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Comparison of North Star Ambulatory Assessment score change in nmDMD patients receiving ataluren: STRIDE Registry vs phase 3 clinical trial

Objectives: We investigated whether nonsense mutation Duchenne muscular dystrophy (nmDMD) patients receiving ataluren in real-world practice (STRIDE Registry; NCT02369731) experienced lesser declines in North Star Ambulatory Assessment (NSAA) total, linear and shift scores vs patients receiving ataluren/placebo in a phase 3 clinical trial (Study 020; NCT01826487). The NSAA comprises 17 items, scored to document progressive loss of function.

Methods: STRIDE patients were assessed by first 48-week score change (difference between their first ‘48-week assessment’ [between 40 and 72 weeks] and first assessment); Study 020 patients were assessed by change over 48 weeks. The proportion of STRIDE patients who lost ability to perform NSAA items over the first 48 weeks was compared with Study 020 patients in a shift analysis; item failure was recorded by a shift from a score of 2 (able) or 1 (impaired) to 0 (unable).

Results: In Study 020, ataluren-treated patients experienced a lesser mean decline in NSAA total and linear scores vs placebo-allocated patients over 48 weeks (total score [95% confidence interval [CI]: ataluren,−2.7[−3.5,−1.9]; placebo,−3.7[−4.5,−2.8]; linear score [95% CI]: ataluren,−6.3[−8.3,−4.2]; placebo,−8.4[−10.4,−6.4]). STRIDE patients consistently experienced a mean (95% CI) decline in NSAA total and linear scores of −1.97(−2.90,−1.05) and −4.54(−6.75,−2.33) respectively, over their first 48-week assessments. The proportion of patients who lost ability to perform NSAA items was greater for Study 020 placebo-allocated patients than ataluren-treated STRIDE and Study 020 patients.

Conclusion: These results demonstrate that ataluren delays decline in performance of NSAA items in nmDMD patients vs placebo, indicating that ataluren delays disease progression.
Keywords: Duchenne muscular dystrophy; NSAA; STRIDE.

Francesco Muntoni
University College London, Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health
United Kingdom

Már Tulinius
Gothenburg University, Queen Silvia Children’s Hospital
Sweden

Filippo Buccella
Parent Project APS
Italy

Isabelle Desguerre
Hôpital Necker – Enfants Malades
France

Janbernd Kirschner
Medical Center – University of Freiburg
Germany

Andrés Nascimento Osorio
Hospital Sant Joan de Déu, Unidad de Patología Neuromuscular, Universidad de Barcelona
Spain

Shelley Johnson
PTC Therapeutics Inc.
United States

Christian Werner
PTC Therapeutics Germany GmbH
Germany

Joel Jiang
PTC Therapeutics Inc.
United States

James Li
PTC Therapeutics Inc.
United States

Panayiota Trifillis
PTC Therapeutics Inc.
United States

Eugenio Mercuri
Catholic University
Italy

 

 


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