PLoS ONE (Jan 2024)

Meaningful changes in motor function in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD): A multi-center study.

  • Francesco Muntoni,
  • James Signorovitch,
  • Gautam Sajeev,
  • Nicolae Done,
  • Zhiwen Yao,
  • Nathalie Goemans,
  • Craig McDonald,
  • Eugenio Mercuri,
  • Erik H Niks,
  • Brenda Wong,
  • Krista Vandenborne,
  • Volker Straub,
  • Imelda J M de Groot,
  • Cuixia Tian,
  • Adnan Manzur,
  • Ibrahima Dieye,
  • Henry Lane,
  • Susan J Ward,
  • Laurent Servais,
  • PRO-DMD-01 study investigators,
  • Association Française contre les Myopathies,
  • UK NorthStar Clinical Network,
  • ImagingDMD investigators,
  • cTAP

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0304984
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 7
p. e0304984

Abstract

Read online

Evaluations of treatment efficacy in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), a rare genetic disease that results in progressive muscle wasting, require an understanding of the 'meaningfulness' of changes in functional measures. We estimated the minimal detectable change (MDC) for selected motor function measures in ambulatory DMD, i.e., the minimal degree of measured change needed to be confident that true underlying change has occurred rather than transient variation or measurement error. MDC estimates were compared across multiple data sources, representing >1000 DMD patients in clinical trials and real-world clinical practice settings. Included patients were ambulatory, aged ≥4 to 80% confidence in true change were 2.8 units for the North Star Ambulatory Assessment (NSAA) total score, 1.3 seconds for the 4-stair climb (4SC) completion time, 0.36 stairs/second for 4SC velocity and 36.3 meters for the 6-minute walk distance (6MWD). MDC estimates were similar across clinical trial and real-world data sources, and tended to be slightly larger than MCIDs for these measures. The identified thresholds can be used to inform endpoint definitions, or as benchmarks for monitoring individual changes in motor function in ambulatory DMD.