Literature DB >> 30573480

Randomised placebo-controlled trial of combination ACE inhibitor and beta-blocker therapy to prevent cardiomyopathy in children with Duchenne muscular dystrophy? (DMD Heart Protection Study): a protocol study.

John P Bourke1, Gillian Watson2, Francesco Muntoni3,4, Stefan Spinty5, Helen Roper6, Michela Guglieri7, Chris Speed2, Elaine McColl2, Ashish Chikermane8, Sandeep Jayawant9, Satish Adwani10, Tracey Willis11, Jennifer Wilkinson2, Andrew Bryant12, Thomas Chadwick12, Ruth Wood2, Kate Bushby7.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Although cardiologists were 'late-comers' to the multidisciplinary team-contributing to the complex care of patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), they now recognise the importance of systematic cardiac surveillance and timely therapy to prolonged survival in patients with DMD. Empirical deployment of cardioactive medications has already improved outcomes, but the evidence base for clinical decision making is weak. Fundamental questions remain as to whether prophylactic therapy is justified and convincingly superior to prompt deployment of the same therapies once left ventricular (LV) dysfunction is detected. Even if it were, at what age should therapy be introduced and with what specific drugs? METHODS AND ANALYSIS: We are conducting a multicentre, parallel group, randomised, placebo-controlled study of combination therapy with an ACE inhibitor (perindopril) and a beta-blocker (bisoprolol) in boys with DMD aged 5-13 years, with normal LV function by echocardiographic criteria at the time of recruitment. Boys are being followed-up for a minimum of 3 years and a maximum of 5 years and undergo repeat assessments of LV function, heart rate and ECG, forced expiratory volume in the 1 s and forced vital capacity, adverse event reporting and quality of life at 6 monthly intervals.The primary outcome is change in LV function between active and placebo-treated participants over the course of the study. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The study was approved by 'NRES Committee East Midlands - Derby'. The results will be disseminated through manuscript publications, an international workshop and presentations to scientific meetings and parent forums. TRANSLATIONAL ASPECTS: The study seeks to establish the evidence for prophylactic heart therapies for children with DMD, define the optimum age for their introduction and identify any safety concerns. ARTICLE
SUMMARY: The protocol describes the design of an ongoing multicentre, double-blind, randomised placebo-controlled study to establish the evidence for the use of prophylactic heart therapies in children with DMD, define the optimum age for their introduction and identify any safety concerns. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBERS: EudraCT2007-005932-10 and ISRCTN50395346; Pre-results. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2018. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.

Entities:  

Keywords:  ace-inhibitor; beta-blocker; cardiac dystrophinopathy; duchenne muscular dystrophy; prophylactic therapy

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30573480      PMCID: PMC6303652          DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-022572

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMJ Open        ISSN: 2044-6055            Impact factor:   2.692


Double-blind, multicentre, randomised, placebo-controlled study design. Participants studied 6 monthly for a minimum of 3 years. Largest study to date of prophylactic therapy for cardiac dystrophinopathy. Use of echocardiographic assessments for primary endpoint measures.

