26 results on '"Manisha Chopra"'
Search Results
2. Epidemiological evidence for a hereditary contribution to myasthenia gravis: a retrospective cohort study of patients from North America
- Author
-
Joel Oger, Joshua D Green, Bryan J Traynor, Richard J Barohn, Michael Benatar, Emanuela Bartoccion, Derrick Blackmore, Manisha Chopra, Andrea Corse, Mazen M Dimachkie, Amelia Evoli, Julaine Florence, Miriam Freimer, James F Howard, Theresa Jiwa, Henry J Kaminski, John T Kissel, Wilma J Koopman, Bernadette Lipscomb, Michelanglo Maestri, Mariapaola Marino, Janice M Massey, April McVey, Michelle M Mezei, Michael W Nicolle, Robert M Pascuzzi, Mamatha Pasnoor, Alan Pestronk, Carlo Provenzano, Roberta Ricciardi, David P Richman, Julie Rowin, Donald B Sanders, Zaeem Siddiqi, Aimee Soloway, Gil I Wolfe, Charlie Wulf, and Daniel B Drachman
- Subjects
Medicine - Abstract
Objectives To approximate the rate of familial myasthenia gravis and the coexistence of other autoimmune disorders in the patients and their families.Design Retrospective cohort study.Setting Clinics across North America.Participants The study included 1032 patients diagnosed with acetylcholine receptor antibody (AChR)-positive myasthenia gravis.Methods Phenotype information of 1032 patients diagnosed with AChR-positive myasthenia gravis was obtained from clinics at 14 centres across North America between January 2010 and January 2011. A critical review of the epidemiological literature on the familial rate of myasthenia gravis was also performed.Results Among 1032 patients, 58 (5.6%) reported a family history of myasthenia gravis. A history of autoimmune diseases was present in 26.6% of patients and in 28.4% of their family members.Discussion The familial rate of myasthenia gravis was higher than would be expected for a sporadic disease. Furthermore, a high proportion of patients had a personal or family history of autoimmune disease. Taken together, these findings suggest a genetic contribution to the pathogenesis of myasthenia gravis.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Safety and efficacy of zilucoplan in patients with generalised myasthenia gravis (RAISE): a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3 study
- Author
-
James F Howard, Saskia Bresch, Angela Genge, Channa Hewamadduma, John Hinton, Yessar Hussain, Raul Juntas-Morales, Henry J Kaminski, Angelina Maniaol, Renato Mantegazza, Masayuki Masuda, Kumaraswamy Sivakumar, Marek Śmiłowski, Kimiaki Utsugisawa, Tuan Vu, Michael D Weiss, Małgorzata Zajda, Babak Boroojerdi, Melissa Brock, Guillemette de la Borderie, Petra W Duda, Romana Lowcock, Mark Vanderkelen, M Isabel Leite, Dylan Sembinelli, Jeanne Teitelbaum, Michael Nicolle, Emilien Bernard, Juliette Svahn, Marco Spinazzi, Tanya Stojkovic, Sophie Demeret, Nicolas Weiss, Loïc Le Guennec, Sihame Messai, Christine Tranchant, Aleksandra Nadaj-Pakleza, Jean-Baptiste Chanson, Muhtadi Suliman, Leila Zaidi, Celine Tard, Peggy Lecointe, Jana Zschüntzsch, Jens Schmidt, Stefanie Glaubitz, Rachel Zeng, Matthias Scholl, Markus Kowarik, Ulf Ziemann, Markus Krumbholz, Pascal Martin, Christoph Ruschil, Jutta Dünschede, Roswitha Kemmner, Natalie Rumpel, Benjamin Berger, Andreas Totzeck, Tim Hagenacker, Benjamin Stolte, Raffaele Iorio, Amelia Evoli, Silvia Falso, Carlo Antozzi, Rita Frangiamore, Fiammetta Vanoli, Elena Rinaldi, Kazushi Deguchi, Naoya Minami, Yuriko Nagane, Yasushi Suzuki, Sayaka Ishida, Shigeaki Suzuki, Jin Nakahara, Astushi Nagaoka, Shunsuke Yoshimura, Shingo Konno, Youko Tsuya, Akiyuki Uzawa, Tomoya Kubota, Masanori Takahashi, Tatsusada Okuno, Hiroyuki Murai, Nils Erik Gilhus, Marion Boldingh, Tone Hakvåg Rønning, Urszula Chyrchel-Paszkiewicz, Klaudiusz Kumor, Tomasz Zielinski, Krzysztof Banaszkiewicz, Michał Błaż, Agata Kłósek, Mariola Świderek-Matysiak, Andrzej Szczudlik, Aneta Paśko, Lech Szczechowski, Marta Banach, Jan Ilkowski, Solange Kapetanovic Garcia, Patricia Ortiz Bagan, Ana Belén Cánovas Segura, Joana Turon Sans, Nuria Vidal Fernandez, Elena Cortes Vicente, Patricia Rodrigo Armenteros, Mohammad Ashraghi, Ana Cavey, Liam Haslam, Anna Emery, Kore Liow, Sharon Yegiaian, Alexandru Barboi, Rosa Maria Vazquez, Joshua Lennon, Robert M Pascuzzi, Cynthia Bodkin, Sandra Guingrich, Adam Comer, Mark Bromberg, Teresa Janecki, Sami Saba, Marco Tellez, Bakri Elsheikh, Miriam Freimer, Sarah Heintzman, Raghav Govindarajan, Jeffrey Guptill, Janice M Massey, Vern Juel, Natalia Gonzalez, Ali A Habib, Tahseen Mozaffar, Manisha Korb, Namita Goyal, Hannah Machemehl, Georgios Manousakis, Jeffrey Allen, Emily Harper, Constantine Farmakidis, Lilli Saavedra, Mazen Dimachkie, Mamatha Pasnoor, Salma Akhter, Said Beydoun, Courtney McIlduff, Joan Nye, Bhaskar Roy, Bailey Munro Sheldon, Richard Nowak, Benjamin Barnes, Michael Rivner, Niraja Suresh, Jessica Shaw, Brittany Harvey, Lucy Lam, Nikki Thomas, Manisha Chopra, Rebecca E Traub, Sarah Jones, Mary Wagoner, Sejla Smajic, Radwa Aly, Jonathan Katz, Henry Chen, Robert G Miller, Liberty Jenkins, Shaida Khan, Bhupendra Khatri, Lisa Sershon, Pantelis Pavlakis, Shara Holzberg, Yuebing Li, Irys B Caristo, Robert Marquardt, Debbie Hastings, Jacob Rube, Robert P Lisak, Aparna Choudhury, Katherine Ruzhansky, Amit Sachdev, Susan Shin, Joan Bratton, Mary Fetter, Naya McKinnon, Jonathan McKinnon, Laura Sissons-Ross, Amos Sahu, and B Jane Distad
- Subjects
Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2023
4. Reduced plasmablast frequency is associated with seronegative myasthenia gravis
- Author
-
Manisha Chopra, Janice M. Massey, Cliburn Chan, Henry J. Kaminski, Alex Hammett, Richard Barfield, Doug Emmett, Vern C. Juel, James F. Howard, Jeffrey T. Guptill, Zaeem A. Siddiqi, Natalia Gonzalez, John S. Yi, Karissa L. Gable, Mattingly Migdal, Lisa D. Hobson-Webb, Shruti M. Raja, and Melissa A. Russo
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Physiology ,T cell ,Plasma Cells ,030105 genetics & heredity ,CD19 ,Flow cytometry ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immune system ,Physiology (medical) ,Immunopathology ,Myasthenia Gravis ,medicine ,Humans ,Receptors, Cholinergic ,Aged ,Autoantibodies ,CD20 ,biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Chemistry ,Interleukin ,Middle Aged ,Flow Cytometry ,medicine.disease ,Myasthenia gravis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Biomarkers ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background The immunopathology of autoimmune seronegative myasthenia gravis (SN MG) is poorly understood. Our objective was to determine immune profiles associated with a diagnosis of SN MG. Methods We performed high-dimensional flow cytometry on blood samples from SN MG patients (N = 68), healthy controls (N = 46), and acetylcholine receptor antibody (AChR+) MG patients (N = 27). We compared 12 immune cell subsets in SN MG to controls using logistic modeling via a discovery-replication design. An exploratory analysis fit a multinomial model comparing AChR+ MG and controls to SN MG. Results An increase in CD19+ CD20- CD38hi plasmablast frequencies was associated with lower odds of being a SN MG case in both the discovery and replication analyses (discovery P-value = .0003, replication P-value = .0021). Interleukin (IL) -21 producing helper T cell frequencies were associated with a diagnosis of AChR+ MG (P = .004). Conclusions Reduced plasmablast frequencies are strongly associated with a SN MG diagnosis and may be a useful diagnostic biomarker in the future.
- Published
- 2020
5. Classical Complement Pathway Inhibition in a 'Human-On-A-Chip' Model of Autoimmune Demyelinating Neuropathies
- Author
-
John W. Rumsey, Case Lorance, Max Jackson, Trevor Sasserath, Christopher W. McAleer, Christopher J. Long, Arindom Goswami, Melissa A. Russo, Shruti M. Raja, Karissa L. Gable, Doug Emmett, Lisa D. Hobson‐Webb, Manisha Chopra, James F. Howard, Jeffrey T. Guptill, Michael J. Storek, Miguel Alonso‐Alonso, Nazem Atassi, Sandip Panicker, Graham Parry, Timothy Hammond, and James J. Hickman
- Subjects
Pharmacology ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Genetics (clinical) ,Article - Abstract
Chronic autoimmune demyelinating neuropathies are a group of rare neuromuscular disorders with complex, poorly characterized etiology. Here we describe a phenotypic, human-on-a-chip (HoaC) electrical conduction model of two rare autoimmune demyelinating neuropathies, chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP) and multifocal motor neuropathy (MMN), and explore the efficacy of TNT005, a monoclonal antibody inhibitor of the classical complement pathway. Patient sera was shown to contain anti-GM1 IgM and IgG antibodies capable of binding to human primary Schwann cells and induced pluripotent stem cell derived motoneurons. Patient autoantibody binding was sufficient to activate the classical complement pathway resulting in detection of C3b and C5b-9 deposits. A HoaC model, using a microelectrode array with directed axonal outgrowth over the electrodes treated with patient sera, exhibited reductions in motoneuron action potential frequency and conduction velocity. TNT005 rescued the serum-induced complement deposition and functional deficits while treatment with an isotype control antibody had no rescue effect. These data indicate that complement activation by CIDP and MMN patient serum is sufficient to mimic neurophysiological features of each disease and that complement inhibition with TNT005 was sufficient to rescue these pathological effects and provide efficacy data included in an investigational new drug application, demonstrating the model's translational potential.
- Published
- 2022
6. Post-intervention Status in Patients With Refractory Myasthenia Gravis Treated With Eculizumab During REGAIN and Its Open-Label Extension
- Author
-
Mantegazza, R., Wolfe, G. I., Muppidi, S., Wiendl, H., Fujita, K. P., O'Brien, F. L., Booth, H. D. E., Howard, J. F., Claudio Gabriel Mazia, Miguel, Wilken, Fabio, Barroso, Juliet, Saba, Marcelo, Rugiero, Mariela, Bettini, Marcelo, Chaves, Gonzalo, Vidal, Alejandra Dalila Garcia, Jan De Bleecker, Guy Van den Abeele, Kathy de Koning, Katrien De Mey, Rudy, Mercelis, Délphine, Mahieu, Linda, Wagemaekers, Philip Van Damme, Annelies, Depreitere, Caroline, Schotte, Charlotte, Smetcoren, Olivier, Stevens, Sien Van Daele, Nicolas, Vandenbussche, Annelies, Vanhee, Sarah, Verjans, Jan, Vynckier, Ann, D'Hont, Petra, Tilkin, Alzira Alves de Siqueira Carvalho, Igor Dias Brockhausen, David, Feder, Daniel, Ambrosio, Gabor Lovasamela César, Ana Paula Melo, Renata Martins Ribeiro, Rosana, Rocha, Bruno Bezerra Rosa, Thabata, Veiga, Luiz Augusto da Silva, Murilo Santos Engel, Jordana Gonçalves Geraldo, Maria da Penha Ananias Morita, Erica Nogueira Coelho, Gabriel, Paiva, Marina, Pozo, Natalia, Prando, Debora Dada Martineli Torres, Cristiani Fernanda Butinhao, Gustavo, Duran, Tomás Augusto Suriane Fialho, Tamires Cristina Gomes da Silva, Luiz Otavio Maia Gonçalves, Lucas Eduardo Pazetto, Luciana Renata Cubas Volpe, Luciana Souza Duca, Maurício AndréGheller Friedrich, Alexandre, Guerreiro, Henrique, Mohr, Maurer Pereira Martins, Daiane da Cruz Pacheco, Luciana, Ferreira, Ana Paula Macagnan, Graziela, Pinto, Aline de Cassia Santos, Acary Souza Bulle Oliveira, Ana Carolina Amaral de Andrade, Marcelo, Annes, Liene Duarte Silva, Valeria Cavalcante Lino, Wladimir, Pinto, Natália, Assis, Fernanda, Carrara, Carolina, Miranda, Iandra, Souza, Patrícia, Fernandes, Zaeem, Siddiqi, Cecile, Phan, Jeffrey, Narayan, Derrick, Blackmore, Ashley, Mallon, Rikki, Roderus, Elizabeth, Watt, Stanislav, Vohanka, Josef, Bednarik, Magda, Chmelikova, Marek, Cierny, Stanislava, Toncrova, Jana, Junkerova, Barbora, Kurkova, Katarina, Reguliova, Olga, Zapletalova, Jiri, Pitha, Iveta, Novakova, Michaela, Tyblova, Ivana, Jurajdova, Marcela, Wolfova, Henning, Andersen, Thomas, Harbo, Lotte, Vinge, Susanne, Krogh, Anita, Mogensen, John, Vissing, Joan, Højgaard, Nanna, Witting, Anne Mette Ostergaard Autzen, Jane, Pedersen, Juha-Pekka, Erälinna, Mikko, Laaksonen, Olli, Oksaranta, Tuula, Harrison, Jaana, Eriksson, Csilla, Rozsa, Melinda, Horvath, Gabor, Lovas, Judit, Matolcsi, Gedeonne, Jakab, Gyorgyi, Szabo, Brigitta, Szabadosne, Laszlo, Vecsei, Livia, Dezsi, Edina, Varga, Monika, Konyane, Antonini, Giovanni, Antonella Di Pasquale, Garibaldi, Matteo, Morino, Stefania, Troili, Fernanda, Fionda, Laura, Amelia, Evoli, Paolo Emilio Alboini, Valentina, D'Amato, Raffaele, Iorio, Inghilleri, Maurizio, Frasca, Vittorio, Elena, Giacomelli, Gori, MARIA