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 HTLV1-associated myelitis (HAM) is a slowly progressive myelopathy in which spinal cord MRI demonstrates no lesion or atrophy. Objective We examined the overlap between NMOSD features and HTLV1 infection. Methods We included all HTLV1-infected patients recruited in French West Indies (FWI) or referred from different centers, and suffering from at least one NMOSD feature. Literature connecting HTLV1-infection and NMOSD was reviewed. Results We included six NMOSD-like HAM with acute onset, seronegative against AQP4 and MOG-Abs. All displayed extensive longitudinal myelitis, and the optic nerve was involved in three. We gathered 39 cases of NMOSD-like HAM patients from the literature. Atypical signs of HAM were relapses (15.4%), sensory level (50%), upper limb symptoms (35.9%), optic neuritis (10.2%). Typical lesions involved lateral funiculi and featured a double rope sign (56.3%). Conclusion We propose that acute onset of NMOSD-like HAM could be more frequent than expected and should be evoked in high-risk patients. Extensive but often transient cord lesions could be the hallmark of an excessive inflammation of the funiculi targeted by HTLV1 infection. Although usually minor, a few HAM cases demonstrate specific MRI lesions, and the most severe cases may mimic NMOSD attacks.
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