Introduction

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is an X-linked recessively inherited neuromuscular disorder caused by a deficiency in the expression of the protein dystrophin on the inner aspect of muscle cell sarcolemma.1 Its clinical course has traditionally been characterised by weakness of proximal limb muscles and calf muscle hypertrophy and progresses to involve all body muscles.2 Affected individuals typically lose ambulation and become wheelchair-dependent before the age of 13 years and die from cardiorespiratory failure in their third to fourth decade of age.3 4 From the cardiology perspective, some 90% of men with DMD develop a severe, progressive form of cardiomyopathy. Twenty per cent to 30% have evidence of left ventricular (LV) impairment on echocardiography by age 10 years.5–8 Subtler abnormalities in LV function are evident in an even larger proportion of patients at all ages when more sensitive imaging techniques, such as tissue Doppler, magnetic resonance or metabolic imaging, are deployed.9 10 Despite the prevalence of cardiac involvement, until recently cardiologists were not included in the multidisciplinary team managing patients with DMD. Historically, this was because survival in DMD was determined predominantly by respiratory muscle weakness and consequent respiratory failure. Despite the severity of underlying cardiomyopathy, patients with DMD remain asymptomatic because their limited physical activity, due to generalised muscle weakness, means that cardiac symptoms only emerge with the onset of heart failure. Even then, when cardiac medications were introduced, they were usually deployed tentatively and without any expectation that they would improve survival. However, life expectancy in DMD has improved over recent decades, primarily as a result of three changes: routine use of corticosteroid therapy for muscle strengthening, non-invasive ventilation for respiratory muscle weakness and wider multidisciplinary care arrangements.11–13 This has meant that patients with DMD are now surviving routinely to an age when cardiac involvement is more advanced and the heart more often contributes directly to death.6 12 13 The results of large randomised controlled trials in patients with idiopathic forms of dilated cardiomyopathy have established that cardioactive medications can reverse or change the trajectory of decline in LV dysfunction and so improve prognosis.14–16 Combination therapy with an ACE inhibitor (ACEi),17 18 beta-blocker19–21 and an aldosterone antagonist22 23 are now deployed routinely and well tolerated in adults. More recently, the findings from cohort series of patients with established cardiac dystrophinopathy have shown that the rate of decline in LV function can be slowed also by the same drug combinations.24–27 However, when introduced after the detection of early, asymptomatic, LV systolic dysfunction, these therapies do not seem to be able to prevent a slower rate of decline over a longer period of time.25

Objectives and hypotheses

The aim of this randomised, multicentre, placebo-controlled trial is to determine whether the introduction of ACEi (perindopril) combined with beta-blocker (bisoprolol) therapy, before the onset of echo-detectable LV systolic dysfunction, can delay the age of onset and/or slow the rate of progression of cardiomyopathy compared with placebo in men aged 5–13 years with DMD. The study is being conducted at four National Health Service (NHS) specialist hospital sites. LV function will be assessed serially over a minimum of 3 years and a maximum of 5 years. The study was designed on the assumption that only one high-quality placebo-controlled trial of prophylactic cardioactive therapy is ever likely to be funded and brought to completion. Patient recruitment began in mid-2011 and the last participant was recruited in January 2015. Patient follow-up is ongoing. Primary hypothesis: starting the combination of perindopril and bisoprolol before there is any evidence of LV systolic dysfunction, detectable by echocardiography, in children with DMD will delay the onset and/or slow the rate of progression of cardiac dystrophinopathy compared with placebo.

Methods and analysis

Patient and public involvement

The study was designed against the background of uncertainties recognised both by clinicians and patient support groups about the value of prophylactic, cardio-specific medications for children with DMD and the optimum age to start therapy. This issue was a common theme raised by parents of boys attending cardiac surveillance clinics. This prompted the development of this clinical trial and the aims, study duration and the therapies to be tested evolved in discussion with patients/patient groups (eg, Action Duchenne, UK; an ENMC workshop with patient representatives; and so on) and clinician experts over several years. The burden of testing for the study was not specifically assessed with patients/patient but was designed to be intentionally low.

