Exploring the diagnosis delay and ALS functional impairment at diagnosis as relevant criteria for clinical trial enrolment

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TitreExploring the diagnosis delay and ALS functional impairment at diagnosis as relevant criteria for clinical trial enrolment
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2017
AuteursHamidou B, Marin B, Lautrette G, Nicol M, Camu W, Corcia P, Arnes-Bes M-C, Tranchant C, Clavelou P, Hannequin D, Maurice G, Beauvais K, Antoine J-C, Danel-Brunaud V, Viader F, Preux P-M, Couratier P
JournalAMYOTROPHIC LATERAL SCLEROSIS AND FRONTOTEMPORAL DEGENERATION
Volume18
Pagination519-527
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN2167-8421
Mots-clésALSFRS-R slope, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Clinical trial, diagnosis delay, Phenotype
Résumé

Objectives were: i) to describe the phenotypic heterogeneity of incident amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) patients diagnosed in 2012 in French ALS centres; ii) to look at the associations between ALSFRS-R score and ALSFRS-R slope (Delta FS) at time of diagnosis with diagnosis delay, Delta LS phenotypes and Airlie House diagnosis criteria (AHDC); iii) to describe the rate of progression on FS, according to diagnosis delay. Methods: Incident ALS cases diagnosed in French ALS centres were included. The rate of progression was evaluated as follows: Delta FS=(48 - ALSFRS-R at time of diagnosis)/duration from onset to diagnosis (months). Fast and slow progressors were defined by FS >1 and <0.5, respectively. Results: At time of diagnosis, 476 patients were classified into eight phenotypes: bulbar (33.0%), spinal lumbar (28.2%), spinal cervical (23.1%), flail leg (4.4%), ALS/FTD (4.2%), possible flail arm (4.0%), respiratory (2.1%), dropped-head (1.0%). Median FS (n=358/476) was 1.0 [0.5-2.0]. FS was associated with AHDC (p=0.009), but not with clinical phenotype (p=0.902). Stratification on diagnosis delay (<12 months or 18 months) allowed to differentiate fast progressors from slow progressors. Conclusion: At time of inclusion in therapeutic trial closed to diagnosis, FS or diagnosis delay may discriminate the rate of progression.

DOI10.1080/21678421.2017.1353098