Longitudinal multi-modal muscle-based biomarker assessment in motor neuron disease

Background Clinical phenotypic heterogeneity represents a major barrier to trials in motor neuron disease (MND) and objective surrogate outcome measures are required, especially for slowly progressive patients. We assessed responsiveness of clinical, electrophysiological and radiological muscle-base...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of neurology 2020-01, Vol.267 (1), p.244-256
Hauptverfasser: Jenkins, Thomas M., Alix, James J. P., Fingret, Jacob, Esmail, Taniya, Hoggard, Nigel, Baster, Kathleen, McDermott, Christopher J., Wilkinson, Iain D., Shaw, Pamela J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Clinical phenotypic heterogeneity represents a major barrier to trials in motor neuron disease (MND) and objective surrogate outcome measures are required, especially for slowly progressive patients. We assessed responsiveness of clinical, electrophysiological and radiological muscle-based assessments to detect MND-related progression. Materials and methods A prospective, longitudinal cohort study of 29 MND patients and 22 healthy controls was performed. Clinical measures, electrophysiological motor unit number index/size (MUNIX/MUSIX) and relative T2- and diffusion-weighted whole-body muscle magnetic resonance (MR) were assessed three times over 12 months. Multi-variable regression models assessed between-group differences, clinico-electrophysiological associations, and longitudinal changes. Standardized response means (SRMs) assessed sensitivity to change over 12 months. Results MND patients exhibited 18% higher whole-body mean muscle relative T2-signal than controls (95% CI 7–29%, p  
ISSN:0340-5354
1432-1459
DOI:10.1007/s00415-019-09580-x