CRISTINA, Diego, Lopergolo, Onesti, Emanuela, Maria, Gabriele, Francesco, Saccà, Alessandro, Filla, Teresa, Costabile, Enrico, Marano, Angiola, Fasanaro, Angela, Marsili, Giorgia, Puorro, Carlo, Antozzi, Silvia, Bonanno, Giorgia, Camera, Alberta, Locatelli, Lorenzo, Maggi, Maria, Pasanisi, Angela, Campanella, Akiyuki, Uzawa, Tetsuya, Kanai, Naoki, Kawaguchi, Masahiro, Mori, Yoko, Kaneko, Akiko, Kanzaki, Eri, Kobayashi, Hiroyuki, Murai, Katsuhisa, Masaki, Dai, Matsuse, Takuya, Matsushita, Taira, Uehara, Misa, Shimpo, Maki, Jingu, Keiko, Kikutake, Yumiko, Nakamura, Yoshiko, Sano, Kimiaki, Utsugisawa, Yuriko, Nagane, Ikuko, Kamegamori, Tomoko, Tsuda, Yuko, Fujii, Kazumi, Futono, Yukiko, Ozawa, Aya, Mizugami, Yuka, Saito, Makoto, Samukawa, Hidekazu, Suzuki, Miyuki, Morikawa, Sachiko, Kamakura, Eriko, Miyawaki, Meinoshin, Okumura, Soichiro, Funaka, Tomohiro, Kawamura, Masayuki, Nakamori, Masanori, Takahashi, Namie, Taichi, Tomoya, Hasuike, Eriko, Higuchi, Hisako, Kobayashi, Kaori, Osakada, Hirokazu, Shiraishi, Teiichiro, Miyazaki, Masakatsu, Motomura, Akihiro, Mukaino, Shunsuke, Yoshimura, Shizuka, Asada, Seiko, Yoshida, Shoko, Amamoto, Tomomi, Kobashikawa, Megumi, Koga, Maeda, Yasuko, Kazumi, Takada, Mihoko, Takada, Masako, Tsurumaru, Yumi, Yamashita, Yasushi, Suzuki, Tetsuya, Akiyama, Koichi, Narikawa, Ohito, Tano, Kenichi, Tsukita, Rikako, Kurihara, Fumie, Meguro, Yusuke, Fukuda, Miwako, Sato, Tomihiro, Imai, Emiko, Tsuda, Shun, Shimohama, Takashi, Hayashi, Shin, Hisahara, Jun, Kawamata, Takashi, Murahara, Masaki, Saitoh, Shuichiro, Suzuki, Daisuke, Yamamoto, Yoko, Ishiyama, Naoko, Ishiyama, Mayuko, Noshiro, Rumi, Takeyama, Kaori, Uwasa, Ikuko, Yasuda, Anneke van der Kooi, Marianne de Visser, Tamar, Gibson, Byung-Jo, Kim, Chang Nyoung Lee, Yong Seo Koo, Hung Youl Seok, Hoo Nam Kang, Hyejin, Ra, Byoung Joon Kim, Eun Bin Cho, Misong, Choi, Hyelim, Lee, Ju-Hong, Min, Jinmyoung, Seok, Jieun, Lee, Da Yoon Koh, Juyoung, Kwon, Sangae, Park, Eun Haw Choi, Yoon-Ho, Hong, So-Hyun, Ahn, Dae Lim Koo, Jae-Sung, Lim, Chae Won Shin, Ji Ye Hwang, Miri, Kim, Seung Min Kim, Ha-Neul, Jeong, Jinwoo, Jung, Yool-Hee, Kim, Hyung Seok Lee, Ha Young Shin, Eun Bi Hwang, Miju, Shin, Carlos, Casasnovas, Maria Antonia Alberti Aguilo, Christian, Homedes-Pedret, Natalia Julia Palacios, Laura Diez Porras, Valentina Velez Santamaria, Ana, Lazaro, Josep Gamez Carbonell, Pilar, Sune, Maria Salvado Figueras, Gisela, Gili, Gonzalo, Mazuela, Isabel, Illa, Elena Cortes Vicente, Jordi, Diaz-Manera, Luis Antonio Querol Gutiérrez, Ricardo Rojas Garcia, Nuria, Vidal, Elisabet, Arribas-Ibar, Exuperio Diez Tejedor, Pilar Gomez Salcedo, Mireya, Fernandez-Fournier, Pedro Lopez Ruiz, Francisco Javier Rodriguez de Rivera, Maria, Sastre, Fredrik, Piehl, Albert, Hietala, Lena, Bjarbo, Ihsan, Sengun, Arzu, Meherremova, Pinar, Ozcelik, Bengu, Balkan, Celal, Tuga, Muzeyyen, Ugur, Sevim, Erdem-Ozdamar, Can Ebru Bekircan-Kurt, Nazire Pinar Acar, Ezgi, Yilmaz, Yagmur, Caliskan, Gulsah, Orsel, Husnu, Efendi, Seda, Aydinlik, Hakan, Cavus, Ayse, Kutlu, Gulsah, Becerikli, Cansu, Semiz, Ozlem, Tun, Murat, Terzi, Baki, Dogan, Musa Kazim Onar, Sedat, Sen, Tugce Kirbas Cavdar, Adife, Veske, Fiona, Norwood, Aikaterini, Dimitriou, Jakit, Gollogly, Mohamed, Mahdi-Rogers, Arshira, Seddigh, Giannis, Sokratous, Gal, Maier, Faisal, Sohail, Saiju, Jacob, Girija, Sadalage, Pravin, Torane, Claire, Brown, Amna, Shah, Sivakumar, Sathasivam, Heike, Arndt, Debbie, Davies, Dave, Watling, Anthony, Amato, Thomas, Cochrane, Mohammed, Salajegheh, Kristen, Roe, Katherine, Amato, Shirli, Toska, Nicholas, Silvestri, Kara, Patrick, Karen, Zakalik, Jonathan, Katz, Robert, Miller, Marguerite, Engel, Dallas, Forshew, Elena, Bravver, Benjamin, Brooks, Mohammed, Sanjak, Sarah, Plevka, Maryanne, Burdette, Scott, Cunningham, Megan, Kramer, Joanne, Nemeth, Clara, Schommer, Tierney, Scott, Vern, Juel, Jeffrey, Guptill, Lisa, Hobson-Webb, Janice, Massey, Kate, Beck, Donna, Carnes, John, Loor, Amanda, Anderson, Robert, Pascuzzi, Cynthia, Bodkin, John, Kincaid, Riley, Snook, Sandra, Guingrich, Angela, Micheels, Vinay, Chaudhry, Andrea, Corse, Betsy, Mosmiller, Andrea, Kelley, Doreen, Ho, Jayashri, Srinivasan, Michal, Vytopil, Jordan, Jara, Nicholas, Ventura, Cynthia, Carter, Craig, Donahue, Carol, Herbert, Stephanie, Scala, Elaine, Weiner, Sharmeen, Alam, Jonathan, Mckinnon, Laura, Haar, Naya, Mckinnon, Karan, Alcon, Kaitlyn, Mckenna, Nadia, Sattar, Kevin, Daniels, Dennis, Jeffery, Miriam, Freimer, Joseph Chad Hoyle, John, Kissel, Julie, Agriesti, Sharon, Chelnick, Louisa, Mezache, Colleen, Pineda, Filiz, Muharrem, Chafic, Karam, Julie, Khoury, Tessa, Marburger, Harpreet, Kaur, Diana, Dimitrova, James, Gilchrist, Brajesh, Agrawal, Mona, Elsayed, Stephanie, Kohlrus, Angela, Ardoin, Taylor, Darnell, Laura, Golden, Barbara, Lokaitis, Jenna, Seelbach, Neelam, Goyal, Sarada, Sakamuri, Yuen, T So, Shirley, Paulose, Sabrina, Pol, Lesly, Welsh, Ratna, Bhavaraju-Sanka, Alejandro Tobon Gonzalez, Lorraine, Dishman, Floyd, Jones, Anna, Gonzalez, Patricia, Padilla, Amy, Saklad, Marcela, Silva, Sharon, Nations, Jaya, Trivedi, Steve, Hopkins, Mohamed, Kazamel, Mohammad, Alsharabati, Liang, Lu, Kenkichi, Nozaki, Sandi, Mumfrey-Thomas, Amy, Woodall, Tahseen, Mozaffar, Tiyonnoh, Cash, Namita, Goyal, Gulmohor, Roy, Veena, Mathew, Fatima, Maqsood, Brian, Minton, H James Jones, Jeffrey, Rosenfeld, Rebekah, Garcia, Laura, Echevarria, Sonia, Garcia, Michael, Pulley, Shachie, Aranke, Alan Ross Berger, Jaimin, Shah, Yasmeen, Shabbir, Lisa, Smith, Mary, Varghese, Laurie, Gutmann, Ludwig, Gutmann, Nivedita, Jerath, Christopher, Nance, Andrea, Swenson, Heena, Olalde, Nicole, Kressin, Jeri, Sieren, Richard, Barohn, Mazen, Dimachkie, Melanie, Glenn, April, Mcvey, Mamatha, Pasnoor, Jeffery, Statland, Yunxia, Wang, Tina, Liu, Kelley, Emmons, Nicole, Jenci, Jerry, Locheke, Alex, Fondaw, Kathryn, Johns, Gabrielle, Rico, Maureen, Walsh, Laura, Herbelin, Charlene, Hafer-Macko, Justin, Kwan, Lindsay, Zilliox, Karen, Callison, Valerie, Young, Beth, Disanzo, Kerry, Naunton, Michael, Benatar, Martin, Bilsker, Khema, Sharma, Anne, Cooley, Eliana, Reyes, Sara-Claude, Michon, Danielle, Sheldon, Julie, Steele, Rebecca, Traub, Manisha, Chopra, Tuan, Vu, Lara, Katzin, Terry, Mcclain, Brittany, Harvey, Adam, Hart, Kristin, Huynh, Said, Beydoun, Amaiak, Chilingaryan, Victor, Doan, Brian, Droker, Hui, Gong, Sanaz, Karimi, Frank, Lin, Krishna, Polaka, Akshay, Shah, Anh, Tran, Salma, Akhter, Ali, Malekniazi, Rup, Tandan, Michael, Hehir, Waqar, Waheed, Shannon, Lucy, Michael, Weiss, Jane, Distad, Susan, Strom, Sharon, Downing, Bryan, Kim, Tulio, Bertorini, Thomas, Arnold, Kendrick, Henderson, Rekha, Pillai, Liu, Ye, Lauren, Wheeler, Jasmine, Hewlett, Mollie, Vanderhook, Richard, Nowak, Daniel, Dicapua, Benison, Keung, Aditya, Kumar, Huned, Patwa, Kimberly, Robeson, Irene, Yang, Joan, Nye, and Hong, Vu
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Clinical Neurology ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Placebo ,Article ,Antibodies ,Post-intervention ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,Refractory ,law ,Internal medicine ,Monoclonal ,Myasthenia Gravis ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Humans ,Medicine ,Humanized ,Science & Technology ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,Eculizumab ,Complement Inactivating Agents ,Female ,Treatment Outcome ,EFFICACY ,medicine.disease ,Myasthenia gravis ,Clinical trial ,030104 developmental biology ,SAFETY ,Neurosciences & Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,COMPLEMENT INHIBITOR ECULIZUMAB ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
ObjectiveTo evaluate whether eculizumab helps patients with anti–acetylcholine receptor–positive (AChR+) refractory generalized myasthenia gravis (gMG) achieve the Myasthenia Gravis Foundation of America (MGFA) post-intervention status of minimal manifestations (MM), we assessed patients' status throughout REGAIN (Safety and Efficacy of Eculizumab in AChR+ Refractory Generalized Myasthenia Gravis) and its open-label extension.MethodsPatients who completed the REGAIN randomized controlled trial and continued into the open-label extension were included in this tertiary endpoint analysis. Patients were assessed for the MGFA post-intervention status of improved, unchanged, worse, MM, and pharmacologic remission at defined time points during REGAIN and through week 130 of the open-label study.ResultsA total of 117 patients completed REGAIN and continued into the open-label study (eculizumab/eculizumab: 56; placebo/eculizumab: 61). At week 26 of REGAIN, more eculizumab-treated patients than placebo-treated patients achieved a status of improved (60.7% vs 41.7%) or MM (25.0% vs 13.3%; common OR: 2.3; 95% CI: 1.1–4.5). After 130 weeks of eculizumab treatment, 88.0% of patients achieved improved status and 57.3% of patients achieved MM status. The safety profile of eculizumab was consistent with its known profile and no new safety signals were detected.ConclusionEculizumab led to rapid and sustained achievement of MM in patients with AChR+ refractory gMG. These findings support the use of eculizumab in this previously difficult-to-treat patient population.ClinicalTrials.gov IdentifierREGAIN, NCT01997229; REGAIN open-label extension, NCT02301624.Classification of EvidenceThis study provides Class II evidence that, after 26 weeks of eculizumab treatment, 25.0% of adults with AChR+ refractory gMG achieved MM, compared with 13.3% who received placebo.
- Published
- 2020
7. Clinical outcome measures following plasma exchange for MG exacerbation
- Author
-
Janice M. Massey, James F. Howard, Manisha Chopra, Shruti M. Raja, Jeffrey T. Guptill, and Vern C. Juel
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Exacerbation ,Symptom Flare Up ,MEDLINE ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Brief Communication ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Myasthenia Gravis ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,medicine ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Young adult ,RC346-429 ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Plasma Exchange ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Outcome measures ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Myasthenia gravis ,3. Good health ,Clinical trial ,030104 developmental biology ,Female ,Therapeutic plasma exchange ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,Brief Communications ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Our objective is to report longitudinal results of the MG‐ADL, MG‐Composite, MG‐MMT, and MG‐QoL15 in an open‐label trial of therapeutic plasma exchange in myasthenia gravis. Ten MG patients experiencing exacerbation had assessments prior to, immediately following, and at selected time points post‐TPE. Changes from baseline to 2 weeks post‐TPE were: MG‐ADL median −5.0, P
- Published
- 2019
8. In Vivo Viscoelastic Response (VisR) Ultrasound for Characterizing Mechanical Anisotropy in Lower-Limb Skeletal Muscles of Boys with and without Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
- Author
-
Melissa C. Caughey, Catherine Jacobs, Regina Emmett, Diane O. Meyer, Christopher J. Moore, Manisha Chopra, James F. Howard, and Caterina M. Gallippi
- Subjects
Male ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Duchenne muscular dystrophy ,Biophysics ,Rectus femoris muscle ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,Gastrocnemius muscle ,0302 clinical medicine ,In vivo ,0103 physical sciences ,Humans ,Medicine ,Quantitative Muscle Testing ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Child ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Anisotropy ,Acoustic radiation force ,010301 acoustics ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,Anatomy ,medicine.disease ,Muscular Dystrophy, Duchenne ,Lower Extremity ,Elasticity Imaging Techniques ,business - Abstract
Our group has previously found that in silico, mechanical anisotropy may be interrogated by exciting transversely isotropic materials with geometrically asymmetric acoustic radiation force excitations and then monitoring the associated induced displacements in the region of excitation. We now translate acoustic radiation force-based anisotropy assessment to human muscle in vivo and investigate its clinical relevance to monitoring muscle degeneration in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). Clinical anisotropy assessments were performed using Viscoelastic Response ultrasound, with a degree of anisotropy reflected by the ratios of Viscoelastic Response relative elasticity (RE) or relative viscosity (RV) measured with the asymmetric radiation force oriented parallel versus perpendicular to muscle fiber alignment. In vivo results from rectus femoris and gastrocnemius muscles of boys aged ∼7.9–10.4 y indicate that RE and RV anisotropy ratios in rectus femoris muscles of boys with DMD were significantly higher than those of healthy control boys (RE: DMD = 1.51 ± 0.87, control = 0.99 ± 0.69, p = 0.04, Wilcoxon rank sum test; RV: DMD = 1.04 ± 0.71, control = 0.74 ± 0.22, p = 0.02). In the gastrocnemius muscle, only the RV anisotropy ratio was significantly higher in dystrophic than control patients (DMD = 1.23 ± 0.35, control = 0.88 ± 0.31, p = 0.04). In the dystrophic rectus femoris muscle, the RE anisotropy ratio was inversely correlated (slope = –0.03/lbf, r = –0.43, p = 0.07, Pearson correlation) with quantitative muscle testing functional output measures but was not correlated with quantitative muscle testing in the dystrophic gastrocnemius. These results suggest that Viscoelastic Response RE and RV measures reflect differences in mechanical anisotropy associated with functional impairment with dystrophic degeneration that are relevant to monitoring DMD clinically.
