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. 2010 Mar 15;25(4):426-32.
doi: 10.1002/mds.22912.

Measuring the rate of progression in Friedreich ataxia: implications for clinical trial design

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Measuring the rate of progression in Friedreich ataxia: implications for clinical trial design

Lisa S Friedman et al. Mov Disord. .

Abstract

Friedreich ataxia is an autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by ataxia of all four limbs, dysarthria, and arreflexia. A variety of measures are currently used to quantify disease progression, including the Friedreich Ataxia Rating Scale, examiner-rated functional disability scales, self-reported activities of daily living and performance measures such as the timed 25-foot walk, 9-hole pegboard test, PATA speech test, and low-contrast letter acuity vision charts. This study examines the rate of disease progression over one and two years in a cohort of 236 Friedreich ataxia patients using these scales and performance measure composites. The Friedreich Ataxia Rating Scale and performance-measure composites captured disease progression, with a greater sensitivity to change over 2 years than over 1 year. The measures differed in their sensitivity to change and in possible bias. These results help to establish norms for progression in FRDA that can be useful in measuring the long-term success of therapeutic agents and defining sample-size calculations for double-blind clinical trials.

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Conflict of interest statement

Financial Disclosure: The authors report no conflict of interest related to this study.

Ms. Friedman reports no disclosures.

Ms. Farmer is an employee of the Friedreich Ataxia Research Alliance and a consultant to the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.

Dr. Perlman obtains salary support from clinical billing of insurance companies for treatment patients and from two research grants--FARA/MDA subcontract grant for Clinical Outcome Measures in FA; Santhera Pharmaceuticals Inc. funding for Phase III Idebenone study and Idebenone Extension study.

Dr. Wilmot receives a consultant fee from Santhera Pharmaceuticals for serving on the Data Safety Monitoring Board for trials involving the drug idebenone, including trials in Friedreich ataxia.

Dr. Gomez reports no disclosures.

Dr. Bushara reports no disclosures.

Dr. Mathews receives research support from PTC Therapeutics as a clinical trial site. She receives research support from the CDC and from the NIH (#U54 NS053672 and RO1 NSO043264).

Dr. Subramony is a member of the Speaker’s Bureau for Athena Diagnostics and receives honoraria for such speaking engagements. He received research support from the Luckyday Foundation for this work.

Dr. Ashizawa receives R01 funding from NINDS NS041547 and RC1 funding from NINDS NS068897 as the Principle Investigator and is a site investigator for NINDS NS050733.

Dr. Balcer is supported by grants from the National Eye Institute and the Multiple Sclerosis society.

Dr. Wilson serves on the Data and Safety Monitoring Board for the phase II trial of deferiprone for Friedreich ataxia sponsored by Apopharma, and is funded by the NIH, the Friedreich’s Ataxia Research Alliance, and the National Ataxia Foundation.

Dr. Lynch is supported by grants from the NIH (NS45986), MDA/FARA (Clinical research network in Friedreich ataxia), the Trisomy 21 program of the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, and Santhera Pharmaceuticals (Phase III trial of Idebenone in Friedreich ataxia and extension study).

Author Roles:

1. Research project: A. Conception, B. Organization, C. Execution;

2. Statistical Analysis: A. Design, B. Execution, C. Review and Critique;

3. Manuscript: A. Writing of the first draft, B. Review and Critique;

Friedman: 1C, 2A, 2B, 2C, 3A, 3B. Farmer: 1A, 1B, 1C, 3B. Perlman: 1C, 3B. Wilmot: 1C, 3B.

Gomez: 1C, 3B. Bushara: 1C, 3B. Mathews: 1C, 3B. Subramony: 1C, 3B. Ashizawa: 1C, 3B.

Balcer: 2A, 2B, 2C, 3B. Wilson: 1A, 1B, 2C, 3B. Lynch: 1A, 1B, 1C, 2A, 2B, 2C, 3A, 3B.

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