Eligibility criteria

At each of the four participating UK hospitals, boys with DMD attend neuromuscular clinics at least annually for supervision of musculoskeletal and respiratory function. Each hospital also has a regular schedule for cardiac surveillance, by which patients have LV function assessed every 2 years before the age of 10 years and annually thereafter in accordance with published DMD care recommendations.28 Males, aged 5 years to less than their 13th birthday, with proximal muscle weakness and genetically confirmed DMD (ie, an out-of-frame deletion or frameshifting point mutation in the dystrophin gene or less than 3% dystrophin expression on muscle biopsy by immunohistochemistry or western blot) were identified from their clinical records ahead of a scheduled neuromuscular or cardiology clinic attendance. The parent(s)/legal guardian(s) of those not already receiving cardiac medications were contacted initially by letter, informed of the nature and purpose of the trial and invited to have their child participate. Parents and children received age-appropriate information documents about the study prior to attending a dedicated study screening clinic. Parents provided written consent, and as far as possible, the assent of children was also obtained prior to study entry as required by local regulations. A screening log was kept by each site of those approached but not recruited to the study. Permission to use their child’s NHS number for tracing in the case of loss to follow-up and for assessment of long-term survival status was also obtained from the parent(s)/legal guardian(s). Boys then underwent baseline testing. This comprised an echocardiogram with tissue Doppler imaging, 12-lead ECG, vitalograph for forced vital capacity (FVC) and forced expiratory volume in the 1 s (FEV1) and peak flow measurements as well as blood sampling for haematology and biochemistry parameters. A parent and the boy also completed core and Neuromuscular disease specific module (NMD) module PedsQual quality of life questionnaires.29 30 To be eligible for randomisation and study enrolment, LV ejection fraction (LVEF), calculated by the 16-segment wall motion score method, had to be ≥55%, fractional shortening (FS) ≥28% and there could not be any LV segmental hypokinesis on baseline echo imaging.

Additional inclusion/exclusion considerations

Current or recent inclusion in a separate natural history trial did not preclude participation in the DMD Heart Protection study. Patients with contraindications to either ACEi or beta-blocker medications were not recruited. Renal function was measured by plasma urea, creatinine and potassium prior to study entry. Patients with abnormal renal function (ie, creatinine>upper limit of local laboratory range; typically >60 mmol/L) or consistently abnormally high serum potassium level (K>upper limit of local laboratory range; typically 5 mmol/L) were also excluded. To achieve blinding throughout the study, participants had to be able to swallow an empty capsule identical in size, colour and shape to that to be used throughout the study at the screening visit to be enrolled in the trial.

Randomisation, blinding and enrolment

Randomisation and dosing

To ensure concealment of allocation, randomisation was performed using the web-based Newcastle Clinical Trials Unit’s Randomisation Service in variable blocks, blocked and stratified by centre. Boys fulfilling study entry criteria were randomised to receive capsules containing both active medications (ie, perindopril 2 mg and bisoprolol 1.25 mg) or an identical placebo capsule (ie, containing an inert filler). All participants took one capsule at bedtime for the first month and those weighing more than 30 kg then increased to two capsules at bedtime thereafter. If a participant’s weight increases to more than 30 kg at any scheduled review, study medication increases to two capsules per day for the remainder of the study.

Blinding

Randomisation to active or placebo combined capsule (1:1 ratio) is double blinded from the point of manufacture and identifiable only by a master code held at the Newcastle Clinical Trials Unit (NCTU). Participants, clinicians, pharmacy and other trial staff are also blinded to treatment allocation. Study drug and placebo capsules are identical in appearance and packaging, identifiable only through the study code numbers on the medication bottles. Following entry of a participant into the study, bottle numbers assigned to him are recorded on the prescription, and a list of bottles received by participants is maintained by the NCTU. Emergency code-break envelopes, one per participant, are stored in the trial pharmacy at sites to allow unblinding in the event of an emergency. Any unblinding is notified to the trial coordinating team and a record will be maintained in both the Trial Master File and the Investigator Site File. Code breaks will not be performed routinely for participants on study completion.

Evaluation and follow-up

All participants are being followed-up 6 monthly for a minimum of 3 years and a maximum of 5 years. At each attendance, participants have height and/or arm span, weight, blood pressure and heart rate measured, and the family is questioned about any adverse events, intercurrent illnesses and need for urgent or elective hospital admissions since last assessed. A list of all concomitant medications and any changes in doses are recorded. Boys have a repeat echocardiogram, 12-lead ECG, peak flow, FEV1 and FVC measurements and both the boy and a parent complete age-appropriate PedsQL, quality of life questionnaires. Families are instructed to bring all used and unused containers of trial medications back with them at each assessment as a way of assessing compliance with their allocated treatment (Table 1).
Table 1