- Published
- 2018
9. Safety, efficacy, and tolerability of efgartigimod in patients with generalised myasthenia gravis (ADAPT): a multicentre, randomised, placebo-controlled, phase 3 trial
- Author
-
Lucy Lam, Jiri Pitha, John Vissing, Laura Fionda, Denis Korobko, Michael Pulley, Tony Vangeneugden, Silvia Bonanno, Nobuhiro Ido, Jerrica Farias, Jafar Shabanpour, James Gilchrist, Girolamo Alfieri, Gyorgyi Szabo, Carlayne E. Jackson, Eduardo Ng, Csilla Rozsa, Hans D. Katzberg, Carlo Antozzi, Aleksandra Golenia, Sayaka Ishida, Temur Margania, Andrzej Szczudlik, Richard J. Barohn, Mari Suzuki., Robert Henegar, Kaoru Sakuma, Evanthia Bernitsas, Elena Lapochka, Yukiko Ozawa, Tomihiro Imai, Debbie Hastings, Antonio Guglietta, Benjamin Frishberg, Elena Antipenko, Vera Bril, Stanislav Vohanka, Isela Hernandez, Ivo Bozovic, Ilona Vergunova, Lorenzo Maggi, Andreas Meisel, Ali Malekniazi, Tahseen Mozaffar, Emmanuelle Salort-Campana, Yasmin Camberos, Jan J.G.M. Verschuuren, Masayuki Masuda, Masanori Takahashi, Yoshihiko Okubo, Marek Smilowski, Yasushi Suzuki, Mary Wagoner, Andrew Heim, David Bors, Chiho Watanabe, Fiammetta Vanoli, Antonio Reia, Zubair Quraishi, Omar Jawdat, Makoto Samukawa, Gregory Sahagian, Gedeonne Margo Jakab, Eiichi Nomura, Samantha Colgan, Cindy Benzel, Ayako Mori, Annabel M. Ruiter, Ratna Bharavaju-Sanka, Roman Shakarishvili, Victoria Cannon, Malkova Nadezhda, Tomas Horak, Anna Kostera-Pruszczyk, Eniko Szabo, Emilien Delmont, Alexander Tsiskaridze, Lubna Daniyal, Vidosava Rakocevic Stojanovic, Szilvia Toth, Siegfried Kohler, Iveta Novakova, Katherine Roath, Kazuna Ikeda, Salma Akhter, Claudia Heibutzki, Martijn R. Tannemaat, Marta Pinkosz, Mads Peter Godtfeldt Stemmerik, Chafic Karam, Irys Caristo, Carolyn Paiz, Josef Bednarik, Monika Frasinska, Stefania Morino, Norianne Pimentel, Kanako Minemoto, Rekha Pillai, Linda Wagemaekers, Annelien De Pue, Irina Poverennova, Katerina Reguliova, Jana Junkerova, Angela Marsili, Anne-Marie Peters, Maren Wyckmans, Michaela Tyblova, Debbie Eggleston, Anne Mette Ostergaard Autzen, Takamichi Sugimoto, Kuldeep Kumar Khatri, Niraja Suresh, Jan De Bleecker, Lea Gerischer, Grazyna Zwolinska, Kevin R Keene, Yosuke Onishi, Francesco Saccà, Zaeem A. Siddiqi, Marjolein Van Heur, Jeffrey Statland, Tatiana Romanova, Diana Dimitrova, Stojan Peric, Tomoko Tsuda, Cathy Bailey, Lubov Urtaeva, Lizzie Zafirakos, Katherine Ruzhansky, Tomoya Kubota, Angela Campanella, Nadezhda Kuznetsova, Sarah Jones, Giovanni Antonini, Hiroyuki Murai, Luca Leonardi, Alan R. Berger, Jonathan Baets, Peter Ulrichts, Said R. Beydoun, Michala Jakubikova, Mamatha Pasnoor, James F. Howard, Leila Darki, Katerina Havelkova, Namita Goyal, Akiyuki Uzawa, Tia Nguyen, Miki Takaki, Matteo Garibaldi, Manisha Kak, Ivonne Turner, Aude-Marie Grapperon, Mageda Horakova, Yuebing Li, Ivana Basta, Lech Szczechowski, Shabber Mannan, Aneta Pasko, Caroline Vinck, Riccardo Giossi, Rudolf Mercelis, Ivana Jurajdova, Lesly Welsh, Małgorzata Bilińska, Marek Halas, Dragana Lavrnic, Kimiaki Utsugisawa, Todd Levine, Erik Velasquez, Daisuke Yamamoto, Constantine Farmakidis, John Anthony Morren, Sarah Hoffman, Manisha Chopra, Shingo Konno, Rita Frangiamore, Kelly Jia, Jana Horakova, Anna Melnikova, Piotr Szczudlik, Ali Habib, Giorgia Puorro, Michael D. Weiss, Robert P. Lisak, Hiroyuki Naito, Shahram Attarian, Hiroko Nakamura, Shin Hisahara, Mazen M. Dimachkie, Genya Watanabe, Duaa Jabari, Ekaterina Bulatova, Angela Genge, Makiko Naito, Melissa Currence, Henning Andersen, Katrien De Mey, Kathy de Koning, Yuen T. So, Chiara Pane, Renato Mantegazza, Rebecca Traub, Manato Yasuda, Amy Visser, Dike Remstedt, Yuka Takematsu, Frauke Stascheit, Ayumi Kamei, Tuan Vu, Tulio E. Bertorini, Ludivine Kouton, Neelam Goyal, Flicia Mada, Nizar Chahin, Mihiro Shimizu, Srikanth Muppidi, and Erina Sugano
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,fc fragment ,Placebo ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,law.invention ,efgartigimod ,myasthenia gravis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,Double-Blind Method ,law ,Internal medicine ,Activities of Daily Living ,Myasthenia Gravis ,medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,Humans ,Receptors, Cholinergic ,Dosing ,Longitudinal Studies ,education ,Biology ,Autoantibodies ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Headache ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Myasthenia gravis ,3. Good health ,Immunoglobulin Fc Fragments ,Clinical trial ,Chemistry ,030104 developmental biology ,Tolerability ,Female ,Human medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background: There is an unmet need for treatment options for generalised myasthenia gravis that are effective, targeted, well tolerated, and can be used in a broad population of patients. We aimed to assess the safety and efficacy of efgartigimod (ARGX-113), a human IgG1 antibody Fc fragment engineered to reduce pathogenic IgG autoantibody levels, in patients with generalised myasthenia gravis. Methods: ADAPT was a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3 trial done at 56 neuromuscular academic and community centres in 15 countries in North America, Europe, and Japan. Patients aged at least 18 years with generalised myasthenia gravis were eligible to participate in the study, regardless of anti-acetylcholine receptor antibody status, if they had a Myasthenia Gravis Activities of Daily Living (MG-ADL) score of at least 5 (>50% non-ocular), and were on a stable dose of at least one treatment for generalised myasthenia gravis. Patients were randomly assigned by interactive response technology (1:1) to efgartigimod (10 mg/kg) or matching placebo, administered as four infusions per cycle (one infusion per week), repeated as needed depending on clinical response no sooner than 8 weeks after initiation of the previous cycle. Patients, investigators, and clinical site staff were all masked to treatment allocation. The primary endpoint was proportion of acetylcholine receptor antibody-positive patients who were MG-ADL responders (≥2-point MG-ADL improvement sustained for ≥4 weeks) in the first treatment cycle. The primary analysis was done in the modified intention-to-treat population of all acetylcholine receptor antibody-positive patients who had a valid baseline MG-ADL assessment and at least one post-baseline MG-ADL assessment. The safety analysis included all randomly assigned patients who received at least one dose or part dose of efgartigimod or placebo. This trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03669588); an open-label extension is ongoing (ADAPT+, NCT03770403). Findings: Between Sept 5, 2018, and Nov 26, 2019, 167 patients (84 in the efgartigimod group and 83 in the placebo group) were enrolled, randomly assigned, and treated. 129 (77%) were acetylcholine receptor antibody-positive. Of these patients, more of those in the efgartigimod group were MG-ADL responders (44 [68%] of 65) in cycle 1 than in the placebo group (19 [30%] of 64), with an odds ratio of 4·95 (95% CI 2·21–11·53, p
- Published
- 2020
10. Epidemiological evidence for a hereditary contribution to myasthenia gravis: a retrospective cohort study of patients from North America
- Author
-
Zaeem A. Siddiqi, Robert M. Pascuzzi, Mazen M. Dimachkie, David P. Richman, Richard J. Barohn, Srikanth Muppidi, Michael Benatar, Julaine Florence, M Marino, Michelanglo Maestri, Vinay Chaudhry, Theresa Jiwa, Joshua D. Green, Roberta Ricciardi, Wilma J. Koopman, Joel Oger, Bernadette Lipscomb, Daniel B. Drachman, Manisha Chopra, Amelia Evoli, Derrick Blackmore, Julie Rowin, Gil I. Wolfe, Donald B. Sanders, Michelle M. Mezei, Carlo Provenzano, Henry J. Kaminski, Andrea M. Corse, Aimee Soloway, John T. Kissel, Alan Pestronk, Janice M. Massey, Emanuela Bartoccion, Miriam Freimer, Michael W. Nicolle, Charlie Wulf, April McVey, James F. Howard, Mamatha Pasnoor, and Bryan J. Traynor
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Neuromuscular disease ,Neurology ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurogenetics ,Neurodegenerative ,Autoimmune Disease ,Settore MED/05 - PATOLOGIA CLINICA ,Rare Diseases ,Clinical Research ,immune system diseases ,Epidemiology ,Myasthenia Gravis ,Receptors ,medicine ,Genetics ,Humans ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Receptors, Cholinergic ,genetics ,Family history ,Aetiology ,neurogenetics ,Cholinergic ,Autoantibodies ,Retrospective Studies ,Autoimmune disease ,Other Medical and Health Sciences ,business.industry ,neurology ,Neurosciences ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,neuromuscular disease ,medicine.disease ,Myasthenia gravis ,nervous system diseases ,North America ,Public Health and Health Services ,Medicine ,epidemiology ,business - Abstract
ObjectivesTo approximate the rate of familial myasthenia gravis and the coexistence of other autoimmune disorders in the patients and their families.DesignRetrospective cohort study.SettingClinics across North America.ParticipantsThe study included 1032 patients diagnosed with acetylcholine receptor antibody (AChR)-positive myasthenia gravis.MethodsPhenotype information of 1032 patients diagnosed with AChR-positive myasthenia gravis was obtained from clinics at 14 centres across North America between January 2010 and January 2011. A critical review of the epidemiological literature on the familial rate of myasthenia gravis was also performed.ResultsAmong 1032 patients, 58 (5.6%) reported a family history of myasthenia gravis. A history of autoimmune diseases was present in 26.6% of patients and in 28.4% of their family members.DiscussionThe familial rate of myasthenia gravis was higher than would be expected for a sporadic disease. Furthermore, a high proportion of patients had a personal or family history of autoimmune disease. Taken together, these findings suggest a genetic contribution to the pathogenesis of myasthenia gravis.
- Published
- 2020
11. Imbalance in T Follicular Helper Cells Producing IL-17 Promotes Pro-inflammatory Responses in MuSK Antibody Positive Myasthenia Gravis
- Author
-
Yingkai Li, Vern C. Juel, James F. Howard, Shruti M. Raja, Janice M. Massey, Weibin Liu, Manisha Chopra, Lisa D. Hobson-Webb, John S. Yi, Melissa A. Russo, Jeffrey T. Guptill, and Doug Emmett
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Adult ,Male ,T cell ,Immunology ,Cell ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Article ,Autoimmunity ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immunopathology ,Follicular phase ,Myasthenia Gravis ,medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Humans ,Aged ,Autoantibodies ,Interleukin-17 ,T-Lymphocytes, Helper-Inducer ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Phenotype ,Myasthenia gravis ,Coculture Techniques ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Interleukin 17 ,Inflammation Mediators ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
A detailed understanding of the role of Tfh cells in MuSK-antibody positive myasthenia gravis (MuSK-MG) is lacking. We characterized phenotype and function of Tfh cells in MuSK-MG patients and controls. We found similar overall Tfh and follicular regulatory (Tfr) T cell frequencies in MuSK-MG and healthy controls, but MuSK-MG patients exhibited higher frequencies of Tfh17 cells and a higher ratio of Tfh:Tfr cells. These results suggest imbalanced Tfh cell regulation, further supported by increased frequencies of CD4 T cells co-producing IL-21/IL-17 and IL-17/IFN-γ, and increased Tfh-supported IgG production. These results support a role for Tfh cell dysregulation in MuSK-MG immunopathology.
- Published
- 2020
12. Clinical Effects of the Self-administered Subcutaneous Complement Inhibitor Zilucoplan in Patients With Moderate to Severe Generalized Myasthenia Gravis: Results of a Phase 2 Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Multicenter Clinical Trial
- Author
-
James F, Howard, Richard J, Nowak, Gil I, Wolfe, Miriam L, Freimer, Tuan H, Vu, John L, Hinton, Michael, Benatar, Petra W, Duda, James E, MacDougall, Ramin, Farzaneh-Far, Henry J, Kaminski, Richard, Barohn, Mazen, Dimachkie, Mamatha, Pasnoor, Constantine, Farmakidis, Tina, Liu, Samantha, Colgan, Michael G, Benatar, Tulio, Bertorini, Rekha, Pillai, Robert, Henegar, Mark, Bromberg, Summer, Gibson, Teresa, Janecki, Miriam, Freimer, Bakri, Elsheikh, Paige, Matisak, Angela, Genge, Amanda, Guidon, William, David, Ali A, Habib, Veena, Mathew, Tahseen, Mozaffar, William, Hewitt, Deborah, Barnett, Patricia, Sullivan, Doreen, Ho, Rebecca E, Traub, Manisha, Chopra, Radwa, Aly, Elham, Bayat, Mohammad, Abu-Rub, Shaida, Khan, Dale, Lange, Shara, Holzberg, Bhupendra, Khatri, Emily, Lindman, Tayo, Olapo, Lisa M, Sershon, Robert P, Lisak, Evanthia, Bernitsas, Kelly, Jia, Rabia, Malik, Tiffany D, Lewis-Collins, Michael, Nicolle, Aditi, Sharma, Bhaskar, Roy, Joan, Nye, Michael, Pulley, Alan, Berger, Yasmeen, Shabbir, Amit, Sachdev, Kimberly, Patterson, Zaeem, Siddiqi, Mark, Sivak, Joan, Bratton, George, Small, Anem, Kohli, Mary, Fetter, Tuan, Vu, Lucy, Lam, Brittany, Harvey, Nicholas, Silvestri, Kara, Patrick, Karen, Zakalik, James, MacDougall, Angela, Pontius, and Michelle, Hoarty
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Randomization ,Injections, Subcutaneous ,Population ,Phases of clinical research ,Self Administration ,Placebo ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,Complement inhibitor ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,Double-Blind Method ,law ,Internal medicine ,Myasthenia Gravis ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Complement C5 ,Middle Aged ,Clinical trial ,Complement Inactivating Agents ,Tolerability ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Importance Many patients with generalized myasthenia gravis (gMG) have substantial clinical disability, persistent disease burden, and adverse effects attributable to chronic immunosuppression. Therefore, there is a significant need for targeted, well-tolerated therapies with the potential to improve disease control and enhance quality of life. Objective To evaluate the clinical effects of zilucoplan, a subcutaneously (SC) self-administered macrocyclic peptide inhibitor of complement component 5, in a broad population of patients with moderate to severe gMG. Design, Setting, and Participants This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 2 clinical trial at 25 study sites across North America recruited participants between December 2017 and August 2018. Fifty-seven patients were screened, of whom 12 did not meet inclusion criteria and 1 was lost to follow-up after randomization but before receiving study drug, resulting in a total of 44 acetylcholine receptor autoantibody (AChR-Ab)–positive patients with gMG with baseline Quantitative Myasthenia Gravis (QMG) scores of at least 12, regardless of treatment history. Interventions Patients were randomized 1:1:1 to a daily SC self-injection of placebo, 0.1-mg/kg zilucoplan, or 0.3-mg/kg zilucoplan for 12 weeks. Main Outcomes and Measures The primary and key secondary end points were the change from baseline to week 12 in QMG and MG Activities of Daily Living scores, respectively. Significance testing was prespecified at a 1-sided α of .10. Safety and tolerability were also assessed. Results The study of 44 patients was well balanced across the 3 treatment arms with respect to key demographic and disease-specific variables. The mean age of patients across all 3 treatment groups ranged from 45.5 to 54.6 years and most patients were white (average proportions across 3 treatment groups: 78.6%-86.7%). Clinically meaningful and statistically significant improvements in primary and key secondary efficacy end points were observed. Zilucoplan at a dose of 0.3 mg/kg SC daily resulted in a mean reduction from baseline of 6.0 points in the QMG score (placebo-corrected change, –2.8;P = .05) and 3.4 points in the MG Activities of Daily Living score (placebo-corrected change, –2.3;P = .04). Clinically meaningful and statistically significant improvements were also observed in other secondary end points, the MG Composite and MG Quality-of-Life scores. Outcomes for the 0.1-mg/kg SC daily dose were also statistically significant but slower in onset and less pronounced than with the 0.3-mg/kg dose. Rescue therapy (intravenous immunoglobulin or plasma exchange) was required in 3 of 15, 1 of 15, and 0 of 14 participants in the placebo, 0.1-mg/kg zilucoplan, and 0.3-mg/kg zilucoplan arms, respectively. Zilucoplan was observed to have a favorable safety and tolerability profile. Conclusions and Relevance Zilucoplan yielded rapid, meaningful, and sustained improvements over 12 weeks in a broad population of patients with moderate to severe AChR-Ab–positive gMG. Near-complete complement inhibition appeared superior to submaximal inhibition. The observed safety and tolerability profile of zilucoplan was favorable. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:NCT03315130.
