 | 55 ± 14 | Week 78: 57 ± 16 | Week 78: 1 | 2 | Below | Below | “much better” to “somewhat better” |
| [ | Pompe | 2 | Pt 1: 81 | 2 years: | 2 years: | 2 years: | Pt 1: Below | Pt 1: Below | Pt 1: “much better” to “somewhat better” |
| Pt 2: 94 | Pt 1: 80 | Pt 1: −1 | Pt 1: −1 | Pt 2: Within | Pt 2: Below | Pt 2: “much better” to “somewhat better” | |||
| Pt 2: 92 | Pt 2: −2 | Pt 2: −2 | | | |||||
| [ | Pompe | 74 | 65 ± 27 | 67 ± 27 | 2 | 3 | Within | Within | “much better” to “somewhat better” |
| [ | Pompe | 44 | 70 | 12 months: 70 | 12 months: 0.5 | 1 | Below | Below | “much better” to “somewhat better” |
| [ | Pompe | 28 | 80 ± 14 | At 3 years: 77 ± 18 | 3 years: −4 | 5 | Within | Within | “same” to “much worse” |
| [ | Pompe | 1 | 44 | 42 | −2 | −5 | Within | Within | “somewhat better” |
| ---------- | ---------- | ---------- | ---------- | ---------- | ---------- | ---------- | |||
| 31 | 25 | −6 | −19 | Above | Above | “same” to “much worse” | |||
| [ | Pompe | 5 | | 2 years: | 2 years: | | | | |
| Pt 1: 0.0 | Pt 1: 8 | Pt 1: 8 | Pt 1: - | Pt 1: Above | Pt 1: - | Pt 1: “much better” | |||
| Pt 2: 46 | Pt 2: 66 | Pt 2: 26 | Pt 2: 57 | Pt 2: Above | Pt 2: Above | Pt 2: “much better” | |||
| Pt 3: 9 | Pt 3: 16 | Pt 3: 7 | Pt 3: 78 | Pt 3: Above | Pt 3: Above | Pt 3: “much better” | |||
| Pt 4: 14 | Pt 4: 7 | Pt 4: −7 | Pt 4: 50 | Pt 4: Above | Pt 4: Above | Pt 4: “somewhat worse” | |||
| Pt 5: 10 | Pt 5: 20 | Pt 5: 10 | Pt 5: 100 | Pt 5: Above | Pt 5: Above | Pt 5: “much better” | |||
| [ | Pompe | 1 | | | 1.9/year | | Below | | “much better” to “somewhat better” |
| [ | Pompe | 1 | 6 months: 16 | Above | “much better” | ||||
*MCID of 2–6% and patient classifications based on a study in patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis [39].
FVC forced vital capacity, IPF idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, MCID minimal clinically important difference, pt patient, diff. difference, % predicted FVC Percentage change in predicted FVC, MPS mucopolysaccharidosis, SD standard deviation.
Figure 2Changes in SF-36 scores stratified by changes in FVC percentage in patients with IPF [41]. Reproduced from [41] © 2010, with permission from Elsevier. BP, bodily pain; FVC, forced vital capacity; GH, general health; MCS, mental component summary; MH, mental health; PCS, physical component summary score; PF, physical functioning; RE, role emotional domain; RP, role physical; SF, social functioning; VT, vitality.
Figure 3Changes in global health status according to changes in % predicted FVC in patients with IPF [[39]]. FVC, forced vital capacity. IPF, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.