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Using Acute Optic Neuritis Trials to Assess Neuroprotective and Remyelinating Therapies in Multiple Sclerosis

Authors :
Sara Llufriu
Yolanda Blanco
Thaís Armangue
Santiago Ortiz-Perez
Irati Zubizarreta
Elena H. Martinez-Lapiscina
Irene Pulido-Valdeolivas
Maria Sepúlveda
Magi Andorra
Albert Saiz
Ana Tercero-Uribe
Nuria Sola-Valls
Ana M Guerrero-Zamora
Ruben Torres-Torres
Iñigo Gabilondo
Pablo Villoslada
Eugenia Martinez-Hernandez
Anna Camos-Carreras
Elena Fraga-Pumar
Salut Alba-Arbalat
Bernardo Sanchez-Dalmau
Source :
JAMA Neurol
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
American Medical Association (AMA), 2020.

Abstract

IMPORTANCE: Neuroprotective and remyelinating therapies are required for multiple sclerosis (MS), and acute optic neuritis (AON) is a potential condition to evaluate such treatments. OBJECTIVE: To comprehensively assess key biological and methodological aspects of AON trials for testing neuroprotection and remyelination in MS. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: The AON-VisualPath prospective cohort study was conducted from February 2011 to November 2018 at the Hospital Clinic of University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain. Consecutive patients with AON were prospectively enrolled in the cohort and followed up for 18 months. Data analyses occurred from November 2018 to February 2019. EXPOSURES: Participants were followed up for 18 months using optical coherence tomography, visual acuity tests, and in a subset of 25 participants, multifocal visual evoked potentials. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Dynamic models of retinal changes and nerve conduction and their associations with visual end points; and eligibility criteria, stratification, and sample-size estimation for future trials. RESULTS: A total of 60 patients (50 women [83%]; median age, 34 years) with AON were included. The patients studied displayed early and intense inner retinal thinning, with a thinning rate of approximately 2.38 μm per week in the ganglion cell plus inner plexiform layer (GCIPL) during the first 4 weeks. Eyes with AON displayed a 6-month change in latency of about 20 milliseconds, while the expected change in the eyes of healthy participants by random variability was 0.13 (95% CI, −0.80 to 1.06) milliseconds. The strongest associations with visual end points were for the 6-month intereye difference in 2.5% low-contrast letter acuity, which was correlated with the peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer thinning (adjusted R(2), 0.57), GCIPL thinning (adjusted R(2), 0.50), and changes in mfVEP latency (adjusted R(2), 0.26). A 5-letter increment in high-contrast visual acuity at presentation (but not sex or age) was associated with 6-month retinal thinning (1.41 [95% CI, 0.60-2.23] μm less peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer thinning thinning; P = .001; adjusted R(2), 0.20; 0.86 [95% CI, 0.35-1.37] μm less GCIPL thinning; P = .001; adjusted R(2), 0.19) but not any change in multifocal visual evoked potential latency. To demonstrate 50% efficacy in GCIPL thinning or change in multifocal visual evoked potential latency, a 6-month, 2-arm, parallel-group trial would need 37 or 50 participants per group to test a neuroprotective or remyelinating drug, respectively (power, 80%; α, .05). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Acute optic neuritis is a suitable condition to test neuroprotective and remyelinating therapies after acute inflammation, providing sensitive markers to assess the effects on both processes and prospective visual recovery within a manageable timeframe and with a relatively small sample size.

Details

ISSN :
21686149
Volume :
77
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JAMA Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5041405dfbaaf717261a96190f6907d6