New Tool To Help Children With Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease
New Measurement Tool for Clinical Trials to Help
Children With Charcot-Marie-Tooth
Disease
7 May
2012
An international study led by the
University of Sydney and published in the Annals of
Neurology has the potential to improve the design of
clinical trials for the treatment of Charcot-Marie-Tooth
disease, a disorder which affects the peripheral nervous
system.
Charcot-Marie Tooth
disease (CMT) is among the most common inherited
neurological disorders, affecting one in 2500 people.
Symptoms such as leg weakness, foot pain, trips and falls
develop in the first two decades of life, with some patients
wheelchair bound by 21 years. Currently there is no
treatment for any form of this disease, but clinical trials
are increasingly occurring.
“While it is very
positive that clinical trials are taking place in this area,
it is vital that trials are based on appropriately selected
patients and carefully chosen outcome measures,” says
Associate Professor Joshua Burns, Chief Investigator from
the University of Sydney and The Children’s Hospital at
Westmead. “This relies on being able to measure disease
severity accurately, and in turn the patient’s response to
treatment, which we were previously unable to do in
children.”
In response, Associate Professor Burns
and colleagues from the USA, UK and Italy designed the CMT
Pediatric Scale (CMTPedS), a patient-centred multi-item
rating scale of disability for children with
CMT.
“Rating scales used for adult patients are
inappropriate for children and since most forms of CMT
affect children there was an obvious need for a new clinical
tool.”
“Furthermore, it is during childhood
that we anticipate that treatments for CMT may be most
effective – before the disease progresses and makes repair
more difficult.”
During a 14-month test period
the CMTPedS was administered to more than 170 children aged
three to 20 with varying types of CMT in Australia and
internationally via the Inherited Neuropathies Consortium.
Analysis of these data supported the viability of CMTPedS as
a reliable, valid and sensitive global measure of disability
for children with CMT from the age of three years.
The CMTPedS can be completed in 25 minutes and
will have broad application in clinical trials of
rehabilitative, pharmacological and surgical interventions.
“There is growing international support for the
rating scale to be implemented as the primary outcome
measure in studies of children with CMT because the quality
of the measure has the potential to influence the outcome of
clinical trials and patient care,” says Associate
Professor Burns.
This research was supported by
grants from the National Health and Medical Research Council
of Australia, the National Institutes of Neurological
Disorders and Stroke’s Office of Rare Diseases, the
Charcot Marie Tooth Association, the Muscular Dystrophy
Association and the CMT Association of
Australia.
ENDS