Test schedule for participants in the DMD Heart Protection Trial

Time0 months6 months12 months 18 months 24 months 30 months 36 months 42 months 48 months 54 months 60 months
Inclusion/exclusion screeningX
Parent/guardian written informed consent and participant assentX
RandomisationX
Weight (kg)XXXXXXXXXXX
Height and arm span (cm)XXXXXXXXXXX
Seated blood pressure (mm Hg)XXXXXXXXXXX
Symptom/adverse eventsXXXXXXXXXXX
QoL questionnaires (parent/guardian and participant)XXXXXXXXXXX
12-lead ECGXXXXXXXXXXX
2D echocardiogramXXXXXXXXXXX
LV tissue Doppler imagingXXXXXXXXXXX
FEV1/FVCXXXXXX
Serum biochemistry (potassium, sodium, urea and creatinine)
Biomarker blood sample Once at any time point
MRI of heart (including late Gad sequences) Once at study exit

▲=performed if clinically indicated; Δ=baseline blood test taken to confirm eligibility, if recent results are not available at screening visit. A repeat blood sample may be drawn for the same measurements, when the patient is established on maintenance dosage for the trial, at the discretion of the local PI; X=measure to be performed at that interval.

DMD, Duchenne muscular dystrophy; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in the 1 s; FVC, forced vital capacity respectively; QoL, PedsQL quality of life assessments.

To increase the sensitivity of testing, cardiac MRI (cMRI) will be offered once to each participant as they exit the trial. This will allow supplementary measures of LVEF%, wall thicknesses, chamber dimensions and volume for comparisons between active and placebo cohorts in those who consent to this additional test. Test schedule for participants in the DMD Heart Protection Trial ▲=performed if clinically indicated; Δ=baseline blood test taken to confirm eligibility, if recent results are not available at screening visit. A repeat blood sample may be drawn for the same measurements, when the patient is established on maintenance dosage for the trial, at the discretion of the local PI; X=measure to be performed at that interval. DMD, Duchenne muscular dystrophy; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in the 1 s; FVC, forced vital capacity respectively; QoL, PedsQL quality of life assessments.

Primary outcome variable

The primary outcome variable is change in LVEF%, derived from the 16-segment regional wall motion scoring system, compared with baseline between those receiving combination therapy or placebo over the duration of study participation. To assess the robustness of the echo-derived EF% result, similar comparisons will be made for other parameters of LV size and function, end-systolic and end-diastolic dimensions, LV wall motion index and LV-FS%. Prevalence of segmental, as opposed to global, cardiomyopathy will be compared by tissue Doppler imaging. LV diastolic function will be assessed using mitral-flow-to-left-ventricular-tissue-Doppler ratios (E/E′ ratios).

Secondary outcome variables

cMRI measures of LV size and function as well as the presence, extent and distribution of intramyocardial fibrosis will be compared between active and placebo treated patients. Changes in quality of life measures over the duration of study participation will be compared between active and placebo treated participants using generic and muscle-specific PedsQL questionnaires.29 30 The cause of any deaths will be recorded and compared between groups as will the development of symptoms and/or signs of congestive cardiac failure (CCF). For the purpose of this study, heart failure will be diagnosed by the onset of symptoms of orthopnoea with or without peripheral oedema and objective signs of heart failure—raised jugular venous pressure, third heart sound or gallop rhythm, pulmonary plethora on chest X-ray or similar—all in the context of known advanced LV dysfunction (ie, echocardiogram LVEF <25%). Patients who develop CCF will be withdrawn from intervention but invited to continue follow-up (as per protocol) and treated thereafter at the discretion of clinician managing the patient. However, given the age, study duration and requirement to have normal LV function by all criteria at study entry, it is not anticipated that any participant will meet this heart failure endpoint. Participants who show a progressive reduction in LVEF% on at least two assessments at least 3 months apart, culminating in LVEF ≤35%, will be deemed to have reached a predefined study endpoint, mandating the introduction of active therapy. They will cease trial medications without being unblinded and convert to open-labelled ACEi and beta-blocker therapy. They will be asked to continue under study follow-up. This stipulation is to avoid participants being withdrawn on the basis of subtle changes in heart measures of dubious clinical significance that could subvert the aim of the study.

