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Impairment measures versus inflammatory RODS in GBS and CIDP: a responsiveness comparison

Authors :
Jean Pouget
Anneke J. van der Kooi
Angelika F. Hahn
Kenneth C. Gorson
W. Ludo van der Pol
David R. Cornblath
Michael P. Lunn
Catharina G. Faber
Thomas H P Draak
Pieter A. van Doorn
Eduardo Nobile-Orazio
Els K. Vanhoutte
Leonard H. van den Berg
Vera Bril
Nicolette C. Notermans
Peter Y K Van Den Bergh
Jean Marc Léger
Janneke G. J. Hoeijmakers
Sonja I. van Nes
Giuseppe Lauria
Richard A. Lewis
Ingemar S. J. Merkies
Hans D. Katzberg
Source :
Journal of the Peripheral Nervous System. 20:289-295
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Wiley, 2015.

Abstract

This study aimed to 'define responder' through the concept of minimum clinically important differences using the individually obtained standard errors (MCID-SE) and a heuristic 'external criterion' responsiveness method in patients with Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS) and chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (CIDP). One hundred and fourteen newly diagnosed or relapsing patients (GBS: 55, CIDP: 59) were serially examined (1-year follow-up). The inflammatory Rasch-built overall disability scale (I-RODS), Rasch-transformed MRC sum score (RT-MRC), and Rasch-transformed modified-INCAT-sensory scale (RT-mISS) were assessed. Being-a-responder was defined as having a MCID-SE cut-off ≥1.96. Also, the correlations between patients' scores on each scale and the EuroQoL health-status 'thermometer' (external criterion) were determined (higher correlation indicated better responsiveness). In both diseases, the SEs showed a characteristic 'U'-shaped dynamic pattern across each scales' continuum. The number of patients showing a meaningful change were higher for the I-RODS > RT-MRC > RT-mISS and were in GBS higher than CIDP patients. The MCID-SE concept using Rasch-transformed data demonstrated an individual pattern of 'being-a-responder' in patients with immune-mediated neuropathies, and the findings were validated by the external criterion responsiveness method. The I-RODS showed greater responsiveness compared with the MRC and INCAT-sensory scales, and its use is therefore recommended in future trials in GBS and CIDP.

Details

ISSN :
10859489
Volume :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the Peripheral Nervous System
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........3cbca88e9aea80cdc3b2860d221ee138
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jns.12118