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Clinical Outcomes in Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy: A Study of 5345 Patients from the TREAT-NMD DMD Global Database.

Authors :
Koeks Z
Bladen CL
Salgado D
van Zwet E
Pogoryelova O
McMacken G
Monges S
Foncuberta ME
Kekou K
Kosma K
Dawkins H
Lamont L
Bellgard MI
Roy AJ
Chamova T
Guergueltcheva V
Chan S
Korngut L
Campbell C
Dai Y
Wang J
Barišić N
Brabec P
Lähdetie J
Walter MC
Schreiber-Katz O
Karcagi V
Garami M
Herczegfalvi A
Viswanathan V
Bayat F
Buccella F
Ferlini A
Kimura E
van den Bergen JC
Rodrigues M
Roxburgh R
Lusakowska A
Kostera-Pruszczyk A
Santos R
Neagu E
Artemieva S
Rasic VM
Vojinovic D
Posada M
Bloetzer C
Klein A
Díaz-Manera J
Gallardo E
Karaduman AA
Oznur T
Topaloğlu H
El Sherif R
Stringer A
Shatillo AV
Martin AS
Peay HL
Kirschner J
Flanigan KM
Straub V
Bushby K
Béroud C
Verschuuren JJ
Lochmüller H
Source :
Journal of neuromuscular diseases [J Neuromuscul Dis] 2017; Vol. 4 (4), pp. 293-306.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Background: Recent short-term clinical trials in patients with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) have indicated greater disease variability in terms of progression than expected. In addition, as average life-expectancy increases, reliable data is required on clinical progression in the older DMD population.<br />Objective: To determine the effects of corticosteroids on major clinical outcomes of DMD in a large multinational cohort of genetically confirmed DMD patients.<br />Methods: In this cross-sectional study we analysed clinical data from 5345 genetically confirmed DMD patients from 31 countries held within the TREAT-NMD global DMD database. For analysis patients were categorised by corticosteroid background and further stratified by age.<br />Results: Loss of ambulation in non-steroid treated patients was 10 years and in corticosteroid treated patients 13 years old (p = 0.0001). Corticosteroid treated patients were less likely to need scoliosis surgery (p < 0.001) or ventilatory support (p < 0.001) and there was a mild cardioprotective effect of corticosteroids in the patient population aged 20 years and older (p = 0.0035). Patients with a single deletion of exon 45 showed an increased survival in contrast to other single exon deletions.<br />Conclusions: This study provides data on clinical outcomes of DMD across many healthcare settings and including a sizeable cohort of older patients. Our data confirm the benefits of corticosteroid treatment on ambulation, need for scoliosis surgery, ventilation and, to a lesser extent, cardiomyopathy. This study underlines the importance of data collection via patient registries and the critical role of multi-centre collaboration in the rare disease field.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2214-3599
Volume :
4
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of neuromuscular diseases
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29125504
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3233/JND-170280