Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
200 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2012-09-30
2024-03-31
Brief Summary
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This study is recruiting a large number of genetically confirmed dysferlinopathy patients aged 10 years or older, who are ambulant or non-ambulant. The study has reopened for a further two years (COS2). Participants will be assessed at 4 further visits over 2 years via medical, physiotherapy, and MRI/MRS assessments, as well as standard blood tests. Optionally, the participants can donate blood samples and a skin sample for use in the identification of disease markers and other approved research. There is a sub-study running in MRI at selected sites.
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Detailed Description
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Recently, two as yet unpublished studies have addressed the topic of charting the natural history of dysferlinopathy more systematically. In a study of 9 genetically confirmed LGMD2B and MM patients studied over 18 months, Isabel Illa and colleagues found a significant decline in muscle strength in a set of muscle groups measured by manual muscle testing, and in knee flexion measured by quantitative muscle testing, accompanied by a detectable deterioration on MRI imaging in biceps femori and tibialis posterior. Maggie Walter and colleagues assessed the natural course of disease and efficacy of deflazacort treatment in 25 patients (between 25 and 63 years of age) with genetically confirmed dysferlinopathy in a double-blind, cross-over trial. During the first year of the study, they assessed the natural course of disease in 6-month intervals, evaluating MRC scores, quantitative strength measurement by hand-held dynamometry (Citec, Groningen, Netherlands), and torque measurement (M3 diagnose system, Fa. Schnell, Germany), Neuromuscular Symptoms Score (NSS), Timed Function Tests (getting up from lying and sitting position, climbing 4 stairs, running 10m), Vignos Scale, Hammersmith Motor Ability Score, and Global Assessment CGI Scale, quality of life SF-36 scale and laboratory parameters (sodium, potassium, creatinine, urea, GOT, GPT, gamma-GT, CK, blood count, ESR, CRP). Medication (placebo or deflazacort in a cross-over design) was only started in the 2nd year of the study. All patients showed a decline in muscle strength over one year, which was reflected in the tests performed.
It is reassuring that from these data we can conclude that it is likely that there will be changes detectable with time in dysferlinopathy that could inform the design of future clinical trials, but the optimal measurements have yet to be defined and mapped in a much larger group of dysferlinopathy patients representing the entire clinical spectrum of this diverse disease group. Extrapolating from the requirements for studies in other types of muscular dystrophies, including the regulatory advice for establishing pivotal trials of therapies in these disorders, these measures would need to include not only measures of muscle strength, but also of function and some degree of patient reported outcomes. The unpublished results of Isabel Illa and colleagues, as well as another small study of MRI in dysferlinopathy, also show some hope for the use of MRI as a measure of change in muscle over time which might be applicable as an outcome measure. Up until now, muscle MRI has been seen more as a tool for delineating the pattern of muscles involved than for monitoring change - the use of MRI for monitoring disease progression in a non-invasive manner is however attracting a lot of current interest, though more study is needed especially in respect of functional correlates and patient relevance.
The frequency of dysferlinopathy provides a further challenge to the collection of natural history data. The relative frequency of different forms of muscular dystrophy depends to a certain extent on the population studied. Dysferlinopathy appears to be a more common cause of LGMD in Southern European populations than in Northern European ones. Founder mutations exist in only a few small communities. There is little doubt that dysferlinopathy is under-diagnosed and, in fact, the clinical diagnostic process by which dysferlinopathy is diagnosed is also variable. Most laboratories still rely on the suggestion of the diagnosis by muscle immunocytochemistry or (more reliably) immunoblotting. Some laboratories carry out protein testing on monocytes as an alternative screening methodology. The gold standard for dysferlinopathy diagnosis has however become DNA testing, with sequencing carried out in a small number of commercial laboratories as well as a series of diagnostic laboratories in Europe and the USA. The Jain Foundation (www.jain-foundation.org) can help guide those who are unsure about their diagnosis through the process of getting a genetic analysis. Please contact Sarah Shira at the Jain Foundation for help with diagnosis at +1 425 882 1492
With the perspective of different approaches to therapy in dysferlinopathy, a clearer definition of the natural history of the disease and the delineation of suitable outcome measures for clinical trials needs to be prioritised. The current protocol builds on existing national and international networks to bring together a critical mass to address the following specific aims:
1. To define the natural history of Dysferlinopathies with respect to age and nature of onset, progression and presence of complications.
2. To determine the most suitable and robust outcomes measures for evaluation of disease progression in patients with Dysferlinopathy at different stages of the disease.
3. To evaluate whether cardiac manifestations are clinically significant in patients with Dysferlinopathy.
4. To explore if sodium MRI could be useful to identify muscle damage on skeletal muscle of patients with Dysferlinopathy
Conditions
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Study Design
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COHORT
PROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
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Patients with a genetically confirmed dysferlinopathy
No interventions assigned to this group
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
NOTE: Contact Sarah Shira at the Jain Foundation for help with diagnosis at +1 425 882 1492
* Ambulant with or without aids; or full-time wheelchair user, i.e. non-ambulant; with the ratio 2:1 between recruited ambulant and recruited non-ambulant patients.
* All ages ≥ 10 years of age.
* Ability to perform assessments (there will be different assessments for ambulant and non-ambulant patients).
* Ability to attend scheduled investigations.
* Informed consent to participate in the clinical outcome study.
NOTE: Funds are available to cover necessary hotel stays and travel costs to the study centres for the participant and a helper (if needed).
