학술논문

Longitudinal magnetic resonance imaging in progressive supranuclear palsy: A new combined score for clinical trials
Document Type
article
Source
Movement Disorders. 32(6)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Neurosciences
Clinical Sciences
Clinical Research
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities
Biomedical Imaging
Brain Disorders
Neurodegenerative
Neurological
Aged
Clinical Trials as Topic
Disease Progression
Female
Frontal Lobe
Humans
Longitudinal Studies
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Mesencephalon
Middle Aged
Supranuclear Palsy
Progressive
Third Ventricle
progressive supranuclear palsy
magnetic resonance imaging
volumetry
power calculation
clinical trials
AL-108-231 Investigators
Tauros MRI Investigators
Movement Disorder Society-Endorsed PSP Study Group
Human Movement and Sports Sciences
Neurology & Neurosurgery
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundTwo recent, randomized, placebo-controlled phase II/III trials (clinicaltrials.gov: NCT01110720, NCT01049399) of davunetide and tideglusib in progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) generated prospective, 1-year longitudinal datasets of high-resolution T1-weighted three-dimensional MRI.ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to develop a quantitative MRI disease progression measurement for clinical trials.MethodsThe authors performed a fully automated quantitative MRI analysis employing atlas-based volumetry and provide sample size calculations based on data collected in 99 PSP patients assigned to placebo in these trials. Based on individual volumes of 44 brain compartments and structures at baseline and 52 weeks of follow-up, means and standard deviations of annualized percentage volume changes were used to estimate standardized effect sizes and the required sample sizes per group for future 2-armed, placebo-controlled therapeutic trials.ResultsThe highest standardized effect sizes were found for midbrain, frontal lobes, and the third ventricle. Using the annualized percentage volume change of these structures to detect a 50% change in the 1-year progression (80% power, significance level 5%) required lower numbers of patients per group (third ventricle, n = 32; midbrain, n = 37; frontal lobe, n = 43) than the best clinical scale (PSP rating scale total score, n = 58). A combination of volume changes in these 3 structures reduced the number of required patients to only 20 and correlated best with the progression in the clinical scales.ConclusionsWe propose the 1-year change in the volumes of third ventricle, midbrain, and frontal lobe as combined imaging read-out for clinical trials in PSP that require the least number of patients for detecting efficacy to reduce brain atrophy. © 2017 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.