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. 2018 Oct;142(Suppl 2):S5-S16.
doi: 10.1542/peds.2018-0333C.

Neurology Care, Diagnostics, and Emerging Therapies of the Patient With Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy

Affiliations

Neurology Care, Diagnostics, and Emerging Therapies of the Patient With Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy

Fawn Leigh et al. Pediatrics. 2018 Oct.

Abstract

Duchenne muscular dystrophy is the most common form of childhood muscular dystrophy. A mutation in the DMD gene disrupts dystrophin (protein) production, causing damage to muscle integrity, weakness, loss of ambulation, and cardiopulmonary compromise by the second decade of life. Life expectancy has improved from mid-teenage years to mid-20s with the use of glucocorticoids and beyond the third decade with ventilator support and multidisciplinary care. However, Duchenne muscular dystrophy is associated with comorbidities and is a fatal disease. Glucocorticoids prolong ambulation, but their side effects are significant. Emerging investigational therapies have surfaced over the past decade and have rapidly been tested in clinical trials. Gene-specific strategies include nonsense readthrough, exon skipping, gene editing, utrophin modulation, and gene replacement. Other mechanisms include muscle regeneration, antioxidants, and antifibrosis and anti-inflammatory pathways. With potential therapies emerging, early diagnosis is needed to initiate treatment early enough to minimize morbidity and mortality. Newborn screening can be used to significantly improve early diagnosis, especially for gene-specific therapeutics.

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Conflict of interest statement

POTENTIAL CONFLICT OF INTEREST: Dr Leigh has served as a consultant to Sarepta Therapeutics and Summit Therapeutics and as principal investigator on clinical research grants sponsored by Sarepta Therapeutics, Pfizer, Atlas 5D, and Solid Biosciences; Dr Bushby has given expert advice to Solid Ventures, Gerson Lehrman Group research, Catabasis Pharmaceuticals, Bristol-Myers Squibb, PTC Therapeutics, BioMarin Pharmaceutical, and Laboratory of the Government Chemist Ltd and has received a grant and speaker fees from PTC Therapeutics; Dr Finkel has received grant support for Duchenne muscular dystrophy–related topics from Bristol-Myers-Squib, Catabasis Pharmaceuticals, the National Institutes of Health, Eli Lilly and Company, the Muscular Dystrophy Association, PTC Therapeutics, ReveraGen BioPharma, Santhera Pharmaceuticals, Sarepta Therapeutics, and Summit Therapeutics and has served as a paid consultant to Catabasis Pharmaceuticals, Eli Lilly and Company, PTC Therapeutics, Sarepta Therapeutics, and Summit Therapeutics, and none of these relationships are directly related to Dr Finkel’s participation in this activity or article; the other authors have indicated they have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose.

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