- Published
- 2020
13. Long-term efficacy and safety of eculizumab in Japanese patients with generalized myasthenia gravis: A subgroup analysis of the REGAIN open-label extension study
- Author
-
Hiroyuki Murai, Akiyuki Uzawa, Yasushi Suzuki, Tomihiro Imai, Hirokazu Shiraishi, Hidekazu Suzuki, Meinoshin Okumura, Fanny O’Brien, Jing-Jing Wang, Kenji P. Fujita, Kimiaki Utsugisawa, Claudio Gabriel Mazia, Miguel Wilken, Fabio Barroso, Juliet Saba, Marcelo Rugiero, Mariela Bettini, Marcelo Chaves, Gonzalo Vidal, Alejandra Dalila Garcia, Jan De Bleecker, Guy Van den Abeele, Kathy de Koning, Katrien De Mey, Rudy Mercelis, Délphine Mahieu, Linda Wagemaekers, Philip Van Damme, Annelies Depreitere, Caroline Schotte, Charlotte Smetcoren, Olivier Stevens, Sien Van Daele, Nicolas Vandenbussche, Annelies Vanhee, Sarah Verjans, Jan Vynckier, Ann D'Hondt, Petra Tilkin, Alzira Alves de Siqueira Carvalho, Igor Dias Brockhausen, David Feder, Daniel Ambrosio, Pamela César, Ana Paula Melo, Renata Martins Ribeiro, Rosana Rocha, Bruno Bezerra Rosa, Thabata Veiga, Luiz Augusto da Silva, Murilo Santos Engel, Jordana Gonçalves Geraldo, Maria da Penha Ananias Morita, Erica Nogueira Coelho, Gabriel Paiva, Marina Pozo, Natalia Prando, Debora Dada Martineli Torres, Cristiani Fernanda Butinhao, Gustavo Duran, Tamires Cristina Gomes da Silva, Luiz Otavio Maia Gonçalves, Lucas Eduardo Pazetto, Tomás Augusto Suriane Fialho, Luciana Renata Cubas Volpe, Luciana Souza Duca, Acary Souza Bulle Oliveira, Ana Carolina Amaral Andrade, Marcelo Annes, Liene Duarte Silva, Valeria Cavalcante Lino, Wladimir Pinto, Natália Assis, Fernanda Carrara, Carolina Miranda, Iandra Souza, Patricia Fernandes, Zaeem Siddiqi, Cecile Phan, Jeffrey Narayan, Derrick Blackmore, Ashley Mallon, Rikki Roderus, Elizabeth Watt, Jana Junkerova, Barbora Kurkova, Katarina Reguliova, Olga Zapletalova, Jiri Pitha, Iveta Novakova, Michaela Tyblova, Ivana Jurajdova, Marcela Wolfova, Henning Andersen, Thomas Harbo, Lotte Vinge, Susanne Krogh, Anita Mogensen, John Vissing, Joan Højgaard, Nanna Witting, Anne Mette Ostergaard Autzen, Jane Pedersen, Juha-Pekka Eralinna, Mikko Laaksonen, Olli Oksaranta, Tuula Harrison, Jaana Eriksson, Csilla Rozsa, Melinda Horvath, Gabor Lovas, Judit Matolcsi, Gyorgyi Szabo, Gedeonne Jakab, Brigitta Szabadosne, Giovanni Antonini, Antonella Di Pasquale, Matteo Garibaldi, Stefania Morino, Fernanda Troili, Laura Fionda, Allessandro Filla, Teresa Costabile, Enrico Marano, Francesco Saccà, Angiola Fasanaro, Angela Marsili, Giorgia Puorro, Renato Mantegazza, Carlo Antozzi, Silvia Bonanno, Giorgia Camera, Alberta Locatelli, Lorenzo Maggi, Maria Pasanisi, Angela Campanella, Amelia Evoli, Paolo Emilio Alboini, Valentina D'Amato, Raffaele Iorio, Tetsuya Kanai, Naoki Kawaguchi, Masahiro Mori, Yoko Kaneko, Akiko Kanzaki, Eri Kobayashi, Katsuhisa Masaki, Dai Matsuse, Takuya Matsushita, Taira Uehara, Misa Shimpo, Maki Jingu, Keiko Kikutake, Yumiko Nakamura, Yoshiko Sano, Yuriko Nagane, Ikuko Kamegamori, Tomoko Tsuda, Yuko Fujii, Kazumi Futono, Yukiko Ozawa, Aya Mizugami, Yuka Saito, Miyuki Morikawa, Makoto Samukawa, Sachiko Kamakura, Eriko Miyawaki, Teiichiro Mitazaki, Masakatsu Motomura, Akihiro Mukaino, Shunsuke Yoshimura, Shizuka Asada, Seiko Yoshida, Shoko Amamoto, Tomomi Kobashikawa, Megumi Koga, Yasuko Maeda, Kazumi Takada, Mihoko Takada, Masako Tsurumaru, Yumi Yamashita, Tetsuya Akiyama, Koichi Narikawa, Ohito Tano, Kenichi Tsukita, Rikako Kurihara, Fumie Meguro, Yusuke Fukuda, Miwako Sato, Soichiro Funaka, Tomohiro Kawamura, Masayuki Makamori, Masanori Takahashi, Namie Taichi, Tomoya Hasuike, Eriko Higuchi, Hisako Kobayashi, Kaori Osakada, Emiko Tsuda, Shun Shimohama, Takashi Hayashi, Shin Hisahara, Jun Kawamata, Takashi Murahara, Masaki Saitoh, Shuichiro Suzuki, Daisuke Yamamoto, Yoko Ishiyama, Naoko Ishiyama, Mayuko Noshiro, Rumi Takeyama, Kaori Uwasa, Ikuko Yasuda, Anneke van der Kooi, Marianne de Visser, Tamar Gibson, Carlos Casasnovas, Maria Antonia Alberti Aguilo, Christian Homedes-Pedret, Natalia Julia Palacios, Laura Diez Porras, Valentina Velez Santamaria, Ana Lazaro, Exuperio Diez Tejedor, Pilar Gomez Salcedo, Mireya Fernandez-Fournier, Pedro Lopez Ruiz, Francisco Javier Rodriguez de Rivera, Maria Sastre, Josep Gamez, Pilar Sune, Maria Salvado, Gisela Gili, Gonzalo Mazuela, Isabel Illa, Elena Cortes Vicente, Jordi Diaz-Manera, Luis Antonio Querol Gutierrez, Ricardo Rojas Garcia, Nuria Vidal, Elisabet Arribas-Ibar, Fredrik Piehl, Albert Hietala, Lena Bjarbo, Ihsan Sengun, Arzu Meherremova, Pinar Ozcelik, Bengu Balkan, Celal Tuga, Muzeyyen Ugur, Sevim Erdem-Ozdamar, Can Ebru Bekircan-Kurt, Nazire Pinar Acar, Ezgi Yilmaz, Yagmur Caliskan, Gulsah Orsel, Husnu Efendi, Seda Aydinlik, Hakan Cavus, Ayse Kutlu, Gulsah Becerikli, Cansu Semiz, Ozlem Tun, Murat Terzi, Baki Dogan, Musa Kazim Onar, Sedat Sen, Tugce Kirbas Cavdar, Adife Veske, Fiona Norwood, Aikaterini Dimitriou, Jakit Gollogly, Mohamed Mahdi-Rogers, Arshira Seddigh, Giannis Sokratous, Gal Maier, Faisal Sohail, Saiju Jacob, Girija Sadalage, Pravin Torane, Claire Brown, Amna Shah, Sivakumar Sathasivam, Heike Arndt, Debbie Davies, Dave Watling, Anthony Amato, Thomas Cochrane, Mohammed Salajegheh, Kristen Roe, Katherine Amato, Shirli Toska, Gil Wolfe, Nicholas Silvestri, Kara Patrick, Karen Zakalik, Jonathan Katz, Robert Miller, Marguerite Engel, Dallas Forshew, Elena Bravver, Benjamin Brooks, Sarah Plevka, Maryanne Burdette, Scott Cunningham, Mohammad Sanjak, Megan Kramer, Joanne Nemeth, Clara Schommer, Scott Tierney, Vern Juel, Jeffrey Guptill, Lisa Hobson-Webb, Janice Massey, Kate Beck, Donna Carnes, John Loor, Amanda Anderson, Robert Pascuzzi, Cynthia Bodkin, John Kincaid, Riley Snook, Sandra Guingrich, Angela Micheels, Vinay Chaudhry, Andrea Corse, Betsy Mosmiller, Andrea Kelley, Doreen Ho, Jayashri Srinivasan, Michal Vytopil, Jordan Jara, Nicholas Ventura, Stephanie Scala, Cynthia Carter, Craig Donahue, Carol Herbert, Elaine Weiner, Sharmeen Alam, Jonathan McKinnon, Laura Haar, Naya McKinnon, Karan Alcon, Kaitlyn McKenna, Nadia Sattar, Kevin Daniels, Dennis Jeffery, Miriam Freimer, Joseph Chad Hoyle, John Kissel, Julie Agriesti, Sharon Chelnick, Louisa Mezache, Colleen Pineda, Filiz Muharrem, Chafic Karam, Julie Khoury, Tessa Marburger, Harpreet Kaur, Diana Dimitrova, James Gilchrist, Brajesh Agrawal, Mona Elsayed, Stephanie Kohlrus, Angela Andoin, Taylor Darnell, Laura Golden, Barbara Lokaitis, Jenna Seelback, Srikanth Muppidi, Neelam Goyal, Sarada Sakamuri, Yuen T. So, Shirley Paulose, Sabrina Pol, Lesly Welsh, Ratna Bhavaraju-Sanka, Alejandro Tobon Gonzales, Lorraine Dishman, Floyd Jones, Anna Gonzalez, Patricia Padilla, Amy Saklad, Marcela Silva, Mohamed Kazamel, Mohammad Alsharabati, Liang Lu, Kenkichi Nozaki, Sandi Mumfrey-Thomas, Amy Woodall, Tahseen Mozaffar, Tiyonnoh Cash, Namita Goyal, Gulmohor Roy, Veena Mathew, Fatima Maqsood, Brian Minton, H. James Jones, Jeffrey Rosenfeld, Rebekah Garcia, Laura Echevarria, Sonia Garcia, Michael Pulley, Shachie Aranke, Alan Ross Berger, Jaimin Shah, Yasmeen Shabbir, Lisa Smith, Mary Varghese, Laurie Gutmann, Ludwig Gutmann, Nivedita Jerath, Christopher Nance, Andrea Swenson, Heena Olalde, Nicole Kressin, Jeri Sieren, Richard Barohn, Mazen Dimachkie, Melanie Glenn, April McVey, Mamatha Pasnoor, Jeffery Statland, Yunxia Wang, Tina Liu, Kelley Emmons, Nicole Jenci, Jerry Locheke, Alex Fondaw, Kathryn Johns, Gabrielle Rico, Maureen Walsh, Laura Herbelin, Charlene Hafer-Macko, Justin Kwan, Lindsay Zilliox, Karen Callison, Valerie Young, Beth DiSanzo, Kerry Naunton, Michael Benatar, Martin Bilsker, Khema Sharma, Anne Cooley, Eliana Reyes, Sara-Claude Michon, Danielle Sheldon, Julie Steele, James Howard Jr, Manisha Chopra, Rebecca Traub, Tuan Vu, Lara Katzin, Terry McClain, Brittany Harvey, Adam Hart, Kristin Huynh, Said Beydoun, Amaiak Chilingaryan, Victor Doan, Brian Droker, Hui Gong, Sanaz Karimi, Frank Lin, Krishna Pokala, Akshay Shah, Anh Tran, Salma Akhter, Ali Malekniazi, Rup Tandan, Michael Hehir, Waqar Waheed, Shannon Lucy, Michael Weiss, Jane Distad, Susan Strom, Sharon Downing, Bryan Kim, Richard Nowak, Daniel Dicapua, Benison Keung, Aditya Kumar, Huned Patwa, Kimberly Robeson, Irene Yang, Joan Nye, Hong Vu, H., Murai, A., Uzawa, Y., Suzuki, T., Imai, H., Shiraishi, H., Suzuki, M., Okumura, F., O'Brien, J. -J., Wang, K. P., Fujita, K., Utsugisawa, Gabriel Mazia 11, Claudio, Wilken 11, Miguel, Barroso 11, Fabio, Saba 11, Juliet, Rugiero 12, Marcelo, Bettini 12, Mariela, Chaves 12, Marcelo, Vidal 12, Gonzalo, Dalila Garcia 12, Alejandra, De Bleecker 13, Jan, Van den Abeele 13, Guy, de Koning 13, Kathy, De Mey 13, Katrien, Mercelis 14, Rudy, Mahieu 14, Délphine, Wagemaekers 14, Linda, Van Damme 15, Philip, Depreitere 16, Annelie, Schotte 16, Caroline, Smetcoren 16, Charlotte, Stevens 16, Olivier, Van Daele 16, Sien, Vandenbussche 16, Nicola, Vanhee 16, Annelie, Verjans 16, Sarah, Vynckier 16, Jan, D'Hondt 16, Ann, Tilkin 16, Petra, Alves de Siqueira Carvalho 17, Alzira, Dias Brockhausen 17, Igor, Feder 17, David, Ambrosio 17, Daniel, César 17, Pamela, Paula Melo 17, Ana, Martins Ribeiro 17, Renata, Rocha 17, Rosana, Bezerra Rosa 17, Bruno, Veiga 17, Thabata, Augusto da Silva 17, Luiz, Santos Engel 17, Murilo, Gonçalves Geraldo 17, Jordana, da Penha Ananias Morita 18, Maria, Nogueira Coelho 18, Erica, Paiva 18, Gabriel, Pozo 18, Marina, Prando 18, Natalia, Dada Martineli Torres 18, Debora, Fernanda Butinhao 18, Cristiani, Duran 18, Gustavo, Cristina Gomes da Silva 18, Tamire, Otavio Maia Gonçalves 18, Luiz, Eduardo Pazetto 18, Luca, Augusto Suriane Fialho 18, Tomá, Renata Cubas Volpe 18, Luciana, Souza Duca 18, Luciana, Souza Bulle Oliveira 19, Acary, Carolina Amaral Andrade 19, Ana, Annes 19, Marcelo, Duarte Silva 19, Liene, Cavalcante Lino 19, Valeria, Pinto 19, Wladimir, Assis 19, Natália, Carrara 19, Fernanda, Miranda 19, Carolina, Souza 19, Iandra, Fernandes 19, Patricia, Siddiqi 20, Zaeem, Phan 20, Cecile, Narayan 20, Jeffrey, Blackmore 20, Derrick, Mallon 20, Ashley, Roderus 20, Rikki, Watt 20, Elizabeth, Junkerova 21, Jana, Kurkova 21, Barbora, Reguliova 21, Katarina, Zapletalova 21, Olga, Pitha 22, Jiri, Novakova 22, Iveta, Tyblova 22, Michaela, Jurajdova 22, Ivana, Wolfova 22, Marcela, Andersen 23, Henning, Harbo 23, Thoma, Vinge 23, Lotte, Krogh 23, Susanne, Mogensen 23, Anita, Vissing 24, John, Højgaard 24, Joan, Witting 24, Nanna, Mette Ostergaard Autzen 24, Anne, Pedersen 24, Jane, Eralinna 25, Juha-Pekka, Laaksonen 25, Mikko, Oksaranta 25, Olli, Harrison 25, Tuula, Eriksson 25, Jaana, Rozsa 26, Csilla, Horvath 26, Melinda, Lovas 26, Gabor, Matolcsi 26, Judit, Szabo 26, Gyorgyi, Jakab 26, Gedeonne, Szabadosne 26, Brigitta, Antonini 27, Giovanni, Di Pasquale 27, Antonella, Garibaldi 27, Matteo, Morino 27, Stefania, Troili 27, Fernanda, Fionda 27, Laura, Filla, Allessandro, Costabile, Teresa, Marano, Enrico, Sacca', Francesco, Fasanaro, Angiola, Marsili, Angela, Puorro, Giorgia, Mantegazza 29, Renato, Antozzi 29, Carlo, Bonanno 29, Silvia, Camera 29, Giorgia, Locatelli 29, Alberta, Maggi 29, Lorenzo, Pasanisi 29, Maria, Campanella 29, Angela, Evoli 30, Amelia, Emilio Alboini 30, Paolo, D'Amato 30, Valentina, Iorio 30, Raffaele, Kanai 31, Tetsuya, Kawaguchi 31, Naoki, Mori 31, Masahiro, Kaneko 31, Yoko, Kanzaki 31, Akiko, Kobayashi 31, Eri, Masaki 32, Katsuhisa, Matsuse 32, Dai, Matsushita 32, Takuya, Uehara 32, Taira, Shimpo 32, Misa, Jingu 32, Maki, Kikutake 32, Keiko, Nakamura 32, Yumiko, Sano 32, Yoshiko, Nagane 33, Yuriko, Kamegamori 33, Ikuko, Tsuda 33, Tomoko, Fujii 33, Yuko, Futono 33, Kazumi, Ozawa 33, Yukiko, Mizugami 33, Aya, Saito 33, Yuka, Morikawa 34, Miyuki, Samukawa 34, Makoto, Kamakura 34, Sachiko, Miyawaki 34, Eriko, Mitazaki 35, Teiichiro, Motomura 35, Masakatsu, Mukaino 35, Akihiro, Yoshimura 35, Shunsuke, Asada 35, Shizuka, Yoshida 35, Seiko, Amamoto 35, Shoko, Kobashikawa 35, Tomomi, Koga 35, Megumi, Maeda 35, Yasuko, Takada 35, Kazumi, Takada 35, Mihoko, Tsurumaru 35, Masako, Yamashita 35, Yumi, Akiyama 36, Tetsuya, Narikawa 36, Koichi, Tano 36, Ohito, Tsukita 36, Kenichi, Kurihara 36, Rikako, Meguro 36, Fumie, Fukuda 36, Yusuke, Sato 36, Miwako, Funaka 37, Soichiro, Kawamura 37, Tomohiro, Makamori 37, Masayuki, Takahashi 37, Masanori, Taichi 37, Namie, Hasuike 37, Tomoya, Higuchi 37, Eriko, Kobayashi 37, Hisako, Osakada 37, Kaori, Tsuda 38, Emiko, Shimohama 38, Shun, Hayashi 38, Takashi, Hisahara 38, Shin, Kawamata 38, Jun, Murahara 38, Takashi, Saitoh 38, Masaki, Suzuki 38, Shuichiro, Yamamoto 38, Daisuke, Ishiyama 38, Yoko, Ishiyama 38, Naoko, Noshiro 38, Mayuko, Takeyama 38, Rumi, Uwasa 38, Kaori, Yasuda 38, Ikuko, van der Kooi 39, Anneke, de Visser 39, Marianne, Gibson 39, Tamar, Casasnovas 40, Carlo, Antonia Alberti Aguilo 40, Maria, Homedes-Pedret 40, Christian, Julia Palacios 40, Natalia, Diez Porras 40, Laura, Velez Santamaria 40, Valentina, Lazaro 40, Ana, Diez Tejedor 41, Exuperio, Gomez Salcedo 41, Pilar, Fernandez-Fournier 41, Mireya, Lopez Ruiz 41, Pedro, Javier Rodriguez de Rivera 41, Francisco, Sastre 41, Maria, Gamez 42, Josep, Sune 42, Pilar, Salvado 42, Maria, Gili 42, Gisela, Mazuela 42, Gonzalo, Illa 43, Isabel, Cortes Vicente 43, Elena, Diaz-Manera 43, Jordi, Antonio Querol Gutierrez 43, Lui, Rojas Garcia 43, Ricardo, Vidal 43, Nuria, Arribas-Ibar 43, Elisabet, Piehl 44, Fredrik, Hietala 44, Albert, Bjarbo 44, Lena, Sengun 45, Ihsan, Meherremova 45, Arzu, Ozcelik 45, Pinar, Balkan 45, Bengu, Tuga 45, Celal, Ugur 45, Muzeyyen, Erdem-Ozdamar 46, Sevim, Ebru Bekircan-Kurt 46, Can, Pinar Acar 46, Nazire, Yilmaz 46, Ezgi, Caliskan 46, Yagmur, Orsel 46, Gulsah, Efendi 47, Husnu, Aydinlik 47, Seda, Cavus 47, Hakan, Kutlu 47, Ayse, Becerikli 47, Gulsah, Semiz 47, Cansu, Tun 47, Ozlem, Terzi 48, Murat, Dogan 48, Baki, Kazim Onar 48, Musa, Sen 48, Sedat, Kirbas Cavdar 48, Tugce, Veske 