Exclusion Criteria
* Other concomitant pathology that in the view of the investigator would jeopardise the ability to take part in the protocol.
10 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Jain Foundation
OTHER
Newcastle-upon-Tyne Hospitals NHS Trust
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Volker Straub
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Newcastle University
Meredith K James
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Newcastle University
Locations
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UC Irvine
Orange, California, United States
Stanford University Medical Center
Palo Alto, California, United States
Neurology & Pathology, Washington University, School of Medicine in St Louis
St Louis, Missouri, United States
Columbia University Medical Centre
New York, New York, United States
Carolinas Medical Center, Neuroscience & Spine Institute, Dept of Neurology
Charlotte, North Carolina, United States
Neuromuscular Center at the Research Institute of Nationwide Children's Hospital
Columbus, Ohio, United States
Clinica Davila
Santiago, , Chile
Rigshospitalet Neuromusculaer Klinik
Copenhagen, , Denmark
Institut de Myologie
Paris, , France
Department of Neurosciences, University of Padova
Padua, , Italy
National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry
Kodaira, Tokyo, Japan
Pusan National University Hospital
Busan, , South Korea
Hospital Sant Pau, Neurology Department
Barcelona, , Spain
Hospital Universitario Donostia
San Sebastián, , Spain
Hospital Universitario Virgen del Rocio, IBiS, Neurology Department
Seville, , Spain
Institute of Translational and Clinical Research, Newcastle University, International Centre for Life
Newcastle upon Tyne, , United Kingdom
Countries
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References
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Moore U, Jacobs M, James MK, Mayhew AG, Fernandez-Torron R, Feng J, Cnaan A, Eagle M, Bettinson K, Rufibach LE, Lofra RM, Blamire AM, Carlier PG, Mittal P, Lowes LP, Alfano L, Rose K, Duong T, Berry KM, Montiel-Morillo E, Pedrosa-Hernandez I, Holsten S, Sanjak M, Ashida A, Sakamoto C, Tateishi T, Yajima H, Canal A, Ollivier G, Decostre V, Mendez JB, Sanchez-Aguilera Praxedes N, Thiele S, Siener C, Shierbecker J, Florence JM, Vandevelde B, DeWolf B, Hutchence M, Gee R, Prugel J, Maron E, Hilsden H, Lochmuller H, Grieben U, Spuler S, Tesi Rocha C, Day JW, Jones KJ, Bharucha-Goebel DX, Salort-Campana E, Harms M, Pestronk A, Krause S, Schreiber-Katz O, Walter MC, Paradas C, Hogrel JY, Stojkovic T, Takeda S, Mori-Yoshimura M, Bravver E, Sparks S, Diaz-Manera J, Bello L, Semplicini C, Pegoraro E, Mendell JR, Bushby K, Straub V; Jain COS Consortium. Assessment of disease progression in dysferlinopathy: A 1-year cohort study. Neurology. 2019 Jan 28;92(5):e461-e474. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000006858.
Diaz-Manera J, Fernandez-Torron R, LLauger J, James MK, Mayhew A, Smith FE, Moore UR, Blamire AM, Carlier PG, Rufibach L, Mittal P, Eagle M, Jacobs M, Hodgson T, Wallace D, Ward L, Smith M, Stramare R, Rampado A, Sato N, Tamaru T, Harwick B, Rico Gala S, Turk S, Coppenrath EM, Foster G, Bendahan D, Le Fur Y, Fricke ST, Otero H, Foster SL, Peduto A, Sawyer AM, Hilsden H, Lochmuller H, Grieben U, Spuler S, Tesi Rocha C, Day JW, Jones KJ, Bharucha-Goebel DX, Salort-Campana E, Harms M, Pestronk A, Krause S, Schreiber-Katz O, Walter MC, Paradas C, Hogrel JY, Stojkovic T, Takeda S, Mori-Yoshimura M, Bravver E, Sparks S, Bello L, Semplicini C, Pegoraro E, Mendell JR, Bushby K, Straub V; Jain COS Consortium. Muscle MRI in patients with dysferlinopathy: pattern recognition and implications for clinical trials. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2018 Oct;89(10):1071-1081. doi: 10.1136/jnnp-2017-317488. Epub 2018 May 7.
Moore UR, Jacobs M, Fernandez-Torron R, Jang J, James MK, Mayhew A, Rufibach L, Mittal P, Eagle M, Cnaan A, Carlier PG, Blamire A, Hilsden H, Lochmuller H, Grieben U, Spuler S, Tesi Rocha C, Day JW, Jones KJ, Bharucha-Goebel DX, Salort-Campana E, Harms M, Pestronk A, Krause S, Schreiber-Katz O, Walter MC, Paradas C, Hogrel JY, Stojkovic T, Takeda S, Mori-Yoshimura M, Bravver E, Sparks S, Diaz-Manera J, Bello L, Semplicini C, Pegoraro E, Mendell JR, Bushby K, Straub V. Teenage exercise is associated with earlier symptom onset in dysferlinopathy: a retrospective cohort study. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2018 Nov;89(11):1224-1226. doi: 10.1136/jnnp-2017-317329. Epub 2018 Jan 29. No abstract available.
Related Links
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This study is fully funded by the Jain Foundation, a non-profit foundation whose mission is to cure muscular dystrophies caused by dysferlin protein deficiency.
All information for this study can be found on the study website (www.dysferlinoutcomestudy.org), including contact details and participating sites
Other Identifiers
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85750
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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