Background Hereditary transthyretin (ATTRv) amyloidosis is a rare, inherited, progressive disease caused by mutations in the transthyretin (TTR) gene. We aimed to assess the efficacy and safety of long-term treatment with patisiran, an RNA interference therapeutic that inhibits TTR production, in patients with ATTRv amyloidosis with polyneuropathy. MethodsThis multi-country, multi-centre, open-label extension (OLE) trial enrolled patients at 43 sites in 19 countries as of 24 September 2018. Patients were eligible if they had completed the phase 3 APOLLO (randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled [2:1], 18-month study) or phase 2 OLE (single-arm, 24-month study) parent studies and tolerated the study drug. Eligible patients from APOLLO (APOLLO-patisiran [received patisiran during APOLLO] and APOLLO-placebo [received placebo during APOLLO] groups) and the phase 2 OLE (phase 2 OLE patisiran group) studies enrolled in this Global OLE trial and receive patisiran 0•3 mg/kg by intravenous infusion every 3 weeks for up to 5 years. Efficacy assessments include measures of polyneuropathy (modified Neuropathy Impairment Score +7 [mNIS+7]), quality of life, autonomic symptoms, nutritional status, disability, ambulation status, motor function, and cardiac stress. Patients included in the current efficacy analyses are those who had completed 12-month efficacy assessments as of the data cut-off. Safety analyses included all patients who received ≥1 dose of patisiran up to the data cut-off. The Global OLE is ongoing with no new enrolment, and current findings are based on the 12-month interim analysis. The study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02510261.
Background: The objective of this study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of repeated low-dose rituximab treatment guided by monitoring circulating CD19+ B cells in patients with refractory myasthenia gravis (MG). Methods: Patients with refractory MG who had received rituximab treatment at two teaching hospitals between September 2013 and January 2017 were reviewed retrospectively. The treatment protocol consisted of an induction treatment with low-dose rituximab (375 mg/m2 twice with a 2-week interval), followed by retreatment (375 mg/m2 once). Retreatment was based on either circulating CD19+ B-cell repopulation or clinical relapse. Outcome measures included the MG Foundation of America (MGFA) clinical classification and postintervention status, prednisolone dose, CD19+ B-cell counts, clinical relapse, and adverse effects. Results: Of 17 patients, 11 (65%) achieved the primary endpoint, defined as the minimal manifestation or better status with prednisolone ⩽5 mg/day, after median 7.6 months (range, 2–17 months) following rituximab treatment. Over a median follow up of 24 months (range, 7–49 months), a total of 30 retreatments were undertaken due to clinical relapse without B-cell repopulation ( n = 6), on the basis of B-cell repopulation alone ( n = 16) and both ( n = 8). B-cell recovery appeared to be in parallel with clinical relapse on the group level, although the individual-level association appeared to be modest, with B-cell repopulation observed only at 57% (8/14) of clinical relapses. Conclusions: The repeated low-dose rituximab treatment based on the assessment of circulating B-cell depletion could be a cost-effective therapeutic option for refractory MG. Further studies are needed to verify the potentially better cost-effectiveness of low-dose rituximab, and to identify biomarkers that help optimize treatment in MG patients.
Background and ObjectiveTo investigate the clinical relevance of CSF myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein-immunoglobulin G (MOG-IgG) testing in a large multicenter cohort.MethodsIn this multicenter cohort study, paired serum-CSF samples from 474 patients with suspected inflammatory demyelinating disease (IDD) from 11 referral hospitals were included. After serum screening, patients were grouped into seropositive myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody associated disease (MOGAD, 31), aquaporin-4-IgG-positive neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (AQP4-IgG + NMOSD, 60), other IDDs (217), multiple sclerosis (MS, 45), and non-IDDs (121). We then screened CSF for MOG-IgG and compared the clinical and serologic characteristics of patients uniquely positive for MOG-IgG in the CSF to seropositive patients with MOGAD.ResultsNineteen patients with seropositive MOGAD (61.3%), 9 with other IDDs (CSF MOG + IDD, 4.1%), 4 with MS (8.9%), but none with AQP4-IgG + NMOSD nor with non-IDDs tested positive in the CSF for MOG-IgG. The clinical, pathologic, and prognostic features of patients uniquely positive for CSF MOG-IgG, with a non-MS phenotype, were comparable with those of seropositive MOGAD. Intrathecal MOG-IgG synthesis, observed from the onset of disease, was shown in 12 patients: 4 of 28 who were seropositive and 8 who were uniquely CSF positive, all of whom had involvement of either brain or spinal cord. Both CSF MOG-IgG titer and corrected CSF/serum MOG-IgG index, but not serum MOG-IgG titer, were associated with disability, CSF pleocytosis, and level of CSF proteins.DiscussionCSF MOG-IgG is found in IDD other than MS and also in MS. In IDD other than MS, the CSF MOG-IgG positivity can support the diagnosis of MOGAD. The synthesis of MOG-IgG in the CNS of patients with MOGAD can be detected from the onset of the disease and is associated with the severity of the disease.Classification of EvidenceThis study provides Class II evidence that the presence of CSF MOG-IgG can improve the diagnosis of MOGAD in the absence of an MS phenotype, and intrathecal synthesis of MOG-IgG was associated with increased disability.
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