48, Adife, Norwood 49, Fiona, Dimitriou 49, Aikaterini, Gollogly 49, Jakit, Mahdi-Rogers 49, Mohamed, Seddigh 49, Arshira, Sokratous 49, Gianni, Maier 49, Gal, Sohail 49, Faisal, Jacob 50, Saiju, Sadalage 50, Girija, Torane 50, Pravin, Brown 50, Claire, Shah 50, Amna, Sathasivam 51, Sivakumar, Arndt 51, Heike, Davies 51, Debbie, Watling 51, Dave, Amato 52, Anthony, Cochrane 52, Thoma, Salajegheh 52, Mohammed, Roe 52, Kristen, Amato 52, Katherine, Toska 52, Shirli, Wolfe 53, Gil, Silvestri 53, Nichola, Patrick 53, Kara, Zakalik 53, Karen, Katz 54, Jonathan, Miller 54, Robert, Engel 54, Marguerite, Forshew 54, Dalla, Bravver 55, Elena, Brooks 55, Benjamin, Plevka 55, Sarah, Burdette 55, Maryanne, Cunningham 55, Scott, Sanjak 55, Mohammad, Kramer 55, Megan, Nemeth 55, Joanne, Schommer 55, Clara, Tierney 55, Scott, Juel 56, Vern, Guptill 56, Jeffrey, Hobson-Webb 56, Lisa, Massey 56, Janice, Beck 56, Kate, Carnes 56, Donna, Loor 56, John, Anderson 56, Amanda, Pascuzzi 57, Robert, Bodkin 57, Cynthia, Kincaid 57, John, Snook 57, Riley, Guingrich 57, Sandra, Micheels 57, Angela, Chaudhry 58, Vinay, Corse 58, Andrea, Mosmiller 58, Betsy, Kelley 58, Andrea, Ho 59, Doreen, Srinivasan 59, Jayashri, Vytopil 59, Michal, Jara 59, Jordan, Ventura 59, Nichola, Scala 59, Stephanie, Carter 59, Cynthia, Donahue 59, Craig, Herbert 59, Carol, Weiner 59, Elaine, Alam 59, Sharmeen, McKinnon 60, Jonathan, Haar 60, Laura, McKinnon 60, Naya, Alcon 60, Karan, McKenna 60, Kaitlyn, Sattar 60, Nadia, Daniels 60, Kevin, Jeffery 60, Denni, Freimer 61, Miriam, Chad Hoyle 61, Joseph, Kissel 61, John, Agriesti 61, Julie, Chelnick 61, Sharon, Mezache 61, Louisa, Pineda 61, Colleen, Muharrem 61, Filiz, Karam 62, Chafic, Khoury 62, Julie, Marburger 62, Tessa, Kaur 62, Harpreet, Dimitrova 62, Diana, Gilchrist 63, Jame, Agrawal 63, Brajesh, Elsayed 63, Mona, Kohlrus 63, Stephanie, Andoin 63, Angela, Darnell 63, Taylor, Golden 63, Laura, Lokaitis 63, Barbara, Seelback 63, Jenna, Muppidi 64, Srikanth, Goyal 64, Neelam, Sakamuri 64, Sarada, T So 64, Yuen, Paulose 64, Shirley, Pol 64, Sabrina, Welsh 64, Lesly, Bhavaraju-Sanka 65, Ratna, Tobon Gonzales 65, Alejandro, Dishman 65, Lorraine, Jones 65, Floyd, Gonzalez 65, Anna, Padilla 65, Patricia, Saklad 65, Amy, Silva 65, Marcela, Kazamel 66, Mohamed, Alsharabati 66, Mohammad, Lu 66, Liang, Nozaki 66, Kenkichi, Mumfrey-Thomas 66, Sandi, Woodall 66, Amy, Mozaffar 67, Tahseen, Cash 67, Tiyonnoh, Goyal 67, Namita, Roy 67, Gulmohor, Mathew 67, Veena, Maqsood 67, Fatima, Minton 67, Brian, James Jones 68, H, Rosenfeld 68, Jeffrey, Garcia 68, Rebekah, Echevarria 68, Laura, Garcia 68, Sonia, Pulley 69, Michael, Aranke 69, Shachie, Ross Berger 69, Alan, Shah 69, Jaimin, Shabbir 69, Yasmeen, Smith 69, Lisa, Varghese 69, Mary, Gutmann 70, Laurie, Gutmann 70, Ludwig, Jerath 70, Nivedita, Nance 70, Christopher, Swenson 70, Andrea, Olalde 70, Heena, Kressin 70, Nicole, Sieren 70, Jeri, Barohn 71, Richard, Dimachkie 71, Mazen, Glenn 71, Melanie, McVey 71, April, Pasnoor 71, Mamatha, Statland 71, Jeffery, Wang 71, Yunxia, Liu 71, Tina, Emmons 71, Kelley, Jenci 71, Nicole, Locheke 71, Jerry, Fondaw 71, Alex, Johns 71, Kathryn, Rico 71, Gabrielle, Walsh 71, Maureen, Herbelin 71, Laura, Hafer-Macko 72, Charlene, Kwan 72, Justin, Zilliox 72, Lindsay, Callison 72, Karen, Young 72, Valerie, DiSanzo 72, Beth, Naunton 72, Kerry, Benatar 73, Michael, Bilsker 73, Martin, Sharma 73, Khema, Cooley 73, Anne, Reyes 73, Eliana, Michon 73, Sara-Claude, Sheldon 73, Danielle, Steele 73, Julie, Howard Jr 74, Jame, Karam 74, Chafic, Chopra 74, Manisha, Traub 74, Rebecca, Vu 75, Tuan, Katzin 75, Lara, McClain 75, Terry, Harvey 75, Brittany, Hart 75, Adam, Huynh 75, Kristin, Beydoun 76, Said, Chilingaryan 76, Amaiak, Doan 76, Victor, Droker 76, Brian, Gong 76, Hui, Karimi 76, Sanaz, Lin 76, Frank, McClain 76, Terry, Pokala 76, Krishna, Shah 76, Akshay, Tran 76, Anh, Akhter 76, Salma, Malekniazi 76, Ali, Tandan 77, Rup, Hehir 77, Michael, Waheed 77, Waqar, Lucy 77, Shannon, Weiss 78, Michael, Distad 78, Jane, Strom 78, Susan, Downing 78, Sharon, Kim 78, Bryan, Nowak 79, Richard, Dicapua 79, Daniel, Keung 79, Benison, Kumar 79, Aditya, Patwa 79, Huned, Robeson 79, Kimberly, Yang 79, Irene, Nye 79, Joan, and Hong Vu
- Subjects
Male ,Pediatrics ,Myasthenia gravi ,Open-label extension study ,Complement inhibitor ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,Japan ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Myasthenia gravis ,education.field_of_study ,MG-ADL ,Japanese patient ,Eculizumab ,Middle Aged ,HLA ,MG-QoL15 ,Treatment Outcome ,Neurology ,Female ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,COMPLEMENT INHIBITOR ECULIZUMAB ,medicine.drug ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,Clinical Neurology ,Subgroup analysis ,Placebo ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,03 medical and health sciences ,Refractory ,Asian People ,Myasthenia Gravis ,Humans ,education ,Aged ,Science & Technology ,business.industry ,Neurosciences ,medicine.disease ,Complement Inactivating Agents ,Japanese patients ,ONSET ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neurosciences & Neurology ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The terminal complement inhibitor eculizumab was shown to improve myasthenia gravis-related symptoms in the 26-week, phase 3, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled REGAIN study (NCT01997229). In this 52-week sub-analysis of the open-label extension of REGAIN (NCT02301624), eculizumab's efficacy and safety were assessed in 11 Japanese and 88 Caucasian patients with anti-acetylcholine receptor antibody-positive refractory generalized myasthenia gravis. For patients who had received placebo during REGAIN, treatment with open-label eculizumab resulted in generally similar outcomes in the Japanese and Caucasian populations. Rapid improvements were maintained for 52 weeks, assessed by change in score from open-label extension baseline to week 52 (mean [standard error]) using the following scales (in Japanese and Caucasian patients, respectively): Myasthenia Gravis Activities of Daily Living (-2.4 [1.34] and - 3.3 [0.65]); Quantitative Myasthenia Gravis (-2.9 [1.98] and - 4.3 [0.79]); Myasthenia Gravis Composite (-4.5 [2.63] and - 4.9 [1.19]); and Myasthenia Gravis Quality of Life 15-item questionnaire (-8.6 [5.68] and - 6.5 [1.93]). Overall, the safety of eculizumab was consistent with its known safety profile. In this interim sub-analysis, the efficacy and safety of eculizumab in Japanese and Caucasian patients were generally similar, and consistent with the overall REGAIN population. ispartof: JOURNAL OF THE NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES vol:407 ispartof: location:Netherlands status: published
- Published
- 2019
14. Safety and efficacy of eculizumab in anti-acetylcholine receptor antibody-positive refractory generalised myasthenia gravis (REGAIN): a phase 3, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicentre study
- Author
-
Kazumi Takada, Vladislav Abramov, Seiko Yoshida, Pinar Ozcelik, Carolina Miranda, Jennifer Kane, Kaitlyn McKenna, Natasha Campbell, Sharon P. Nations, Shitiz Kumar Sriwastava, Yuko Fujii, Mayumi Murata, Linda Wagemaekers, Angela Andoin, Mollie Vanderhook, Yoshinori Okubo, Martin Bilsker, Taira Uehara, Vera Bril, Julia Wanschitz, Stanislava Toncrova, Mariela Bettini, Kazumi Futono, Shachie Aranke, Yool-hee Kim, Hiroyuki Murai, Anne Nyrhinen, Vinay Chaudhry, Raffaele Iorio, Takashi Kanda, Brittany Harvey, Francisco Javier Rodriguez de Rivera, Henning Andersen, Marianne de Visser, Miwako Sato, Yasuhiro Maeda, Fabienne Deruelle, Marina Pozo, Adam Hart, Masaki Saitoh, Wladimir Bocca Vieira de Rezende Pinto, Said R. Beydoun, Lindsay Zilliox, Akihiro Mukaino, Cinzia Caserta, Mahi Jasinarachchi, Andrea M. Corse, Nikoletta Papadopoulou, JuYoung Kwon, Fernanda Carrara, Juliet Saba, Masayuki Makamori, Vittorio Frasca, Luciana Souza Duca, Hoo Nam Kang, C. Trebst, Celile Phan, Muzeyyen Ugur, Eduardo Ng, Jonathan McKinnon, Hila Bali Kuperman, David Feder, Judit Matolcsi, Jiri Pitha, Martin Stangel, Kate Beck, Gabriel Paiva, Diego Lopergolo, Katrien De Mey, Hidenori Matsuo, Lucas Eduardo Pazetto, Eugene Lai, Amanda Anderson, Ann D'Hondt, Tetsuya Akiyama, Beverly Fyfe, Bella Gross, Elisabet Arribas-Ibar, Kathy de Koning, Gulmohor Roy, Dmitry Pokhabov, Maria Johanna Keijzers, Nicholas Ventura, Tessa Marburger, John Loor, Ji Eun Lee, Alessandro Filla, Celal Tuga, Stephanie Scala, Rudy Mercelis, Marc H. De Baets, Hisako Kobayashi, Stanislav Vohanka, Ana Paula Macagnan, Ana Carolina Amaral de Andrade, Heike Arndt, Giovanni Antonini, Yumi Yamashita, Gwendal Le Masson, Sonia Garcia, Sarah Verjans, James F. Howard, Zaeem A. Siddiqi, Yuen T. So, Megumi Koga, Exuperio Diez Tejedor, Teresa Costabile, Mihoko Takada Takada, Steve Hopkins, Jonathan S. Katz, Charlene Hafer-Macko, Erica Nogueira Coelho, Hung Youl Seok, Carol Herbert, Yuriko Nagane, Didem Altiparmak, Sachiko Kamakura, Mohammad Sanjak, Caroline Moreau, Jordi Díaz-Manera, Sivakumar Sathasivam, Michael Vytopil, Amelia Evoli, Masakatsu Motomura, Ester Reggio, Guy Van den Abeele, Hélène Zéphir, Asya Yarmoschuk, Jasmine Hewlett, Amy Wilson, Sachie Fukui, Cavit Boz, Iandra Souza, Morgane Gaboreau, Ivana Jurajdova, Sonia Decressac, Yong Seo Koo, Valentina Pegoraro, Seung Min Kim, Benison Keung, Rosana Rocha, Nanna Witting, John Vissing, Elaine Weiner, Ali Malekniazi, Larisa Babenko, Amanda C. Guidon, Gal Maier, Charlotte Smetcoren, Robert M. Pascuzzi, Domenico Marco Bonifati, Yumiko Nakamura, Tamires Cristina Gomes da Silva, Takashi Murahara, Sarah Plevka, Tomoko Tsuda, John C. Kincaid, Arnaud Lacour, Ibrez Bandukwala, Alan R. Berger, Chang Nyoung Lee, Jae-Sung Lim, Vern C. Juel, Tulio E. Bertorini, Valeria Cavalcante Lino, Namie Taichi, Ju-Hong Min, Josep Gamez, Nelly Greenbereg, William S. David, Srikanth Muppidi, Husnu Efendi, Pedro Lopez Ruiz, Baki Dogan, Cansu Semiz, Natalia Julia Palacios, Sharon Downing, Paola Cudia, Daniel Jacobs, Can Ebru Bekircan-Kurt, Takayasu Fukudome, Kristen Roe, Lena Bjarbo, Nicole Kassebaum, Makoto Samukawa, Shizuka Asada, Christina Dheel, Fatima Maqsood, Eun Bi Hwang, Kevin Daniels, Sevim Erdem-Ozdamar, Olivier Stevens, Claudio Mazia, Karan Alcon, Sibel Gazioglu, Keiko Kikutake, Luis Lay, Petra Tilkin, Corrado Angelini, Derrick Blackmore, Kimiaki Utsugisawa, Despoina Charalambous, Tuula Harrison, Kristin Huynh, Huned S. Patwa, Laura Echevarria, Henrique Mohr, Christian Homedes-Pedret, Richard J. Barohn, Byung Jo Kim, Daniel DiCapua, Terry McClain, Debora Dada Martineli Torres, Maria Salvado Figueras, Ana Paula Melo, Riley Snook, Miki Ogawa, Marcelo Annes, Yuka Saito, Isabel Illa, Evanthia Bernitsas, Nicole Smalley, Molly Lindsay, Robert G. Miller, Olga Azrilin, Silvia Bonanno, Evgeniya Kosykh, Marcela Wolfova, Olivier Outteryck, Shirli Toska, Anna Kostera-Pruszczyk, HyeJin Ra, Rup Tandan, Sotirios Papagiannopoulos, Natasha Willlems, Anne Mette Ostergaard Autzen, Meinoshin Okumura, Patrick Vermersch, Sarada Sakamuri, Maria Antonia Alberti Aguilo, Shigemi Shimose, Cynthia Carter, Ira Blount, Lisa Thompson, Maurer Pereira Martins, Richard Nowak, Hyung Seok Lee, Anna Kaminska, Joan Bratton, Nazire Pinar Acar, Junichi Ogasawara, Mohamed Mahdi-Rogers, Teiichiro Mitazaki, Marek Čierny, Craig Donahue, Jaya Trivedi, Neelam Goyal, Gonzalo Vidal, Brandy Quarles, Akiko Kanzaki, Yasuko Ikeda, Tomomi Kobashikawa, Morris Brown, Daisuke Yamamoto, Michel Deneve, Denis Korobko, Beth DiSanzo, Benedikt Schoser, Heidi Boterhoven, Eri Kobayashi, Maoko Shirane, Cristiani Fernanda Butinhao, Eriko Higuchi, Takashi Hayashi, Masanori Takahashi, Anne-Cécile Wielanek-Bachelet, Benjamin Rix Brooks, Emanuela Onesti, Tahseen Mozaffar, Liang Lu, Sevasti Bostantzopoulou, Christophe Vial, Shawn J. Bird, Sandi Mumfrey-Thomas, Julie Khoury, Kara Patrick, Kenichi Tsukita, Yoshiko Sano, Hiroshi Nakazora, David P. Richman, Gavin Brown, Yoon-Ho Hong, Tomohiro Kawamura, Igor Dias Brockhausen, Ye Liu, Acary Souza Bulle Oliveira, Soichiro Funaka, Tomoya Hasuike, Frank Lin, Luis Antonio Querol Gutierrez, Namita Goyal, Elena Pinzan, Michelle Mellion, Silvia Messina, Christopher Lindberg, Csilla Rozsa, J. Chad Hoyle, Yoko Kaneko, Gustavo Duran, Francesco Patti, Arshira Seddigh, Ele Kim Perez, Jayashri Srinivasan, Michael Benatar, Philip Van Damme, Salma Akhter, Daniel Ambrosio, Maria Salvado, Floyd Jones, Mark Sivak, Anneke J. van der Kooi, Karen Callison, Catherine Nigro, Rebekah Garcia, Thomas Arnold, Hideki Arima, Brigid Crabtree, Mary Varghese, Aditya Kumar, Miri Kim, Fanny O'Brien, Naya McKinnon, Lauren Wheeler, Hong Vu, Shunsuke Yoshimura, Masatoshi Omoto, Jeffrey T. Guptill, Maria Gabriele, Francoise Bouhour, Veena Mathew, Ritsu Nakayama, Rosa Hasan, Francesco Saccà, Mohammed Salajegheh, Diana Dimitrova, Alzira Alves de Siqueira Carvalho, Maurizio Inghilleri, George Sachs, Rekha Pillai, Enrico Marano, Monika Konyane, Anh Tran, Seda Aydinlik, Kendrick Henderson, Fumie Meguro, Alexandre Guerreiro, Amaiak Chilingaryan, Tiyonnoh Cash, Jun Kawamata, Julie Steele, Helene Gervais-Bernard, Thomas Harbo, Alejandra Dalila Garcia, Musa Kazim Onar, Sabrina Sacconi, Carlos Casasnovas Pons, Nadezhda Malkova, Denis Sazonov, Mireya Fernandez-Fournier, Karin Fricke, Laurie Gutmann, Amy Saklad, Clara Schommer, Sandra Taber, Fiona Norwood, Tugce Kirbas Cavdar, Monique Miesen, Fernanda Troili, Masanori Watanabe, Ratna Bhavaraju-Sanka, Ted M. Burns, Sari Atula, Faisal Sohail, Barbora Kurkova, Brigitta Szabadosne, Luciana Renata Cubas Volpe, Jane Pedersen, Jing Jing Wang, Masashi Inoue, Antonella Di Pasquale, Megan Kramer, Magda Chmelikova, Mehran Soltani, Tuan Vu, Laura Fionda, Eliz Agopian, Susan Shin, Anthony A. Amato, Lotte Vinge, Hakan Cavus, Gil I. Wolfe, Joan Nye, Delphine Mahieu, Miguel