Definition of end of study

The end of study will be the last patient’s last visit, as agreed with the study sponsor.

Sample size calculation

The sample size was based on a composition of change in LVEF% over the 5-year term of the trial. A difference of 5% between active and placebo-treated groups was considered to be the smallest that would represent a clinically useful gain. The SD of LVEF% has been taken to be 10%, and this gives two groups of 64 subjects to yield a power of 80% at the 5% significance level.31 By recruiting 140 patients, allowance was made for an approximate 10% participant dropout rate from ‘ACE-inhibitor cough’. Since the age of onset of earliest detectable cardiomyopathy is variable, depending on age at recruitment, duration of follow-up, steroid use as well as any impact of specific DMD-mutations, it was not possible to factor these meaningfully into a power calculation.

Statistical analyses

Primary endpoints

All primary analyses will be by intention to treat, incorporating all randomised participants. Safety endpoints will be presented by groups as treated. Change in LVEF% from enrolment to end of trial will be assessed for each participant. Differences between treatment groups will be estimated using analysis of covariance (ANCOVA), with age, body surface area (using the Haycock formula), baseline LVEF%, steroid use and enrolling centre as covariates.

Secondary endpoints

ANCOVA will be used to examine differences between treatment groups in terms of LV-FS%, end-diastolic dimension and wall motion scores, adjusted for baseline value, age, body surface area, steroid use and centre. To assess robustness of LVEF% result, similar comparisons will be made for parameters of echo and MR-imaged LV end-systolic and end-diastolic dimensions, wall thicknesses, wall motion index and LV-FS%. ANCOVA will also be used to examine differences in regional LV systolic function between treatment groups in terms of tissue–Doppler ratios. From late-Gad-enhanced cMRI images at study exit, measures of LVEF%, wall thicknesses, chamber dimensions and volume and presence/extent of LV myocardial fibrosis will be obtained and compared between active and placebo participants. The age of onset of earliest definite, echo-detectable impairment of LV function (ie, wall motion abnormality in >2 contiguous LV segments, ejection fraction >2 SDs below mean for age) will be plotted for each group over the 5-year course of the trial and active-treated and placebo-treated groups will be compared using Kaplan-Meier plots. Changes in quality of life measures (core, NMD-specific and parent proxy PedsQL modules) within participants over the course of the trial and between participants in active-treated and placebo-treated arms will be assessed and resulting scores compared. Safety endpoints will be presented descriptively; no formal testing will be performed. Full details of statistical analysis will be documented in a Statistical Analysis Plan that will be signed off prior to database lock. Subgroup analyses will be used to adjust comparisons for baseline variables (eg, age at recruitment, duration of study participation and steroid use).

Ethics and dissemination

The results will be disseminated through various manuscript publications focusing on different outputs from the study and presentations of results at local, national and international scientific meetings. Headline results will be fed back to participant families shortly after they become available by letter, which will also provide links to more detailed results (eg, study-related publications). Patient support group (eg, Action Duchenne, UK; Duchenne UK) have already offered to assist in publicising the results (eg, via their websites and patient-focused events). We also plan to convene an international workshop of experts, when all results are available, to discuss their implications and whether they should influence management recommendations.

Trial management and data monitoring and ethics committees

Trial steering committee

The Trial Steering Committee (TSC) is composed of an independent chair, independent statistician, the chief investigator/applicant and coapplicants, sponsor/funder representative and representatives of the clinical trials unit (statistician and trial manager). The TSC met twice in the first year and meets annually thereafter. Its role is to supervise the trial to ensure that it is conducted to high standards in accordance with the protocol, the principles of good clinical practice (GCP) and with regard to participant safety. The TSC also considers safety issues for the trial and relevant information from other sources, ensuring at all times that ethical considerations are met when recommending the continuation of the trial.

Data monitoring committee

A committee of three, comprising two clinicians and one statistician, all independent of the trial, act as the Data Monitoring and Ethics Committee. They met once at the beginning of the study to agree monitoring procedures, again in year 2 and are planned to meet finally in year 4. As well as overseeing safety aspects, its role includes arbitrating in the case of any disagreements between the Principle Investigators (PI) at site and the CI over serious adverse events.

