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Home Monitoring of Adult Patients With SMA: a Pilot Multicenter Validation Study

Home Monitoring of Adult Patients With SMA: a Pilot Multicenter Validation Study

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT05839145
Acronym
SMA-AtHome
Enrollment
60
Registered
2023-05-03
Start date
2023-12-15
Completion date
2024-01-31
Last updated
2023-12-01

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Muscular Atrophy, Spinal, Type II, Muscular Atrophy, Spinal, Type III

Keywords

Muscular Atrophy, Spinal, Home monitoring, BioImpedance

Brief summary

There is no complete cure for SMA yet. However, the discovery of the genetic cause of SMA has led to the development of several treatment options that affect the genes involved in SMA - a gene replacement therapy called Zolgensma, and two drugs, called Nusinersen (Spinraza) and Risdiplam (Evyrsdi). In this context, the evaluation of efficacy and the long term follow-up of patients treated with these innovative treatments in clinical routine is one of the critical points. These evaluations are carried out in a medical context (clinical sites or research unit) using validated measurement tools and outcome measures. Carrying out these evaluations in a controlled environment can be considered from certain aspects as an advantage (reproducibility of measures, neutral environment, etc.), but also raises a certain number of questions regarding the impact on patients, the financial cost, or the relevance of the data obtained in an unnatural environment (stress, fatigue, patient motivation…). Also the regulatory authorities ask for longitudinal data for deciding to reimburse these expensive treatments. As such, the hospital cannot digest all these evaluations due to a lack of resources.

Detailed description

In the last few years, a number of therapeutic approaches have targeted a possible increase of the production of SMN protein in target motor neurons by genetic replacement of the defective SMN1 gene or by modifying pre-mRNA splicing in SMN2 to promote exon 7 inclusion by using an antisense oligonucleotide or small molecule drugs. Several clinical studies have focused on the evaluation of patients with SMA, whether they are ambulatory or not, adults, children or infants, treated or untreated. Depending on the SMA type, age or ambulatory status of the patients, different assessments (motor function scales or questionnaires) have provided consistent results to measure the evolution of the patients, such as HFMSE, MFM, RULM, 6MWT, MRC scale, Chop Intend or HINE. As these evaluations are generally carried out in a controlled environment, they are likely to present an environmental bias. Even if studies are designed to anticipate and avoid most of these issues, different factors can influence patient test results (fatigue, motivation, stress, day to day variability…). From an economical point of view, the evaluation of patients in a controlled environment also has a significant cost, which heavily impact the global cost of clinical research or standard care (transport, patients' accommodation and care…). This factor is even more important as a significant proportion of the SMA population is non-ambulatory. New treatments are indicated to treat SMA with a major impact on pre-existing disease standards of care and patients care pathway. In particular, there is no consensus on appropriate measures to monitor disease progression and treatment effect in a real-world setting. Such measures are critically needed to discuss treatment indication (treatment initiation criteria and stopping rules, therapeutic goals) and treatment monitoring. While patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) become more represented, objective functional measures are still required to assess SMA. In spite of the development of digital measures, no validated patient self-reported functional measures can be used as a surrogate. Thus, the objective disease assessment is currently based on validated outcome measures for SMA, similar to those used in clinical studies. As compared to clinical trials, the feasibility to administer these measures to SMA patients is challenging. Major limiting factors are: (1) the high disease-prevalence, (2) time-consuming measures, (3) the need for trained expert evaluators, and (4) limited access to hospital-based resources. In addition, the burden of affected individuals and caregivers has not been evaluated as well as patient treatment monitoring expectations. A refined approach using modern tools and fitting with patient real life environment is needed.

Interventions

OTHERStrength force measurment

The grip and pinch strength of the patient will be evaluate using dedicated devices (MyoGrip and MyoPinch)

OTHERTime tests

Lower and upper limb capacities of the patients will be measured during timed tests

OTHERMotor scales

Patient's motor functional abilities will be evaluated using specific motor scales (MFM32, RULM)

OTHERQuestionnaires

Patients and caregivers quality of life will be measured with different questionnaires (SMA-FRS, QOL-gNMD, SMAIS, PREM)

Patients physical activity will be measured at home using accelerometer sensors

OTHERMNR

Sub-group of patients will perform an NMR imaging to evaluate the intramuscular fatty infiltration in thighs and muscle volume in thighs

OTHERBio-impedance analysis

The patients' muscular and fatty volume will be evaluated using BIA technic (compared to MNR)

Sponsors

Roche Pharma AG
CollaboratorINDUSTRY
Institut de Myologie, France
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Age \> 18 years * Confirmed SMA type 2 or 3 diagnostic * Written informed consent * Able to comply with all protocol requirements * Affiliate or beneficiary of a social security scheme Non-Inclusion Criteria: * Inability to carry out assessments at home * Claustrophobia (only for patients from Paris and Lille sites) * Guardianship/trusteeship * Pregnant or nursing women

Exclusion criteria

* Inability to comply with protocol requirements * Any medical and social conditions that could interfere with the study under the appreciation of the medical coordinator

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
To compare the results of physical evaluations between home and hospitalThrough study completion, an average of 3 weeksEvaluation of the correlations between results obtained during the physical evaluations at home compared to those obtained at hospital

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Correlation of home and hospital muscle volume measurement methodsThrough study completion, an average of 3 weeksComparison of muscle volumes measured by bio-impedancemetry with those obtained by MRI.
Correlation of home and hospital MyoGrip measurementThrough study completion, an average of 3 weeksComparison of MyoGrip measurements obtained at home and at the hospital.
Correlation of home and hospital MyoPinch measurementThrough study completion, an average of 3 weeksComparison of MyoPinch measurements obtained at home and at the hospital.
To determine the barriers for evaluation at homeThrough study completion, an average of 3 weeksInventory of items and assessments not carried out at home due to the environment
Correlation of home and hospital RULM resultsThrough study completion, an average of 3 weeksComparison of RULM evaluation results obtained at home and at the hospital.
Correlation of home and hospital 30STS tests resultsThrough study completion, an average of 3 weeksComparison of 30STS measurements obtained at home and at the hospital.
Correlation of home and hospital 9HPT resultsThrough study completion, an average of 3 weeksComparison of 9HPT measurements obtained at home and at the hospital.
Correlation of home and hospital MFM resultsThrough study completion, an average of 3 weeksComparison of MFM evaluation results obtained at home and at the hospital.

Countries

France

Contacts

Primary ContactGuillaume Bassez, MD
g.bassez@institut-myologie.org01 42 16 58 58

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026