Wilken, Markus Färkkilä, Catherine Faber, Erin Manning, Emiko Tsuda, Rami Massie, Paolo Emilio Alboini, Yasmeen Shabbir, Angela Campanella, Aikaterini Dimitriou, Marcelo Rugiero, Cynthia Bodkin, Gyorgyi Szabo, Sharon Halton, Akshay Shah, Yasuko Maeda, Hans D. Katzberg, Yagmur Caliskan, Jaimin Shah, Katsuhisa Masaki, Valentina Damato, Blanka Andersson, Aline de Cassia Santos, Masahiro Mori, Renato Mantegazza, Misa Shimpo, Joanne Nemeth, Livia Dezsi, Anna De Rosa, Doreen Ho, Julie Moutarde, Efstathia Mitropoulou, Amy Woodall, Angela Micheels, László Vécsei, Byoung Joon Kim, Lisa Smith, Tomihiro Imai, Harpreet Kaur, Lorenzo Maggi, Jane Distad, Anita Mogensen, Ericka Simpson, Anne Cooley, Eliana Reyes, Ha Young Shin, Da Yoon Koh, Stefan Gingele, Susan Strom, Ezgi Yilmaz, Manisha Chopra, Anna Melnikova, Edouard Millois, Ludwig Gutmann, Miriam Freimer, Hirokazu Shinozaki, Heena Olalde, Kerry Naunton, Shunya Nakane, Ihsan Sengun, Dimos-Dimitrios Mitsikostas, Edina Varga, Juha-Pekka Erälinna, Wolfgang Löscher, Jan De Bleecker, Elena Bravver, Ana Lazaro, Eun Bin Cho, Thomas Cochrane, Jonathan Goldstein, Lisa D. Hobson-Webb, Michaela Tyblova, Angela Marsil, J. Edward Hartmann, Miyuki Morikawa, Karen Zakalik, Claude Desnuelle, Iveta Novakova, Michiaki Koga, Melinda Horvath, Luiz Otavio Maia Gonçalves, Elena Cortes Vicente, Alejandro Tobon Gonzalez, Stanley H. Appel, Brian Minton, Daniele Orrico, Brian Droker, Jacob Kaufman, Erica Coelho, Chafic Karam, Mikko Laaksonen, Katherine Amato, Jinmyoung Seok, Natalia Prando, Pauline Lahaut, Kaori Osakada, Phillipa Lamont, Alexandros Tselis, Daiane da Cruz Pacheco, Joan Højgaard, Hirokazu Shiraishi, Josef Bednarik, Stefania Morino, Mark Levine-Weinberg, Sara-Claude Michon, Yusuke Fukuda, Michael Pulley, Koichi Narikawa, Ricardo Rojas Garcia, Betsy Mosmiller, James Gilchrist, Maria da Penha Morita Ananias, Maryanne Burdette, Shingo Konno, Janelle Butters, Stephan Wenninger, Debbie Davies, Thomas Skripuletz, Mohammad Alsharabati, Katarina Reguliova, Gabor Lovas, Yuichiro Gondo, Miju Shin, HyeLim Lee, Bruno Bezerra Rosa, Michael D. Weiss, Martha Zampaki, Andrea Caramma, Jeffrey V. Rosenfeld, Cigdem Ozen Aydin, Shara Holzberg, Hélène Merle, Olga Zapletalova, Kurt-Wolfram Suehs, Robert P. Lisak, Dale J. Lange, Albert Hietala, Sedat Sen, Elena Giacomelli, Akiyuki Uzawa, Tomás Augusto Suriane Fialho, Matteo Garibaldi, Nadia Sattar, Wai-Kuen Leong, Lindsay Kaplan, Tetsuya Kanai, Jaana Eriksson, Akiko Nagaishi, Khema Sharma, Tamar Gibson, Mohamed Kazamel, Yulia Nesterova, Sascha Alvermann, Murat Terzi, Taylor Darnell, Donna Carnes, Victor Balyazin, John T. Kissel, Waqar Waheed, Jana Junkerova, Kimberly Robeson, Nicholas Vlaikidis, Nicholas Silvestri, Fredrik Piehl, Maurício André Gheller Friedrich, Shun Shimohama, Nuria Vidal, Eleni Kasioti, H. James Jones, Michael K. Hehir, Luiz Augusto da Silva, Dave Watling, Leslie Roberts, Casey Faigle, Caroline Hourquin, Olli Oksaranta, Tomomi Imamura, Shin Hisahara, Dennis Jeffery, Marie-Hélène Soriani, M. Kawai, Chieko Yoshikawa, Roseann Keo, Angela Genge, Michelangelo Maestri Tassoni, Milvia Pleitez, Michael H. Rivner, Maki Jingu, Giorgia Puorro, Andrea Swenson, Saiju Jacob, Carolina Ortea, Shuichiro Suzuki, Marguerite Engel, Ikuko Kamegamori, SangAe Park, Guilhem Sole, Lesly Welsh, Nichole Gallatti, Jakit Gollogly, Daniel Jons, Yasuteru Sano, Takuya Matsushita, Omar Khan, Maria Cristina Gori, Thabata Veiga, Julie Agriesti, Jos Maessen, Sandra Guinrich, Francesca Bevilacqua, Laura Haar, Jordana Gonçalves Geraldo, Justin Y. Kwan, Hidekazu Suzuki, Dai Matsuse, Kelly Jia, Ozlem Tun, Lara Katzin, Yasushi Suzuki, Shannon Lucy, Carlo Antozzi, ANS - Neuroinfection & -inflammation, Neurology, Howard, James F, Utsugisawa, Kimiaki, Benatar, Michael, Murai, Hiroyuki, Barohn, Richard J, Illa, Isabel, Jacob, Saiju, Vissing, John, Burns, Ted M, Kissel, John T, Muppidi, Srikanth, Nowak, Richard J, O'Brien, Fanny, Wang, Jing-Jing, Mantegazza, Renato, Mazia, Claudio Gabriel, Wilken, Miguel, Ortea, Carolina, Saba, Juliet, Rugiero, Marcelo, Bettini, Mariela, Vidal, Gonzalo, Garcia, Alejandra Dalila, Lamont, Phillipa, Leong, Wai-Kuen, Boterhoven, Heidi, Fyfe, Beverly, Roberts, Leslie, Jasinarachchi, Mahi, Willlems, Natasha, Wanschitz, Julia, Löscher, Wolfgang, De Bleecker, Jan, Van den Abeele, Guy, de Koning, Kathy, De Mey, Katrien, Mercelis, Rudy, Wagemaekers, Linda, Mahieu, Delphine, Van Damme, Philip, Smetcoren, Charlotte, Stevens, Olivier, Verjans, Sarah, D'Hondt, Ann, Tilkin, Petra, Alves de Siqueira Carvalho, Alzira, Hasan, Rosa, Dias Brockhausen, Igor, Feder, David, Ambrosio, Daniel, Melo, Ana Paula, Rocha, Rosana, Rosa, Bruno, Veiga, Thabata, Augusto da Silva, Luiz, Gonçalves Geraldo, Jordana, da Penha Morita Ananias, Maria, Nogueira Coelho, Erica, Paiva, Gabriel, Pozo, Marina, Prando, Natalia, Dada Martineli Torres, Debora, Fernanda Butinhao, Cristiani, Coelho, Erica, Renata Cubas Volpe, Luciana, Duran, Gustavo, Gomes da Silva, Tamires Cristina, Otavio Maia Gonçalves, Luiz, Pazetto, Lucas Eduardo, Souza Duca, Luciana, Suriane Fialho, Tomás Augusto, Gheller Friedrich, Maurício André, Guerreiro, Alexandre, Mohr, Henrique, Pereira Martins, Maurer, da Cruz Pacheco, Daiane, Macagnan, Ana Paula, de Cassia Santos, Aline, Bulle Oliveira, Acary Souza, Amaral de Andrade, Ana Carolina, Annes, Marcelo, Cavalcante Lino, Valeria, Pinto, Wladimir, Miranda, Carolina, Carrara, Fernanda, Souza, Iandra, Genge, Angela, Massie, Rami, Campbell, Natasha, Bril, Vera, Katzberg, Han, Soltani, Mehran, Ng, Eduardo, Siddiqi, Zaeem, Phan, Celile, Blackmore, Derrick, Vohanka, Stanislav, Bednarik, Josef, Chmelikova, Magda, Cierny, Marek, Toncrova, Stanislava, Junkerova, Jana, Kurkova, Barbora, Reguliova, Katarina, Zapletalova, Olga, Pitha, Jiri, Novakova, Iveta, Tyblova, Michaela, Wolfova, Marcela, Jurajdova, Ivana, Andersen, Henning, Harbo, Thoma, Vinge, Lotte, Mogensen, Anita, Højgaard, Joan, Witting, Nanna, Autzen, Anne Mette, Pedersen, Jane, Färkkilä, Marku, Atula, Sari, Nyrhinen, Anne, Erälinna, Juha-Pekka, Laaksonen, Mikko, Oksaranta, Olli, Eriksson, Jaana, Harrison, Tuula, Desnuelle, Claude, Sacconi, Sabrina, Soriani, Marie-Hélène, Decressac, Sonia, Moutarde, Julie, Lahaut, Pauline, Solé, Guilhem, Le Masson, Gwendal, Wielanek-Bachelet, Anne-Cécile, Gaboreau, Morgane, Moreau, Caroline, Wilson, Amy, Vial, Christophe, Bouhour, Françoise, Gervais-Bernard, Helene, Merle, Hélène, Hourquin, Caroline, Lacour, Arnaud, Outteryck, Olivier, Vermersch, Patrick, Zephir, Hélène, Millois, Edouard, Deneve, Michel, Deruelle, Fabienne, Schoser, Benedikt, Wenninger, Stephan, Stangel, Martin, Alvermann, Sascha, Gingele, Stefan, Skripuletz, Thoma, Suehs, Kurt-Wolfram, Trebst, Corinna, Fricke, Karin, Papagiannopoulos, Sotirio, Bostantzopoulou, Sevasti, Vlaikidis, Nichola, Zampaki, Martha, Papadopoulou, Nikoletta, Mitsikostas, Dimos-Dimitrio, Kasioti, Eleni, Mitropoulou, Efstathia, Charalambous, Despoina, Rozsa, Csilla, Horvath, Melinda, Lovas, Gabor, Matolcsi, Judit, Szabo, Gyorgyi, Szabadosne, Brigitta, Vecsei, Laszlo, Dezsi, Livia, Varga, Edina, Konyane, Monika, Gross, Bella, Azrilin, Olga, Greenbereg, Nelly, Bali Kuperman, Hila, Antonini, Giovanni, Garibaldi, Matteo, Morino, Stefania, Troili, Fernanda, Di Pasquale, Antonella, Filla, Alessandro, Costabile, Teresa, Marano, Enrico, Sacca, Francesco, Marsili, Angela, Puorro, Giorgia, Maestri Tassoni, Michelangelo, De Rosa, Anna, Bonanno, Silvia, Antozzi, Carlo, Maggi, Lorenzo, Campanella, Angela, Angelini, Corrado, Cudia, Paola, Pegoraro, Valentina, Pinzan, Elena, Bevilacqua, Francesca, Orrico, Daniele, Bonifati, Domenico Marco, Evoli, Amelia, Alboini, Paolo Emilio, D'Amato, Valentina, Iorio, Raffaele, Inghilleri, Maurizio, Fionda, Laura, Frasca, Vittorio, Giacomelli, Elena, Gori, Maria, Lopergolo, Diego, Onesti, Emanuela, Gabriele, Maria, Patti, Francesco, Salvatore Caramma, Andrea, Messina, Silvia, Reggio, Ester, Caserta, Cinzia, Uzawa, Akiyuki, Kanai, Tetsuya, Mori, Masahiro, Kaneko, Yoko, Kanzaki, Akiko, Kobayashi, Eri, Masaki, Katsuhisa, Matsuse, Dai, Matsushita, Takuya, Uehara, Taira, Shimpo, Misa, Jingu, Maki, Kikutake, Keiko, Nakamura, Yumiko, Sano, Yoshiko, Nagane, Yuriko, Kamegamori, Ikuko, Fujii, Yuko, Futono, Kazumi, Tsuda, Tomoko, Saito, Yuka, Suzuki, Hidekazu, Morikawa, Miyuki, Samukawa, Makoto, Kamakura, Sachiko, Shiraishi, Hirokazu, Mitazaki, Teiichiro, Motomura, Masakatsu, Mukaino, Akihiro, Yoshimura, Shunsuke, Asada, Shizuka, Kobashikawa, Tomomi, Koga, Megumi, Maeda, Yasuko, Takada, Kazumi, Takada, Mihoko Takada, Yamashita, Yumi, Yoshida, Seiko, Suzuki, Yasushi, Akiyama, Tetsuya, Narikawa, Koichi, Tsukita, Kenichi, Meguro, Fumie, Fukuda, Yusuke, Sato, Miwako, Matsuo, Hidenori, Fukudome, Takayasu, Gondo, Yuichiro, Maeda, Yasuhiro, Nagaishi, Akiko, Nakane, Shunya, Okubo, Yoshinori, Okumura, Meinoshin, Funaka, Soichiro, Kawamura, Tomohiro, Makamori, Masayuki, Takahashi, Masanori, Hasuike, Tomoya, Higuchi, Eriko, Kobayashi, Hisako, Osakada, Kaori, Taichi, Namie, Tsuda, Emiko, Hayashi, Takashi, Hisahara, Shin, Imai, Tomihiro, Kawamata, Jun, Murahara, Takashi, Saitoh, Masaki, Shimohama, Shun, Suzuki, Shuichiro, Yamamoto, Daisuke, Konno, Shingo, Imamura, Tomomi, Inoue, Masashi, Murata, Mayumi, Nakazora, Hiroshi, Nakayama, Ritsu, Ikeda, Yasuko, Ogawa, Miki, Shirane, Maoko, Kanda, Takashi, Kawai, Motoharu, Koga, Michiaki, Ogasawara, Junichi, Omoto, Masatoshi, Sano, Yasuteru, Arima, Hideki, Fukui, Sachie, Shimose, Shigemi, Shinozaki, Hirokazu, Watanabe, Masanori, Yoshikawa, Chieko, van der Kooi, Anneke, de Visser, Marianne, Gibson, Tamar, Maessen, Jo, de Baets, Marc, Faber, Catherine, Keijzers, Maria Johanna, Miesen, Monique, Kostera-Pruszczyk, Anna, Kaminska, Anna, Kim, Byung-Jo, Lee, Chang Nyoung, Koo, Yong Seo, Seok, Hung Youl, Kang, Hoo Nam, Ra, Hyejin, Kim, Byoung Joon, Cho, Eun Bin, Lee, Hyelim, Min, Ju-Hong, Seok, Jinmyoung, Koh, Da Yoon, Kwon, Juyoung, Lee, Jieun, Park, Sangae, Hong, Yoon-Ho, Lim, Jae-Sung, Kim, Miri, Kim, Seung Min, Kim, Yool-hee, Lee, Hyung Seok, Shin, Ha Young, Hwang, Eun Bi, Shin, Miju, Sazonov, Deni, Yarmoschuk, Asya, Babenko, Larisa, Malkova, Nadezhda, Melnikova, Anna, Korobko, Deni, Kosykh, Evgeniya, Pokhabov, Dmitry, Nesterova, Yulia, Abramov, Vladislav, Balyazin, Victor, Casasnovas Pons, Carlo, Alberti Aguilo, Maria, Homedes-Pedret, Christian, Palacios, Natalia Julia, Lazaro, Ana, Diez Tejedor, Exuperio, Fernandez-Fournier, Mireya, Lopez Ruiz, Pedro, Rodriguez de Rivera, Francisco Javier, Salvado Figueras, Maria, Gamez, Josep, Salvado, Maria, Cortes Vicente, Elena, Diaz-Manera, Jordi, Querol Gutierrez, Lui, Rojas Garcia, Ricardo, Vidal, Nuria, Arribas-Ibar, Elisabet, Piehl, Fredrik, Hietala, Albert, Bjarbo, Lena, Lindberg, Christopher, Jons, Daniel, Andersson, Blanka, Sengun, Ihsan, Ozcelik, Pinar, Tuga, Celal, Ugur, Muzeyyen, Boz, Cavit, Altiparmak, Didem, Gazioglu, Sibel, Ozen Aydin, Cigdem, Erdem-Ozdamar, Sevim, Bekircan-Kurt, Can Ebru, Yilmaz, Ezgi, Acar, Nazire Pinar, Caliskan, Yagmur, Efendi, Husnu, Aydinlik, Seda, Cavus, Hakan, Semiz, Cansu, Tun, Ozlem, Terzi, Murat, Dogan, Baki, Onar, Musa Kazim, Sen, Sedat, Cavdar, Tugce Kirba, Norwood, Fiona, Dimitriou, Aikaterini, Gollogly, Jakit, Mahdi-Rogers, Mohamed, Seddigh, Arshira, Maier, Gal, Sohail, Faisal, Sathasivam, Sivakumar, Arndt, Heike, Davies, Debbie, Watling, Dave, Rivner, Michael, Hartmann, J. Edward, Quarles, Brandy, Smalley, Nicole, Amato, Anthony, Cochrane, Thoma, Salajegheh, Mohammed, Roe, Kristen, Amato, Katherine, Toska, Shirli, Wolfe, Gil, Silvestri, Nichola, Patrick, Kara, Zakalik, Karen, Katz, Jonathan, Miller, Robert, Engel, Marguerite, Bravver, Elena, Brooks, Benjamin, Plevka, Sarah, Burdette, Maryanne, Sanjak, Mohammad, Kramer, Megan, Nemeth, Joanne, Schommer, Clara, Juel, Vern, Guptill, Jeffrey, Hobson-Webb, Lisa, Beck, Kate, Carnes, Donna, Loor, John, Anderson, Amanda, Lange, Dale, Agopian, Eliz, Goldstein, Jonathan, Manning, Erin, Kaplan, Lindsay, Holzberg, Shara, Kassebaum, Nicole, Pascuzzi, Robert, Bodkin, Cynthia, Kincaid, John, Snook, Riley, Guinrich, Sandra, Micheels, Angela, Chaudhry, Vinay, Corse, Andrea, Mosmiller, Betsy, Ho, Doreen, Srinivasan, Jayashri, Vytopil, Michael, Ventura, Nichola, Scala, Stephanie, Carter, Cynthia, Donahue, Craig, Herbert, Carol, Weiner, Elaine, Mckinnon, Jonathan, Haar, Laura, Mckinnon, Naya, Alcon, Karan, Daniels, Kevin, Sattar, Nadia, Jeffery, Denni, Mckenna, Kaitlyn, Guidon, Amanda, David, William, Dheel, Christina, Levine-Weinberg, Mark, Nigro, Catherine, Simpson, Ericka, Appel, Stanley H, Lai, Eugene, Lay, Lui, Pleitez, Milvia, Halton, Sharon, Faigle, Casey, Thompson, Lisa, Sivak, Mark, Shin, Susan, Bratton, Joan, Jacobs, Daniel, Brown, Gavin, Bandukwala, Ibrez, Brown, Morri, Kane, Jennifer, Blount, Ira, Freimer, Miriam, Hoyle, J. Chad, Agriesti, Julie, Khoury, Julie, Marburger, Tessa, Kaur, Harpreet, Dimitrova, Diana, Mellion, Michelle, Sachs, George, Crabtree, Brigid, Keo, Roseann, Perez, Ele Kim, Taber, Sandra, Gilchrist, Jame, Andoin, Angela, Darnell, Taylor, Goyal, Neelam, Sakamuri, Sarada, So, Yuen T, Welsh, Lesly Welsh, Bhavaraju-Sanka, Ratna, Tobon Gonzalez, Alejandro, Jones, Floyd, Saklad, Amy, Nations, Sharon, Trivedi, Jaya, Hopkins, Steve, Kazamel, Mohamed, Alsharabati, Mohammad, Lu, Liang, Mumfrey-Thomas, Sandi, Woodall, Amy, Richman, David, Butters, Janelle, Lindsay, Molly, Mozaffar, Tahseen, Cash, Tiyonnoh, Goyal, Namita, Roy, Gulmohor, Mathew, Veena, Maqsood, Fatima, Minton, Brian, Jones, H. Jame, Rosenfeld, Jeffrey, Garcia, Rebekah, Garcia, Sonia, Echevarria, Laura, Pulley, Michael, Aranke, Shachie, Berger, Alan Ro, Shah, Jaimin, Shabbir, Yasmeen, Smith, Lisa, Varghese, Mary, Gutmann, Laurie, Gutmann, Ludwig, Swenson, Andrea, Olalde, Heena, Hafer-Macko, Charlene, Kwan, Justin, Zilliox, Lindsay, Callison, Karen, Disanzo, Beth, Naunton, Kerry, Bilsker, Martin, Sharma, Khema, Reyes, Eliana, Cooley, Anne, Michon, Sara-Claude, Steele, Julie, Karam, Chafic Karam, Chopra, Manisha, Bird, Shawn, Kaufman, Jacob, Gallatti, Nichole, Vu, Tuan, Katzin, Lara, Mcclain, Terry, Harvey, Brittany, Hart, Adam, Huynh, Kristin, Beydoun, Said, Chilingaryan, Amaiak, Droker, Brian, Lin, Frank, Shah, Akshay, Tran, Anh, Akhter, Salma, Malekniazi, Ali, Tandan, Rup, Hehir, Michael, Waheed, Waqar, Lucy, Shannon, Weiss, Michael, Distad, Jane, Downing, Sharon, Strom, Susan, Lisak, Robert, Bernitsas, Evanthia, Khan, Omar, Kumar Sriwastava, Shitiz, Tselis, Alexandro, Jia, Kelly, Bertorini, Tulio, Arnold, Thoma, Henderson, Kendrick, Pillai, Rekha, Liu, Ye, Wheeler, Lauren, Hewlett, Jasmine, Vanderhook, Mollie, Dicapua, Daniel, Keung, Benison, Kumar, Aditya, Patwa, Huned, Robeson, Kimberly, Nye, Joan, Vu, Hong, Howard, J, Utsugisawa, K, Benatar, M, Murai, H, Barohn, R, Illa, I, Jacob, S, Vissing, J, Burns, T, Kissel, J, Muppidi, S, Nowak, R, O'Brien, F, Wang, J, Mantegazza, R, and Bonanno, S