Trial management group

A trial management group consisting of the chief investigator, senior trial manager, trial manager, statistician and trial data manager meets quarterly to discuss operational aspects of the trial.

Internal and external inspection

All aspects of the study are also subject to internal oversight by trial management team, internal inspection by representatives of the study sponsor and independent external inspection by regulatory authorities (eg, Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA)) who dictate their own frequency and depth of audit and inspection throughout.

Data handling

A secure system of electronic case report forms is being used for data collection, management and monitoring. Only authorised users with appropriate access permissions are able to enter/view/edit data. All echocardiograms undertaken at recruiting site are being stored locally, and the anonymised images can be made available, if required, to NCTU for later analysis and validation of locally reported results. The quality and retention of study data are the responsibility of NCTU. Data are being collected to standards required by the latest directive on GCP (2005/28/EC) and local policy and will adhere to the Data Protection Act 1998. All study data will be archived in line with sponsor policy (currently15 years). All investigators and their participating institutions are required to permit site monitoring, audits, Research Ethics Committee (REC) and MHRA review and must provide direct access to source data and documents as required for these purposes.

Potential weaknesses in study design

This protocol was conceived originally at a time when cardiac medications were not prescribed routinely even for patients with DMD before the onset of symptomatic heart failure in most hospitals. Although the results of a randomised, placebo-controlled trial of prophylactic perindopril in DMD were known, their clinical significance was debated.52 On this basis, it was concluded that another placebo-controlled study was both necessary and ethically justifiable. Ideally, the study would have had four arms (perindopril alone, bisoprolol alone, perindopril and bisoprolol and placebo alone). However, it rapidly became apparent that there were insufficient potential participants available to recruiting sites to allow that design. Furthermore, the anticipated cost over the study duration planned would have been prohibitive. It was decided, therefore, that this protocol should build on the finding of the earlier perindopril study by recruiting a larger patient cohort and by testing combination (perindopril and bisoprolol) rather than single agent (perindopril) therapy. The optimum age at which to start prophylactic heart therapy is unknown. By recruiting participants as young as 5 years of age, the study aimed to check for intolerance which might outweigh cardiac benefits, particularly in the very young. However, recognising that the youngest recruits were less likely to develop echo-detectable cardiac dysfunction over even the maximum study follow-up of 5 years, the protocol included a prespecified analysis of results by age. The decision to use echo rather than MR assessments for the main outcome measures was discussed repeatedly at the planning stage. Ultimately, echo measures were adopted for the following reasons: (1) young children might not tolerate the length and nature of cMRI without sedation or general anaesthesia. Both were considered unreasonable in a research study planned in 2009; (2) towards the end of study participation, older subjects might not be able to fit comfortably into an MRI scanner due to steroid induced changes in body habitus, scoliosis or limb contractures; and (3) because of respiratory muscle weakness, older patients with DMD do not tolerate lying supine for long without assisted ventilation. Inability to breath-hold adequately and/or patient movement reduce the image quality of cardiac MR scans and so their sensitivity in detecting subtler abnormalities. Furthermore, although cMRI is now used more routinely for surveillance and is more sensitive in detecting cardiac abnormalities at earlier stages in DMD, it was not as widely available in many hospitals in 2009. A further important consideration was that if the findings were ultimately to change the conservative approach to heart management that prevailed when the study was first approved, they would need to be sufficiently robust to convince non-specialists of the benefits of prophylactic therapy. Also, allowing for wide variations in age of onset of detectable cardiac changes in DMD, a study of longer duration using less sensitive heart measures was considered more likely to provide clinically relevant answers than one of shorter duration even using more sensitive assessments. With the increased use and availability of cMRI since the study was first conceived, participants are now being offered cMRI once as they complete follow-up. This will increase the study’s ability to detect subtler differences in cardiac function and in fibrosis between active and placebo arms. Each of the decisions made in developing the final protocol involved compromises and several can legitimately be criticised. However, it is probably only after results become available that it will become clearer whether the best trade-offs were made and whether the protocol should have been optimised differently.

