Journal article icon

Journal article

PRION-1 scales analysis supports use of functional outcome measures in prion disease.

Abstract:
OBJECTIVES: Human prion diseases are heterogeneous but invariably fatal neurodegenerative disorders with no known effective therapy. PRION-1, the largest clinical trial in prion disease to date, showed no effect of the potential therapeutic quinacrine on survival. Although there are several limitations to the usefulness of survival as an outcome measure, there have been no comprehensive studies of alternatives. METHODS: To address this we did comparative analyses of neurocognitive, psychiatric, global, clinician-rated, and functional scales, focusing on validity, variability, and impact on statistical power over 77 person-years follow-up in 101 symptomatic patients in PRION-1. RESULTS: Quinacrine had no demonstrable benefit on any of the 8 scales (p > 0.4). All scales had substantial numbers of patients with the worst possible score at enrollment (Glasgow Coma Scale score being least affected) and were impacted by missing data due to disease progression. These effects were more significant for cognitive/psychiatric scales than global, clinician-rated, or functional scales. The Barthel and Clinical Dementia Rating scales were the most valid and powerful in simulated clinical trials of an effective therapeutic. A combination of selected subcomponents from these 2 scales gave somewhat increased power, compared to use of survival, to detect clinically relevant effects in future clinical trials of feasible size. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings have implications for the choice of primary outcome measure in prion disease clinical trials. Prion disease presents the unusual opportunity to follow patients with a neurodegenerative disease through their entire clinical course, and this provides insights relevant to designing outcome measures in related conditions.
Publication status:
Published

Actions


Access Document


Publisher copy:
10.1212/wnl.0b013e3182364890

Authors



Journal:
Neurology More from this journal
Volume:
77
Issue:
18
Pages:
1674-1683
Publication date:
2011-11-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1526-632X
ISSN:
0028-3878


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:422605
UUID:
uuid:8cd9e738-277f-482d-9dcf-46923fed65ff
Local pid:
pubs:422605
Source identifiers:
422605
Deposit date:
2014-02-08

Terms of use



Views and Downloads






If you are the owner of this record, you can report an update to it here: Report update to this record

TO TOP