- Subjects
Male ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Drug Resistance ,Adult ,Aged ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Autoantibodies ,Double-Blind Method ,Female ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Myasthenia Gravis ,Receptors, Cholinergic ,Outcome Assessment (Health Care) ,Severity of Illness Index ,Neurology (clinical) ,law.invention ,Complement inhibitor ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Monoclonal ,Receptors ,Clinical endpoint ,Humanized ,Cholinergic ,education.field_of_study ,Eculizumab ,Autoantibodie ,Myasthenia Gravi ,Settore MED/26 - NEUROLOGIA ,Human ,medicine.drug ,Meningitides ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,Placebo ,Antibodies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,education ,business.industry ,Surgery ,Thymectomy ,030104 developmental biology ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background Complement is likely to have a role in refractory generalised myasthenia gravis, but no approved therapies specifically target this system. Results from a phase 2 study suggested that eculizumab, a terminal complement inhibitor, produced clinically meaningful improvements in patients with anti-acetylcholine receptor antibody-positive refractory generalised myasthenia gravis. We further assessed the efficacy and safety of eculizumab in this patient population in a phase 3 trial. Methods We did a phase 3, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicentre study (REGAIN) in 76 hospitals and specialised clinics in 17 countries across North America, Latin America, Europe, and Asia. Eligible patients were aged at least 18 years, with a Myasthenia Gravis-Activities of Daily Living (MG-ADL) score of 6 or more, Myasthenia Gravis Foundation of America (MGFA) class II-IV disease, vaccination against Neisseria meningitides, and previous treatment with at least two immunosuppressive therapies or one immunosuppressive therapy and chronic intravenous immunoglobulin or plasma exchange for 12 months without symptom control. Patients with a history of thymoma or thymic neoplasms, thymectomy within 12 months before screening, or use of intravenous immunoglobulin or plasma exchange within 4 weeks before randomisation, or rituximab within 6 months before screening, were excluded. We randomly assigned participants (1:1) to either intravenous eculizumab or intravenous matched placebo for 26 weeks. Dosing for eculizumab was 900 mg on day 1 and at weeks 1, 2, and 3; 1200 mg at week 4; and 1200 mg given every second week thereafter as maintenance dosing. Randomisation was done centrally with an interactive voice or web-response system with patients stratified to one of four groups based on MGFA disease classification. Where possible, patients were maintained on existing myasthenia gravis therapies and rescue medication was allowed at the study physician's discretion. Patients, investigators, staff, and outcome assessors were masked to treatment assignment. The primary efficacy endpoint was the change from baseline to week 26 in MG-ADL total score measured by worst-rank ANCOVA. The efficacy population set was defined as all patients randomly assigned to treatment groups who received at least one dose of study drug, had a valid baseline MG-ADL assessment, and at least one post-baseline MG-ADL assessment. The safety analyses included all randomly assigned patients who received eculizumab or placebo. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01997229. Findings Between April 30, 2014, and Feb 19, 2016, we randomly assigned and treated 125 patients, 62 with eculizumab and 63 with placebo. The primary analysis showed no significant difference between eculizumab and placebo (least-squares mean rank 56·6 [SEM 4·5] vs 68·3 [4·5]; rank-based treatment difference -11·7, 95% CI -24·3 to 0·96; p=0·0698). No deaths or cases of meningococcal infection occurred during the study. The most common adverse events in both groups were headache and upper respiratory tract infection (ten [16%] for both events in the eculizumab group and 12 [19%] for both in the placebo group). Myasthenia gravis exacerbations were reported by six (10%) patients in the eculizumab group and 15 (24%) in the placebo group. Six (10%) patients in the eculizumab group and 12 (19%) in the placebo group required rescue therapy. Interpretation The change in the MG-ADL score was not statistically significant between eculizumab and placebo, as measured by the worst-rank analysis. Eculizumab was well tolerated. The use of a worst-rank analytical approach proved to be an important limitation of this study since the secondary and sensitivity analyses results were inconsistent with the primary endpoint result; further research into the role of complement is needed. Funding Alexion Pharmaceuticals.
- Published
- 2017
15. Cellular changes in eculizumab early responders with generalized myasthenia gravis
- Author
-
James F. Howard, Yingkai Li, Jeffrey T. Guptill, Manisha Chopra, Melissa A. Russo, and John S. Yi
- Subjects
Male ,Regulatory T cell ,T-Lymphocytes ,T cell ,Immunology ,Adaptive Immunity ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Complement inhibitor ,Myasthenia Gravis ,medicine ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Aged ,Complement component 5 ,B-Lymphocytes ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,Eculizumab ,medicine.disease ,Acquired immune system ,Myasthenia gravis ,Complement Inactivating Agents ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,business ,CD8 ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Eculizumab (ECU), a C5 complement inhibitor, is approved to treat acetylcholine receptor autoantibody positive generalized myasthenia gravis (AChR MG). The clinical effect of ECU relies on inhibition of the terminal complement complex; however, the effect of ECU on lymphocytes is largely unknown. We evaluated innate and adaptive immunity among AChR MG patients (N = 3) before ECU and ≥3 months later while on stable therapy, and found reduced activation markers in memory CD4+ T cell subsets, increased regulatory T cell populations, and reduced frequencies of CXCR5+HLA-DR+CCR7+ Tfh subsets and CD11b+ migratory memory B cells. We observed increases within CD8+ T cell subsets that were terminally differentiated and senescent. Our data suggest complement inhibition with ECU modulates the adaptive immunity in patients with MG, consistent with preclinical data showing changes in complement-mediated signaling by T- and antigen-presenting cells. These findings extend our understanding of ECU's mechanism of action when treating patients with MG.
- Published
- 2021
16. Imaging Viscoelasticity in Control and Dystrophic Vastus Lateralis using Quantitative Viscoelastic Response (QVisR) Ultrasound
- Author
-
Melissa C. Caughey, Manisha Chopra, James F. Howard, Christopher J. Moore, and Caterina M. Gallippi
- Subjects
Mechanical property ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Duchenne muscular dystrophy ,Ultrasound ,Dystrophic muscle ,medicine.disease ,01 natural sciences ,Viscoelasticity ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Ultrasonic imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Fibrosis ,Internal medicine ,0103 physical sciences ,medicine ,Cardiology ,business ,010301 acoustics ,Control muscle - Abstract
Mechanical property changes associated with inflammation, necrosis, fibrosis, and fatty deposition in dystrophic muscle may be quantitatively evaluated by Quantitative Viscoelastic Response (QVisR) ultrasound. QVisR uses a machine learning (ML) framework that takes as input tissue displacement in response to two consecutive and co-located acoustic radiation force (ARF) excitations and yields as output estimates of shear elastic and shear viscous moduli. QVisR imaging was performed in the vastus lateralis (VL) muscles of 11 boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) aged 5 to 12 years and of 8 age-matched boys with no known neuromuscular disorders, who served as controls. QVisR measures of elastic moduli differed between DMD and control VL in boys aged less than six years and six-to-seven years. Similarly, QVisR measures of viscous moduli differed between DMD and control VL in boys aged six-to-seven years. These results demonstrate that QVisR measures of elastic and viscous moduli differentiate dystrophic from control muscle. The findings suggest that QVisR may be relevant to monitoring dystrophic muscle degeneration and response to intervention, particularly in early stages when interventions are most likely to be impactful.
- Published
- 2019
17. Texture in Quantitative Viscoelastic Response (QVisR) Images Differentiates Dystrophic from Control Skeletal Muscles in Boys, In Vivo
- Author
-
Catherine Jacobs, Manisha Chopra, Diane O. Meyer, Melissa C. Caughey, James F. Howard, Caterina M. Gallippi, Regina Emmett, and Christopher J. Moore
- Subjects
Tissue deformation ,business.industry ,Duchenne muscular dystrophy ,Ultrasound ,medicine.disease ,01 natural sciences ,Response to treatment ,Viscoelasticity ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,In vivo ,0103 physical sciences ,medicine ,Analysis tools ,business ,Acoustic radiation force ,010301 acoustics ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
Quantitative Viscoelastic Response (QVisR) ultrasound is a new machine learning-based elasticity imaging method in which elastic and viscous moduli are estimated from tissue deformation in response to two consecutive acoustic radiation force (ARF) excitations. The estimated moduli are rendered into two-dimensional parametric images of elastic and viscous modulus. From QVisR images, the spatial distribution of elastic and viscous properties may be evaluated using established computational texture analysis tools. In this study, computational texture analysis by the omnidirectional gray-level run-length matrix (GLRLM) was applied to QVisR images. The images were obtained in the vastus lateralis (VL) muscles of 11 boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy, aged 5-12 years, and 8 age-matched boys with no known neuromuscular disorders, who served as controls. GLRLM-derived elastic entropy in QVisR images was statistically higher (Wilcoxin, p
- Published
- 2019
18. Tacrolimus inhibits Th1 and Th17 responses in MuSK-antibody positive Myasthenia Gravis patients
- Author
-
Lisa D. Hobson-Webb, Janice M. Massey, Yingkai Li, Weibin Liu, Vern C. Juel, James F. Howard, Melissa A. Russo, John S. Yi, Manisha Chopra, and Jeffrey T. Guptill
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_treatment ,T cell ,MuSK protein ,chemical and pharmacologic phenomena ,Article ,Tacrolimus ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Myasthenia Gravis ,Medicine ,Cytotoxic T cell ,Humans ,Receptors, Cholinergic ,Cells, Cultured ,Aged ,biology ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,business.industry ,Receptor Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,T helper cell ,Middle Aged ,Th1 Cells ,medicine.disease ,Myasthenia gravis ,030104 developmental biology ,Cytokine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,surgical procedures, operative ,Neurology ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,Th17 Cells ,Female ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,CD8 ,Immunosuppressive Agents - Abstract
Muscle specific tyrosine kinase antibody positive myasthenia gravis (MuSK- MG) is characterized by autoantibodies against the MuSK protein of the neuromuscular junction resulting in weakness of bulbar and proximal muscles. We previously demonstrated that patients with MuSK-MG have increased pro-inflammatory Th1 and Th17 responses. Tacrolimus, an immunosuppressant used in AChR-MG and transplantation patients, inhibits T cell responses through interference with IL-2 transcription. The therapeutic efficacy and immunological effect of tacrolimus in MuSK-MG is unclear. In the current study we examined the proliferation, phenotype and cytokine production of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in peripheral blood mononuclear cells of MuSK-MG following a 3-day in vitro culture with or without tacrolimus. We determined that tacrolimus profoundly suppressed CD4 and CD8 T cell proliferation and significantly suppressed Th1 and Th17 responses, as demonstrated by a reduced frequency of IFN-γ, IL-2, and IL-17 producing CD4 T cells and reduced frequencies of IFN-γ and IL-2 producing CD8 T cells. Tacrolimus also inhibits pathogenic Th17 cells coproducing IL-17 and IFN-γ. In addition, tacrolimus suppressed follicular T helper cell (Tfh) and regulatory T helper cell (Treg) subsets. These findings provide preliminary support for tacrolimus as a potential alternative immunosuppressive therapy for MuSK-MG.
