| Literature DB >> 26306629 |
Luciano Merlini1, Patrizia Sabatelli2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Currently, the most promising therapies for Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) are exon skipping and stop codon read-through, two strategies aimed at restoring the expression of dystrophin. A phase 3 clinical trial with drisapersen, a drug designed to induce exon 51-skipping, has failed to show significant improvement of the primary outcome measure, the six-minute walk test. DISCUSSION: Here, we review some key points that should be considered when designing clinical trials for these new therapies. First, younger patients have more functional abilities and more muscle fibers to preserve than older patients and therefore are better subjects for trials designed to demonstrate the success of new treatments. Second, the inclusion of patients on corticosteroids both in the treatment and placebo groups is of concern because the positive effect of corticosteroids might mask the effect of the treatment being tested. Additionally, the reasonable expectation from these therapies is the slowing of disease progression rather than improvement. Therefore, the appropriate clinical endpoints are the prolongation of the ability to stand from the floor, climb stairs, and walk, not an increase in muscle strength or function. Hence, the time frames for the detection of new dystrophin, which occurs within months, and the ability to demonstrate a slowing of disease progression, which requires years, are strikingly different. Finally, placebo-controlled trials are difficult to manage if years of blindness are required to demonstrate a slowing of disease progression. Thus, accelerated/conditional approval for new therapies should be based on surrogate biochemical outcomes: the demonstration of de novo dystrophin production and of its beneficial effect on the functional recovery of muscle fiber. These data suggest that clinical trials for DMD patients must be adapted to the particular characteristics of the disease in order to demonstrate the expected positive effect of new treatments.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26306629 PMCID: PMC4549867 DOI: 10.1186/s12883-015-0408-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Fig. 1DMD course and treatment outcomes. A DMD boy beginning treatment at age 5 (arrow) when he has already lost some motor function/muscle strength (line A) compared with normal peers (line N). Without treatment, he will continue to deteriorate, finally loosing ambulation between 7–12 years of age (black triangle – B). The red area (C) represents the outcome of a treatment able to arrest (base of the red trapezoid) or partially or completely to restore (leg of the trapezoid) lost function. The green area (D) represents the outcome of a treatment able to slow the progression of the disease with loss of autonomous ambulation after the age of 14 years