| Literature DB >> 26666258 |
Bruce Ac Cree1, Jeffrey L Bennett2, Mark Sheehan3, Jeffrey Cohen4, Hans-Peter Hartung5, Orhan Aktas5, Ho Jin Kim6, Friedemann Paul7, Sean Pittock8, Brian Weinshenker8, Dean Wingerchuk9, Kazuo Fujihara10, Gary Cutter11, Kaushik Patra12, Armando Flor12, Gerard Barron13, Soraya Madani12, John N Ratchford12, Eliezer Katz12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To date, no treatment for neuromyelitis optica (NMO) has been granted regulatory approval, and no controlled clinical studies have been reported.Entities:
Keywords: MEDI-551; Neuromyelitis optica; anti-CD19 monoclonal antibody; ethics; trial design
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26666258 PMCID: PMC4904355 DOI: 10.1177/1352458515620934
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mult Scler ISSN: 1352-4585 Impact factor: 6.312
Challenges faced in the design of the N-MOmentum trial and the solutions that were implemented.
| Issue | Solution |
|---|---|
| Potential risk associated with the use of placebo | Limit placebo exposure to 6.5 months |
| Utilize a time-to-event primary outcome rather than annualized relapse rate and thus limit to ONE the number of adjudicated relapses per patient during the randomized period | |
| Enrolling into the open-label period following one adjudicated attack | |
| Support an unblinded Data Safety Monitoring Board to monitor subject safety | |
| Perform an interim futility analysis so that the study can be stopped early if the intervention is ineffective | |
| Ensure a robust informed consent process | |
| Desire to minimize the total number of relapses needed and the total number of placebo subjects needed | Use an unequal randomization scheme (3:1) of active to placebo subjects |
| Disease heterogeneity and generalizability of the study results to both AQP4-IgG seropositive and seronegative patients | Enroll both seropositive and seronegative subjects and stratify randomization by AQP4-IgG serostatus to facilitate subgroup analysis |
| Potential for NMO misdiagnosis | Use standard diagnostic criteria in the inclusion criteria |
| Since seronegative patients are at higher risk of misdiagnosis than seropositive patients, utilize a review committee to confirm the diagnosis in seronegative subjects | |
| Lack of objective criteria defining an NMO attack | Use of 18 specific relapse criteria that were developed for this study |
| Unclear role of how to use MRI to diagnose relapses | Utilize relapse criteria that are primarily based on clinical findings but allow MRI confirmation in specific scenarios in which the clinical findings are equivocal or nonspecific |
| Need for a large number of study sites, leading to potential variability in relapse assessment | Utilize clear, objective criteria for relapses |
| Adjudicate relapses using a committee of disease experts | |
| Differing opinions about study design among regulators and other NMO stakeholders | Seek meaningful engagement with disease experts, patient representatives, ethicists, and regulators to inform the trial design |
NMO: neuromyelitis optica; MRI: magnetic resonance imaging.
NMO attack criteria.
