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Improved upper limb function in non-ambulant children with SMA type 2 and 3 during nusinersen treatment: a prospective 3-years SMArtCARE registry study

Authors :
Astrid, Pechmann
Max, Behrens
Katharina, Dörnbrack
Adrian, Tassoni
Franziska, Wenzel
Sabine, Stein
Sibylle, Vogt
Daniela, Zöller
Günther, Bernert
Tim, Hagenacker
Ulrike, Schara-Schmidt
Maggie C, Walter
Astrid, Bertsche
Katharina, Vill
Matthias, Baumann
Manuela, Baumgartner
Isabell, Cordts
Astrid, Eisenkölbl
Marina, Flotats-Bastardas
Johannes, Friese
René, Günther
Andreas, Hahn
Veronka, Horber
Ralf A, Husain
Sabine, Illsinger
Jörg, Jahnel
Jessika, Johannsen
Cornelia, Köhler
Heike, Kölbel
Monika, Müller
Arpad, von Moers
Annette, Schwerin-Nagel
Christof, Reihle
Kurt, Schlachter
Gudrun, Schreiber
Oliver, Schwartz
Martin, Smitka
Elisabeth, Steiner
Regina, Trollmann
Markus, Weiler
Claudia, Weiß
Gert, Wiegand
Ekkehard, Wilichowski
Andreas, Ziegler
Hanns, Lochmüller
Janbernd, Kirschner
Joachim, Zobel
Source :
Orphanet journal of rare diseases. 17(1)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The development and approval of disease modifying treatments have dramatically changed disease progression in patients with spinal muscular atrophy (SMA). Nusinersen was approved in Europe in 2017 for the treatment of SMA patients irrespective of age and disease severity. Most data on therapeutic efficacy are available for the infantile-onset SMA. For patients with SMA type 2 and type 3, there is still a lack of sufficient evidence and long-term experience for nusinersen treatment. Here, we report data from the SMArtCARE registry of non-ambulant children with SMA type 2 and typen 3 under nusinersen treatment with a follow-up period of up to 38 months.SMArtCARE is a disease-specific registry with data on patients with SMA irrespective of age, treatment regime or disease severity. Data are collected during routine patient visits as real-world outcome data. This analysis included all non-ambulant patients with SMA type 2 or 3 below 18 years of age before initiation of treatment. Primary outcomes were changes in motor function evaluated with the Hammersmith Functional Motor Scale Expanded (HFMSE) and the Revised Upper Limb Module (RULM).Data from 256 non-ambulant, pediatric patients with SMA were included in the data analysis. Improvements in motor function were more prominent in upper limb: 32.4% of patients experienced clinically meaningful improvements in RULM and 24.6% in HFMSE. 8.6% of patients gained a new motor milestone, whereas no motor milestones were lost. Only 4.3% of patients showed a clinically meaningful worsening in HFMSE and 1.2% in RULM score.Our results demonstrate clinically meaningful improvements or stabilization of disease progression in non-ambulant, pediatric patients with SMA under nusinersen treatment. Changes were most evident in upper limb function and were observed continuously over the follow-up period. Our data confirm clinical trial data, while providing longer follow-up, an increased number of treated patients, and a wider range of age and disease severity.

Details

ISSN :
17501172
Volume :
17
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Orphanet journal of rare diseases
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........8d56aba8631d4b2fb9a5c6856ec28adb