- Published
- 2018
19. High-Pressure Transvenous Perfusion of the Upper Extremity in Human Muscular Dystrophy: A Safety Study with 0.9% Saline
- Author
-
Robert D. Valley, Yasheng Chen, James F. Howard, Hongyu An, Keith C. Kocis, Weili Lin, Zheng Fan, Manisha Chopra, William J. Powers, and Joseph Muenzer
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Duchenne muscular dystrophy ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Sodium Chloride ,Young Adult ,Pressure ,Genetics ,Limb perfusion ,medicine ,Humans ,Muscular dystrophy ,Molecular Biology ,Saline ,Research Articles ,business.industry ,Gene Transfer Techniques ,Genetic Therapy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Peripheral ,Muscular Dystrophy, Duchenne ,Perfusion ,Clinical trial ,Treatment Outcome ,Molecular Medicine ,Female ,business ,Limb-girdle muscular dystrophy - Abstract
We evaluated safety and feasibility of high-pressure transvenous limb perfusion in an upper extremity of adult patients with muscular dystrophy, after completing a similar study in a lower extremity. A dose escalation study of single-limb perfusion with 0.9% saline was carried out in nine adults with muscular dystrophies under intravenous analgesia. Our study demonstrates that it is feasible and definitely safe to perform high-pressure transvenous perfusion with 0.9% saline up to 35% of limb volume in the upper extremities of young adults with muscular dystrophy. Perfusion at 40% limb volume is associated with short-lived physiological changes in peripheral nerves without clinical correlates in one subject. This study provides the basis for a phase 1/2 clinical trial using pressurized transvenous delivery into upper limbs of nonambulatory patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Furthermore, our results are applicable to other conditions such as limb girdle muscular dystrophy as a method for delivering regional macromolecular therapeutics in high dose to skeletal muscles of the upper extremity.
- Published
- 2015
20. IL-11 Induces Th17 Cell Responses in Patients with Early Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis
- Author
-
Jianping Jin, Silva Markovic-Plese, Jelena Drulovic, Yazhong Tao, Xin Zhang, Manisha Chopra, Irena Dujmovic-Basuroski, and Yunan Tang
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,Cell ,Autoimmunity ,Cell Communication ,Disease ,Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting ,Cerebrospinal fluid ,Downregulation and upregulation ,Transforming Growth Factor beta ,medicine ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Inflammation ,Clinically isolated syndrome ,Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha ,business.industry ,Interleukins ,Multiple sclerosis ,Interleukin-17 ,Cell Differentiation ,Interleukin-11 ,medicine.disease ,Peripheral ,Cytokine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Th17 Cells ,Female ,business ,Immunologic Memory - Abstract
Clinically isolated syndrome (CIS) suggestive of multiple sclerosis (MS) is the earliest clinically evident phase of the disease, which may provide valuable insight into the molecular mechanisms of the initiation of the autoimmune response in MS. Our results introduce IL-11 as a new cytokine that plays a role in the autoimmune response in the early phase of the disease. IL-11 is the highest upregulated cytokine in the sera and cerebrospinal fluid from CIS patients, which is also increased in patients with clinically definitive relapsing-remitting MS in comparison with healthy control subjects. Serum IL-11 levels are significantly increased during clinical exacerbations in comparison with remissions in the same patients. CD4+ cells represent a predominant cell source of IL-11 in the peripheral circulation, and the percentage of IL-11+CD4+ cells is significantly increased in CIS patients in comparison with healthy control subjects. Furthermore, we have identified IL-11 as a new Th17-promoting cytokine, because it induces a differentiation of naive CD4+ T cells into Th17 cells, as well as expansion of Th17 memory cells. Because the Th17 cytokines IL-17F, IL-21 and TNF-α, and TGF-β induce differentiation of naive cells in the IL-11–secreting CD4+ cells, we propose that cross-talk between IL-11+CD4+ and Th17 cells may play a role in the inflammatory response in relapsing-remitting MS.
- Published
- 2015
21. Estimating degree of mechanical anisotropy in dystrophic and control rectus femoris in boys using VisR ultrasound, in vivo
- Author
-
James F. Howard, Caterina M. Gallippi, Melissa C. Caughey, Manisha Chopra, and Christopher J. Moore
- Subjects
Materials science ,business.industry ,Duchenne muscular dystrophy ,Ultrasound ,Muscle degeneration ,medicine.disease ,01 natural sciences ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Ultrasonic imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nuclear magnetic resonance ,In vivo ,0103 physical sciences ,Healthy control ,medicine ,Muscle fibre ,business ,Anisotropy ,010301 acoustics - Abstract
Previous work has shown that the degree of anisotropy in tissue can be assessed using Acoustic Radiation Force Impulse (ARFI) imaging performed with a geometrically asymmetric excitation. In this work, we investigate the clinical relevance of mechanical anisotropy in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). Anisotropy assessment was performed using relative elasticity (RE) and relative viscosity (RV) parameters measured by Viscoelastic Response (VisR) ultrasound. These parameters were evaluated as the ratio of their respective values obtained with two orthogonal transducer orientations, i.e. parallel and perpendicular to the muscle fiber direction, to represent the transverse over the longitudinal RE or RV. In a pilot clinical feasibility study performed in six, 7.9–10.4 year-old boys with (DMD) and five age-matched boys with no known neuromuscular disorders, VisR anisotropy imaging was performed in vivo in the rectus femoris (RF) serially for a total of 22 time points in DMD and 12 time points in control boys. Both the RE and RV anisotropy ratios in the RF muscles of boys with DMD were significantly higher (Wilcoxon, p
- Published
- 2017
22. Estimating degree of mechanical anisotropy in healthy and dystrophic rectus femoris of boys using VisR ultrasound, in vivo
- Author
-
James F. Howard, Caterina M. Gallippi, Chris B. Moore, Manisha Chopra, Melissa C. Caughey, Regina Emmett, and Diane O. Meyer
- Subjects
medicine.anatomical_structure ,business.industry ,In vivo ,Duchenne muscular dystrophy ,Ultrasound ,Muscle fiber necrosis ,medicine ,Skeletal muscle ,Fibrous tissue ,business ,medicine.disease ,Biomedical engineering ,Ultrasonic imaging - Abstract
In Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), muscle fiber necrosis and subsequent progressive replacement of muscle by fibrous tissue and fat impacts the degree of anisotropy (DoA) in mechanical properties. Mechanical DoA can be assessed in skeletal muscle using Viscoelastic Response (VisR) ultrasound. We hypothesize that in vivo VisR DoA measures in the rectus femoris (RF) muscles of boys with DMD statistically differ from those in control boys. Further, we hypothesize that VisR DoA is correlated to RF functional output.
- Published
- 2017
23. Cross-sectional comparison of in vivo Viscoelastic Response (VisR) ultrasound in lower limb muscles of boys with and without duchenne muscular dystrophy
- Author
-
Christopher J. Moore, Diane O. Meyer, Melissa C. Caughey, Mallory R. Selzo, James F. Howard, Manisha Chopra, Caterina M. Gallippi, and Regina Emmett
- Subjects
musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Mechanical property ,business.industry ,Duchenne muscular dystrophy ,Ultrasound ,Adipose tissue ,Muscle degeneration ,medicine.disease ,01 natural sciences ,Lower limb ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,In vivo ,Fibrosis ,Internal medicine ,0103 physical sciences ,medicine ,Cardiology ,business ,010301 acoustics ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a genetic disorder that causes progressive muscle degeneration involving necrosis and inflammation, with subsequent replacement of muscle fibers by fibrosis and fatty tissue. These compositional changes underlie mechanical property alterations in affected muscles, which may be assessed using Viscoelastic Response (VisR) ultrasound. We hypothesize that VisR will delineate differences in the viscoelastic properties of lower limb skeletal muscles in boys with versus without DMD. VisR imaging was performed in the vastus intermedius (VI), rectus femoris (RF), sartorius (SM) and gastrocnemius (GM) muscles of seven boys (4 DMD, 3 control) aged 7.9 – 10.4 years. Parametric images of relative elasticity (RE) and relative viscosity (RV) were rendered. From the parametric images, percent muscle area with relatively high RE or RV value was calculated and compared (Wilcoxon rank-sum) between DMD and control on a per-muscle basis. In the VI, RF and SM, percent muscle with relatively high RV was larger (VI: 17.7% v. 13.1% RF: 98.9% v. 93.7%, SM: 43.2% v. 40.6% p < 0.05) in DMD than control muscles. In the VI, percent muscle with relatively high RE was larger (32.8% v. 29.5%, p < 0.05) in DMD muscles. No significant differences were observed in the GM between DMD and control. VisR results were consistent with temporally-matched functional testing using a hand-held dynamometer, which showed 40.5% to 70.0% lower force output in DMD RF, VL and SM - and only 21.8% lower force output in DMD GM - relative to the corresponding control muscles. These results suggest that VisR imaging is relevant to delineating viscoelastic property alterations that are associated with dystrophic muscle degeneration in boys with DMD, in vivo.
- Published
- 2016
24. Effect of therapeutic plasma exchange on immunoglobulins in myasthenia gravis
- Author
-
Ehsanollah Esfandiari, Paul Atherfold, Vern C. Juel, Janice M. Massey, Emma Jones, James F. Howard, Tim Buchanan, Bryan Smith, John S. Yi, Amanda Anderson, Manisha Chopra, and Jeffrey T. Guptill
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Exacerbation ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,Immunoglobulins ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Article ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Myasthenia Gravis ,medicine ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Aged ,Autoantibodies ,Acetylcholine receptor ,Aged, 80 and over ,Autoimmune disease ,Plasma Exchange ,biology ,business.industry ,Autoantibody ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Myasthenia gravis ,Immunoglobulin A ,Treatment Outcome ,Immunoglobulin M ,Immunoglobulin G ,biology.protein ,Female ,Plasmapheresis ,Therapeutic plasma exchange ,Antibody ,business ,Biomarkers ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
An integrated understanding of therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE) effects on immunoglobulins, autoantibodies, and natural or acquired (vaccine) protective antibodies in patients with autoimmune myasthenia gravis (MG) is lacking. Prior studies measured TPE effects in healthy volunteers or heterogeneous autoimmune diseases populations. We prospectively profiled plasma IgA, IgM, IgG, IgG subclasses (IgG1-4), acetylcholine receptor autoantibodies (AChR+), and protective antibodies in patients with AChR+ MG receiving TPE for an exacerbation. TPE was performed according to institutional practice and patients were profiled for up to 12 weeks. Ten patients were enrolled (median age=72.9 years; baseline MG-Composite=21; median TPE treatments=6 during their first course) and all improved. The maximum decrease in all immunoglobulins, including AChR autoantibodies, was achieved on the final day of the first TPE course (approximately 60–70% reduction). Three weeks post-TPE mean AChR autoantibody, total IgG, IgG1 and IgG2 titers were below the reference range and had not recovered to within 20% of baseline, whereas other measured immunoglobulins approached baseline values. We did not generally observe an “overshoot” of immunoglobulins above pre-TPE levels or accelerated recovery of pathologic AChR autoantibodies. Protective antibody profiles showed similar patterns as other IgGs and were detectable at levels associated with protection from infection. A slow return to baseline for IgGs (except IgG3) was observed, and we did not observe any obvious effect of concomitant medications on this recovery. Collectively, these findings enhance our understanding of the immunological effects of TPE and further supports the concept of rapid immunoglobulin depletion for the treatment of patients with MG.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Viscoelastic Response (VisR) assessment of longitudinal dystrophic degeneration in clinical Duchenne muscular dystrophy
- Author
-
James F. Howard, Caterina M. Gallippi, Diane O. Meyer, Mallory R. Selzo, Melissa C. Caughey, Christopher J. Moore, Regina Emmett, and Manisha Chopra
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Duchenne muscular dystrophy ,Dystrophic muscle ,medicine.disease ,Serial imaging ,Fibrosis ,In vivo ,Progressive inflammation ,Healthy control ,Ultrasound imaging ,medicine ,business - Abstract
Viscoelastic Response (VisR) imaging is an acoustic radiation force (ARF)-based ultrasonic technique for estimating the viscoelastic properties of tissue. It has been proposed as a method for monitoring degeneration in the skeletal muscles of boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). DMD causes progressive inflammation, necrosis, fibrosis and fatty deposition in muscle, all of which will alter the elasticity and viscosity of the tissue. The motivation of this work is to investigate VisR's potential as method for monitoring dystrophic muscle degeneration, in vivo, in boys with DMD. In an ongoing longitudinal clinical study, muscles in the lower limbs of boys affected with DMD and age-matched healthy control boys are imaged using VisR thrice yearly for four years. A case study of serial imaging results in the Medial Gastrocnemius (GM) muscle of one boy with DMD is herein presented. Beginning at age 6.2 years, parametric VisR images of τ, or the ratio of viscosity to elasticity, show a growing region of high τ (>1.2 ms) over the span of one year. This result is consistent with expected progressive inflammation and fatty deposition early in the GM's degenerative cycle. Over the course of the next four months, the area of high τ decreases, which is in agreement with the expected onset of muscle fibrosis. Then, at age 8.3 years, small and diffusely distributed high τ regions are observed in the muscle, consistent with expected distributed fatty depositions. These results suggest that VisR, a noninvasive ultrasound imaging method, may be clinically viable for monitoring local muscular compositional and structural changes associated with dystrophic degeneration, in vivo.
- Published
- 2015
26. A genome-wide association study of myasthenia gravis
- Author
-
Sampath Arepalli, Gabriella Restagno, David P. Richman, Julaine Florence, Michael Benatar, Sean Chong, Miriam Freimer, Henry J. Kaminski, Sonja W. Scholz, Robert M. Pascuzzi, Andrea M. Corse, Carlo Provenzano, Bryan J. Traynor, Emanuela Bartoccioni, Janel O. Johnson, Srikanth Muppidi, Daniel B. Drachman, Gil I. Wolfe, Mike A. Nalls, Janice M. Massey, Adriano Chiò, Manisha Chopra, Derrick Blackmore, Flavia Scuderi, Mamatha Pasnoor, Roberta Ricciardi, Joel Oger, J. Raphael Gibbs, April McVey, Edoardo Errichiello, Charlie Wulf, Theresa Jiwa, Mazen M. Dimachkie, Hannah A. Pliner, Richard J. Barohn, Michael W. Nicolle, Zaeem A. Siddiqi, Giuseppe Marangi, Amelia Evoli, Vinay Chaudhry, James F. Howard, Wilma J. Koopman, Bernadette Lipscomb, Mark Macek, Michelangelo Maestri, Dena G. Hernandez, Alan Pestronk, Julie Rowin, John T. Kissel, Donald B. Sanders, Mario Sabatelli, Michelle M. Mezei, Alan E. Renton, Yevgeniya Abramzon, and Aimee Soloway
- Subjects
Male ,Genome-wide association study ,Settore MED/03 - GENETICA MEDICA ,Settore MED/05 - PATOLOGIA CLINICA ,Gene Frequency ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,GWAS ,CTLA-4 Antigen ,Aetiology ,Age of Onset ,Single Nucleotide ,Middle Aged ,Cohort ,Cognitive Sciences ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Adult ,Weakness ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neuromuscular disease ,Genotype ,Clinical Sciences ,Miastenia gravis ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Autoimmune Disease ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,HLA-DQ alpha-Chains ,Rare Diseases ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Clinical Research ,Internal medicine ,Myasthenia Gravis ,medicine ,Genetics ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Polymorphism ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,business.industry ,Human Genome ,Case-control study ,Neurosciences ,Odds ratio ,medicine.disease ,Myasthenia gravis ,United States ,Case-Control Studies ,Immunology ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Neurology (clinical) ,business - Abstract
Importance Myasthenia gravis is a chronic, autoimmune, neuromuscular disease characterized by fluctuating weakness of voluntary muscle groups. Although genetic factors are known to play a role in this neuroimmunological condition, the genetic etiology underlying myasthenia gravis is not well understood. Objective To identify genetic variants that alter susceptibility to myasthenia gravis, we performed a genome-wide association study. Design, Setting, and Participants DNA was obtained from 1032 white individuals from North America diagnosed as having acetylcholine receptor antibody–positive myasthenia gravis and 1998 race/ethnicity-matched control individuals from January 2010 to January 2011. These samples were genotyped on Illumina OmniExpress single-nucleotide polymorphism arrays. An independent cohort of 423 Italian cases and 467 Italian control individuals were used for replication. Main Outcomes and Measures We calculated P values for association between 8 114 394 genotyped and imputed variants across the genome and risk for developing myasthenia gravis using logistic regression modeling. A threshold P value of 5.0 × 10 −8 was set for genome-wide significance after Bonferroni correction for multiple testing. Results In the overall case-control cohort, we identified association signals at CTLA4 (rs231770; P = 3.98 × 10 −8 ; odds ratio, 1.37; 95% CI, 1.25-1.49), HLA-DQA1 (rs9271871; P = 1.08 × 10 −8 ; odds ratio, 2.31; 95% CI, 2.02 - 2.60), and TNFRSF11A (rs4263037; P = 1.60 × 10 −9 ; odds ratio, 1.41; 95% CI, 1.29-1.53). These findings replicated for CTLA4 and HLA-DQA1 in an independent cohort of Italian cases and control individuals. Further analysis revealed distinct, but overlapping, disease-associated loci for early- and late-onset forms of myasthenia gravis. In the late-onset cases, we identified 2 association peaks: one was located in TNFRSF11A (rs4263037; P = 1.32 × 10 −12 ; odds ratio, 1.56; 95% CI, 1.44-1.68) and the other was detected in the major histocompatibility complex on chromosome 6p21 ( HLA-DQA1 ; rs9271871; P = 7.02 × 10 −18 ; odds ratio, 4.27; 95% CI, 3.92-4.62). Association within the major histocompatibility complex region was also observed in early-onset cases ( HLA-DQA1 ; rs601006; P = 2.52 × 10 −11 ; odds ratio, 4.0; 95% CI, 3.57-4.43), although the set of single-nucleotide polymorphisms was different from that implicated among late-onset cases. Conclusions and Relevance Our genetic data provide insights into aberrant cellular mechanisms responsible for this prototypical autoimmune disorder. They also suggest that clinical trials of immunomodulatory drugs related to CTLA4 and that are already Food and Drug Administration approved as therapies for other autoimmune diseases could be considered for patients with refractory disease.
- Published
- 2015
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.