Discussion

It has been known for decades that a progressive form of cardiomyopathy affects almost all patients with DMD.2 32–38 LV function deteriorates progressively without symptoms for most of its course but ultimately contributes to heart failure and premature death in these patients.38 39 Traditionally, cardiac-specific medications were not deployed, because it was assumed that they would be of little benefit except in alleviating heart failure symptoms.40 41 This was based on the knowledge that none of them could correct the underlying dystrophin deficiency, which results in progressive cardiac myocyte damage from cardiac contractions. However, various cohort series have established that glucocorticoid steroid therapy delays the onset of cardiac dystrophinopathy42–46 and that a range of cardiac-specific drugs can slow the rate of deterioration in ventricular function when introduced after cardiomyopathy is detected.26 47–50 Based on current understanding of the cause and course of cardiomyopathy, therapies are more likely to be effective if started before the process has led to functional abnormalities.13 Support for the prophylactic use of ACEi therapy (perindopril) comes from the results of the only randomised, placebo-controlled trial in children with DMD. This found that, although mean LVEF% did not differ between treated and placebo groups after either three or 5 years, LVEF% fell to less than 45% after 5 years in eight of those initially receiving placebo as compared with only one taking perindopril.51 Additionally, early perindopril seemed to be associated with improved survival after 10 years.52 The results are encouraging but the findings have been criticised for a number of shortcomings in study design and the small trial size was not powered to detect a mortality outcome. Some clinicians found the results persuasive and began to deploy prophylactic ACEi therapy routinely. However, others found the available evidence insufficient to justify daily drug-therapy for an average of 5 years before asymptomatic LV dysfunction would usually be detectable. The effect is that although steroid therapy is now recommended routinely for children with DMD, prophylactic ACEi therapy is not, primarily because of the lack of convincing evidence of benefit. Furthermore, even if the benefits of prophylactic ACEi therapy are accepted, available evidence does not define the optimum age for their introduction. Nor is it established whether therapy should be with ACEi alone, ACEi and beta-blocker, aldosterone antagonist alone or a combination of ACEi, beta-blocker and aldosterone antagonist.27 It is even debated whether prophylactic cardiac therapy is really superior to the prompt introduction of combination cardiac therapies on detecting the earliest evidence of ventricular dysfunction.53 This randomised placebo-controlled study protocol was developed in recognition of these therapeutic uncertainties and to improve the evidence base for clinical decision making about how best to protect the hearts of children with DMD using currently available medications.
  47 in total

1.  Limitation of excessive extracellular matrix turnover may contribute to survival benefit of spironolactone therapy in patients with congestive heart failure: insights from the randomized aldactone evaluation study (RALES). Rales Investigators.

Authors:  F Zannad; F Alla; B Dousset; A Perez; B Pitt
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2000-11-28       Impact factor: 29.690

Review 2.  A comprehensive review of the loop diuretics: should furosemide be first line?

Authors:  Kurt A Wargo; William M Banta
Journal:  Ann Pharmacother       Date:  2009-10-20       Impact factor: 3.154

3.  The PedsQL in pediatric patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy: feasibility, reliability, and validity of the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory Neuromuscular Module and Generic Core Scales.

Authors:  Sarah E Davis; Linda S Hynan; Christine A Limbers; C Mariam Andersen; Medrith C Greene; James W Varni; Susan T Iannaccone
Journal:  J Clin Neuromuscul Dis       Date:  2010-03

Review 4.  Dystrophin-Deficient Cardiomyopathy.

Authors:  Forum Kamdar; Daniel J Garry
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2016-05-31       Impact factor: 24.094

Review 5.  X-linked dilated cardiomyopathy and the dystrophin gene.

Authors:  A Ferlini; C Sewry; M A Melis; A Mateddu; F Muntoni
Journal:  Neuromuscul Disord       Date:  1999-07       Impact factor: 4.296

6.  Left ventricular function and response to enalapril in patients with duchenne muscular dystrophy during the second decade of life.

