A Review of the Management and Outcomes of Children With SMA in the West Midlands During 2017-2022
NCT ID: NCT05994950
Last Updated: 2024-04-12
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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RECRUITING
30 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2023-12-06
2024-12-31
Brief Summary
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As a result of this mortality and morbidity have changed particularly for the SMA type 1 population and therefore there is now a changing phenotype with many children needing interventions at different time points compared to the natural history. This review process is a retrospective review from 1st July 2017 - 30th June 2022, when most of the new drug therapies were being introduced, of all the children aged from 0-16 years in the West Midlands region and their outcomes.
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Detailed Description
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The most common form of SMA is due to a genetic defect in the survival motor neuron 1 (SMN1) gene located on Chromosome 5 (5q11.2-q13.3) which encodes SMN, a protein widely expressed in all eukaryotic cells and necessary for survival of motor neurons. Whilst the diagnosis is made by genetic testing after clinical suspicion, classification is made clinically and on what level of function is achieved, at what age. The severe neonatal type (SMA 0) and the common severe type (SMA I), accounting for approximately 50% cases, presenting before the age of 6 months. These infants, treatment naïve, are very weak and never achieve independent sitting. The rare SMA 0 group generally presents in the neonatal period, often with extreme weakness and contractures and most die within the neonatal period. SMA type II patients present between 6-18 months can achieve independent sitting but are unable to stand and walk and have a reduced life expectancy. SMA type III can be very variable ranging from children who have a similar neuromuscular disability to those with type II, to those that are mildly affected. SMA type IV, the mildest form and very rare, presents in adulthood with onset usually after the second decade, with normal life expectancy. Whilst the sub-groups are classified clinically, there does appear to be a relationship between clinical severity and functional SMN protein and SMN2 copy number. This being said, there has been a phenotypic change since the introduction in the of disease modifying treatment over the last 5 years and therefore the historical classical classification will be evolving. Whilst clinicians have not seen a type I phenotype change to a type II phenotype, many have seen significant changes in mortality and morbidity for these children.
The principle question is how are the West Midlands cohort progressing?
Conditions
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Study Design
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OTHER
RETROSPECTIVE
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* OR patient was born between 1st July 2017 - 30th June 2022.
* Genetically confirmed 5q SMA.
* Patients must have been under the care of the named Key Collaborative Site and Neuromuscular Service for their SMA anytime during 1st July 2017- 30th June 2022 and must have had at least two clinical reviews during this time.
* Deceased patients can be reviewed, as long as they met the eligibility criteria before their date of death.
Exclusion Criteria
* Genetically confirmed as having non-5q SMA or have no genetic confirmation of their diagnosis.
* Patient was not under the care of the named Key Collaborative Site and Neuromuscular Service for their SMA specialist care anytime during 1st July 2017 - 30th June 2022.
0 Years
16 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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University Hospital Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust
OTHER
Robert Jones and Agnes Hunt Orthopaedic and District NHS Trust
OTHER_GOV
Responsible Party
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Locations
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Birmingham Heartlands Hospital
Birmingham, Shropshire, United Kingdom
The Robert Jones and Agnes Hunt Orthopaedic Hospital
Oswestry, Shropshire, United Kingdom
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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RL1 874
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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