| Example symptoms of an NMO/NMOSD attack[ | Attack type[ | Protocol-defined attack criteria[ |
|---|---|---|
| Blurred vision; loss of vision; eye pain | ON | 1. Greater than 15-character drop in high-contrast Landolt C Broken Rings Chart from last visit as measured in a previously affected eye and no other ophthalmological explanation |
| 2. At least 2-step drop[ | ||
| 3. At least 7 or more character drop in low-contrast Landolt C Broken Rings Chart from last visit as measured in either eye alone (monocular) AND a new RAPD in affected eye | ||
| 4. At least 7 or more character drop in low-contrast Landolt C Broken Rings Chart from last visit as measured in either eye alone (monocular) AND loss of a previously documented RAPD in fellow eye | ||
| 5. At least 5 or more character drop in high-contrast Landolt C Broken Rings Chart from last visit as measured in either eye alone (monocular) AND a new RAPD in affected eye | ||
| 6. At least 5 or more character drop in high-contrast Landolt C Broken Rings Chart from last visit as measured in either eye alone (monocular) AND loss of a previously documented RAPD in fellow eye | ||
| 7. At least 1-step drop[ | ||
| 8. At least 1-step drop[ | ||
| 9. At least 7 or more character drop in low-contrast Landolt C Broken Rings Chart from last visit as measured in either eye alone (monocular) AND a new Gd-enhancing or new/enlarging T2 MRI lesion in the corresponding optic nerve | ||
| 10. At least 5 or more character drop in high-contrast Landolt C Broken Rings Chart from last visit as measured in either eye alone (monocular) AND a new Gd-enhancing or new/enlarging T2 MRI lesion in the corresponding optic nerve | ||
| 11. At least 1-step drop[ | ||
| Deep or radicular pain; extremity paresthesia; weakness; sphincter dysfunction; Lhermitte’s sign (not in isolation) | Myelitis[ | 12. At least 2-point worsening in 1 or more of the relevant (pyramidal, bladder/bowel, sensory) FSS compared to last visit |
| 13. At least 1-point worsening in EDSS score compared to last visit if previous EDSS score is 5.5 or more | ||
| 14. At least 1-point worsening in 2 or more of the relevant (pyramidal, bladder/bowel, sensory) FSS compared to last visit when the last visit score was 1 or greater AND a new Gd-enhancing or new/enlarging T2 MRI lesion in the spinal cord | ||
| 15. At least 0.5-point worsening in EDSS score compared to last visit if previous EDSS score is 5.5 or more AND a new Gd-enhancing or new/enlarging T2 MRI lesion in the spinal cord | ||
| Nausea; intractable vomiting; intractable hiccups; other neurological signs (e.g. double vision, dysarthria, dysphagia, vertigo, oculomotor palsy, weakness, nystgmus, other cranial nerve abnormality) | Brainstem | 16. Isolated (not present at last visit) intractable nausea, vomiting, and/or hiccups lasting for greater than 48 hours AND a new Gd-enhancing or new/enlarging T2 MRI lesion in the brainstem |
| 17. At least 2-point worsening in 1 or more of the relevant (brainstem, cerebellar) FSS compared to last visit AND a new Gd-enhancing or new/enlarging T2 MRI lesion in the brainstem | ||
| Encephalopathy; hypothalamic dysfunction | Brain | 18. At least 2-point worsening in 1 or more of the relevant (cerebral, sensory, pyramidal) FSS (with a score of 3 or more at the current visit) compared to last visit AND a new Gd-enhancing or new/enlarging T2 MRI lesion in the brain consistent with the clinical presentation |
CF: counting fingers; EDSS: Expanded Disability Severity Score; FSS: Functional System Scores; Gd: gadolinium; HM: hand motion; LP: light perception; MRI: magnetic resonance imaging; NLP: no light perception; NMO/NMOSD: neuromyelitis optica/neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders; ON: optic neuritis; RAPD: relative afferent pupillary defect.
The symptoms listed are examples and are not inclusive of all NMO/NMOSD symptoms.
Four major areas of the body may be affected by an attack: the optic nerve, resulting in ON; the spinal cord, resulting in myelitis; the brainstem, resulting in a number of outcomes; and the brain.
Symptom(s) must meet at least one of the objective criteria for an NMO/NMOSD attack. However, the symptom(s) may meet more than one of the criteria for an NMO/NMOSD attack across different body systems.
At least 2-step drop can be any of the following worsening: on Landolt C Broken Rings Chart to HM, LP, or NLP; CF to LP or NLP; and HM to NLP.
At least 1-step drop can be any of the following worsening: on Landolt C Broken Rings Chart to CF, HM, LP, or NLP; CF to HM or LP or NLP; and LP to NLP.
A 1-point change in a single FSS without a change in the EDSS, with or without a new Gd-enhancing or new/enlarging T2 MRI lesion in the spinal cord, is not considered a clinically significant change and will not count as an attack per this protocol.
Figure 1.N-MOmentum study design scheme.