Authors:  Claudio Ramaciotti; Lisa C Heistein; Melanie Coursey; Matthew S Lemler; Reenu S Eapen; Susan T Iannaccone; William A Scott
Journal:  Am J Cardiol       Date:  2006-08-02       Impact factor: 2.778

7.  Relation of aldosterone "escape" despite angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor administration to impaired exercise capacity in chronic congestive heart failure secondary to ischemic or idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy.

Authors:  Mariantonietta Cicoira; Luisa Zanolla; Lorenzo Franceschini; Andrea Rossi; Giorgio Golia; Prisca Zeni; Beatrice Caruso; Piero Zardini
Journal:  Am J Cardiol       Date:  2002-02-15       Impact factor: 2.778

8.  Managing Duchenne muscular dystrophy--the additive effect of spinal surgery and home nocturnal ventilation in improving survival.

Authors:  Michelle Eagle; John Bourke; Robert Bullock; Mike Gibson; Jwalant Mehta; Dave Giddings; Volker Straub; Kate Bushby
Journal:  Neuromuscul Disord       Date:  2007-05-08       Impact factor: 4.296

9.  Absence of Cardiac Benefit with Early Combination ACE Inhibitor and Beta Blocker Treatment in mdx Mice.

Authors:  Alison Blain; Elizabeth Greally; Steven H Laval; Andrew M Blamire; Guy A MacGowan; Volker W Straub
Journal:  J Cardiovasc Transl Res       Date:  2015-04-21       Impact factor: 4.132

10.  A randomized, double-blind trial of lisinopril and losartan for the treatment of cardiomyopathy in duchenne muscular dystrophy.

Authors:  Hugh D Allen; Kevin M Flanigan; Philip T Thrush; Igor Dvorchik; Han Yin; Charles Canter; Anne M Connolly; Mark Parrish; Craig M McDonald; Elizabeth Braunlin; Steven D Colan; John Day; Basil Darras; Jerry R Mendell
Journal:  PLoS Curr       Date:  2013-12-12
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  5 in total

1.  Preventing Cardiomyopathy in DMD: A Randomized Placebo-Controlled Drug Trial.

Authors:  John P Bourke; Gillian Watson; Stefan Spinty; Andrew Bryant; Helen Roper; Thomas Chadwick; Ruth Wood; Elaine McColl; Kate Bushby; Francesco Muntoni; Michela Guglieri
Journal:  Neurol Clin Pract       Date:  2021-10

Review 2.  The Added Value of Cardiac Magnetic Resonance in Muscular Dystrophies.

Authors:  Mariana M Lamacie; Jodi Warman-Chardon; Andrew M Crean; Anca Florian; Karim Wahbi
Journal:  J Neuromuscul Dis       Date:  2019

3.  Quantitative assessment of left ventricular longitudinal function and myocardial deformation in Duchenne muscular dystrophy patients.

Authors:  Roman Panovský; Martin Pešl; Jan Máchal; Tomáš Holeček; Věra Feitová; Lenka Juříková; Lucia Masárová; Eva Pešlová; Lukáš Opatřil; Mary Luz Mojica-Pisciotti; Vladimír Kincl
Journal:  Orphanet J Rare Dis       Date:  2021-01-30       Impact factor: 4.123

4.  A medium-chain triglyceride containing ketogenic diet exacerbates cardiomyopathy in a CRISPR/Cas9 gene-edited rat model with Duchenne muscular dystrophy.

Authors:  Yuri Fujikura; Koichi Kimura; Keitaro Yamanouchi; Hidetoshi Sugihara; Masaki Hatakeyama; Haotong Zhuang; Tomoki Abe; Masao Daimon; Hiroyuki Morita; Issei Komuro; Katsutaka Oishi
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-07-08       Impact factor: 4.996

5.  Muscle and cardiac therapeutic strategies for Duchenne muscular dystrophy: past, present, and future.

Authors:  Agnieszka Łoboda; Józef Dulak
Journal:  Pharmacol Rep       Date:  2020-07-20       Impact factor: 3.024

  5 in total

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