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Functional outcome measures in young, steroid-naïve boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy

Authors :
Anna G Mayhew
Dionne Moat
Michael P. McDermott
Michelle Eagle
Robert C. Griggs
Wendy M. King
Meredith K. James
Robert Muni-Lofra
Alison Shillington
Sarah Gregson
Lindsey Pallant
Christy Skura
Loretta A. Staudt
Katy Eichinger
Heather McMurchie
Rosanna Rabb
Marina Di Marco
Sarah Brown
Riccardo Zanin
Maria Teresa Arnoldi
Melissa McIntyre
Amelia Wilson
Lindsay N. Alfano
Linda P. Lowes
Colleen Blomgren
Evelin Milev
Mario Iodice
Amy Pasternak
Angela Chiu
Ilka Lehnert
Nicole Claus
Kathy A. Dieruf
Enrica Rolle
Alina Nicorici
Barbara Andres
Elke Hobbiebrunken
Gerda Roetmann
Victoria Kern
Matthew Civitello
Sibylle Vogt
Melissa J. Hayes
Cheryl Scholtes
Catherine Lacroix
Tara Gunn
Sinead Warner
Jennifer Newman
Andrea Barp
Katherine Kundrat
Staci Kovelman
Penny J. Powers
Michela Guglieri
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to quantitate motor performance in 196 genetically confirmed steroid-naïve boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), to evaluate the test-retest reliability of measures of motor performance in young DMD boys, and to assess correlations among the different functional outcomes including timed tests. Boys aged 4-7 years were recruited in the FOR-DMD study, a comparative effectiveness study of different steroid regimens in DMD. Eligible boys had to be able to rise from the floor independently and to perform pulmonary function testing consistently. The boys were evaluated with standardized assessments at the screening and baseline visits at 32 sites in 5 countries (US, UK, Canada, Italy, Germany). Assessments included timed rise from floor, timed 10 m walk/run, six-minute walk distance, North Star Ambulatory Assessment (NSAA) and forced vital capacity (FVC). Mean age at baseline was 5.9 years (range 4.1-8.1 years). Test-retest reliability was high for functional assessments, regardless of time lag between assessments (up to 90 days) and for the majority of age groups. Correlations were strong among the functional measures and timed tests, less so with FVC. Physiotherapy measures are reliable in a young, steroid-naïve population and rise from floor velocity appears to be a sensitive measure of strength in this population.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c5e14527315758d1386a2c3218e74632