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Therapeutic role of nusinersen on respiratory progression in pediatric patients with spinal muscular atrophy type 2 and nonambulant type 3

Abstract:
Background and Objectives
Nusinersen has shown significant functional motor benefit in the milder types of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA). Less is known on the respiratory outcomes in patients with nusinersen-treated SMA. The aim of this study was to describe changes in respiratory function in pediatric patients with SMA type 2 and 3 on regular treatment with nusinersen within the iSMAc international cohort and to compare their trajectory with the natural history (NH) data published by the consortium in 2020.

Methods
This is a 5-year retrospective observational study of pediatric SMA type 2 and nonambulant type 3 (age ≤18 years) treated with nusinersen. The primary objective was to compare the slopes of decline in forced vital capacity % predicted (FVC% pred.), FVC, and age when FVC dropped below 60% between the treated patients and a control group from the natural history cohort. Data on peak cough flow and the use of noninvasive ventilation (NIV) and cough assist were collected.

Results
Data were available for 69 treated patients, 53 were SMA type 2 and 16 type 3. The mean (SD) age at first injection was 8.5 (3.2) and 9.7 (3.7) years, respectively. The median (interquartile range) treatment duration was 1 (0.7; 1.9) and 1.2 (0.9; 1.9) years, respectively. At the time of the first nusinersen injection, 24 of 52 (46%) patients with SMA type 2 and 2 of 16 (13%) patients with SMA type 3 were on NIV. Forty-three of 53 (81%) and 4 of 16 (25%) patients used cough device. FVC% pred. in treated patients with SMA type 2 declined annually by 2.3% vs 3.9% in NH (p = 0.08) and in treated patients with type 3 by 2.6% vs 3.4% NH (p = 0.59). Patients treated reached FVC <60% later than untreated (12.1 vs 10 years, p = 0.05). A higher percentage of treated vs untreated patients maintained FVC% pred. equal/above their baseline after 12 (65% vs 36%) and 24 (50% vs 24%) months, respectively. NIV use among treated did not significantly change throughout 1-year follow-up.

Discussion
This study included the largest real-world cohort of pediatric patients with milder SMA types. The results suggest a positive role of nusinersen in delaying the respiratory decline in patients treated longer than 1 year when compared with natural history. Larger cohorts and longer observation are planned.

Classification of Evidence
This study provided Class III evidence that nusinersen slows progression for patients with SMA types 2 and 3 compared with a natural history cohort.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1212/cpj.0000000000200298

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Contributor


Publisher:
American Academy of Neurology
Journal:
Neurology: Clinical Practice More from this journal
Volume:
14
Issue:
3
Article number:
e200298
Place of publication:
United States
Publication date:
2024-05-17
Acceptance date:
2024-03-19
DOI:
EISSN:
2163-0933
ISSN:
2163-0402
Pmid:
38932995


Language:
English
Pubs id:
2011045
UUID:
uuid_6a4885e6-0995-459f-81fb-7a9144d27f0c
Local pid:
pubs:2011045
Source identifiers:
W4397042038
Deposit date:
2025-12-11
ARK identifier:

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