Comparison of disease activity in SPMS and PPMS in the context of multicenter clinical trials.

BACKGROUND: Retrospective single center natural history studies have shown that times to reach disability milestones and ages at which they are reached are similar in primary (PPMS) and secondary (SPMS) progressive multiple sclerosis suggesting that they may be phenotypic variations of the same dise...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rotem Orbach, Zhenming Zhao, Yong-Cheng Wang, Gilmore O'Neill, Diego Cadavid
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3462180?pdf=render
id doaj-f8b196fe97674399b0070498ee9f4931
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f8b196fe97674399b0070498ee9f49312020-11-25T02:42:27ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-01710e4540910.1371/journal.pone.0045409Comparison of disease activity in SPMS and PPMS in the context of multicenter clinical trials.Rotem OrbachZhenming ZhaoYong-Cheng WangGilmore O'NeillDiego CadavidBACKGROUND: Retrospective single center natural history studies have shown that times to reach disability milestones and ages at which they are reached are similar in primary (PPMS) and secondary (SPMS) progressive multiple sclerosis suggesting that they may be phenotypic variations of the same disease. OBJECTIVE: Here we compared longitudinal disease activity in SPMS and PPMS in the context of international multicenter clinical trials. METHODS: We analyzed all objective outcome measures that were systematically collected over 2 years for all subjects randomized to placebo arms in one SPMS and one PPMS clinical trial over the last decade. Conventional and exploratory definitions of clinical disease activity were used. Disease activity was analyzed in 3 different categories intermittent activity, progression, and improvement. Conventional MRI measures and one patient reported outcome measure of quality of life were included when available for comparison. Heat maps were drawn for all results followed by hierarchical clustering. RESULTS: There were 101 outcome variables from 206 SPMS subjects and 79 outcome variables from 135 PPMS subjects. The comparison revealed that SPMS and PPMS subjects exhibited similar disease activity over 2 years in all but two of the variables in common worsening in the EDSS sensory system was more common in PPMS while worsening on the 9 hole PEG was more common in SPMS. Intermittent activity was the most common pattern of disease activity in SPMS and PPMS. Clinical worsening and improvement occurred at similar frequency in both. CONCLUSION: Longitudinal disease activity was nearly identical in SPMS and PPMS subjects in the context of the two multicenter international clinical trials we examined.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3462180?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rotem Orbach
Zhenming Zhao
Yong-Cheng Wang
Gilmore O'Neill
Diego Cadavid
spellingShingle Rotem Orbach
Zhenming Zhao
Yong-Cheng Wang
Gilmore O'Neill
Diego Cadavid
Comparison of disease activity in SPMS and PPMS in the context of multicenter clinical trials.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Rotem Orbach
Zhenming Zhao
Yong-Cheng Wang
Gilmore O'Neill
Diego Cadavid
author_sort Rotem Orbach
title Comparison of disease activity in SPMS and PPMS in the context of multicenter clinical trials.
title_short Comparison of disease activity in SPMS and PPMS in the context of multicenter clinical trials.
title_full Comparison of disease activity in SPMS and PPMS in the context of multicenter clinical trials.
title_fullStr Comparison of disease activity in SPMS and PPMS in the context of multicenter clinical trials.
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of disease activity in SPMS and PPMS in the context of multicenter clinical trials.
title_sort comparison of disease activity in spms and ppms in the context of multicenter clinical trials.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description BACKGROUND: Retrospective single center natural history studies have shown that times to reach disability milestones and ages at which they are reached are similar in primary (PPMS) and secondary (SPMS) progressive multiple sclerosis suggesting that they may be phenotypic variations of the same disease. OBJECTIVE: Here we compared longitudinal disease activity in SPMS and PPMS in the context of international multicenter clinical trials. METHODS: We analyzed all objective outcome measures that were systematically collected over 2 years for all subjects randomized to placebo arms in one SPMS and one PPMS clinical trial over the last decade. Conventional and exploratory definitions of clinical disease activity were used. Disease activity was analyzed in 3 different categories intermittent activity, progression, and improvement. Conventional MRI measures and one patient reported outcome measure of quality of life were included when available for comparison. Heat maps were drawn for all results followed by hierarchical clustering. RESULTS: There were 101 outcome variables from 206 SPMS subjects and 79 outcome variables from 135 PPMS subjects. The comparison revealed that SPMS and PPMS subjects exhibited similar disease activity over 2 years in all but two of the variables in common worsening in the EDSS sensory system was more common in PPMS while worsening on the 9 hole PEG was more common in SPMS. Intermittent activity was the most common pattern of disease activity in SPMS and PPMS. Clinical worsening and improvement occurred at similar frequency in both. CONCLUSION: Longitudinal disease activity was nearly identical in SPMS and PPMS subjects in the context of the two multicenter international clinical trials we examined.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3462180?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT rotemorbach comparisonofdiseaseactivityinspmsandppmsinthecontextofmulticenterclinicaltrials
AT zhenmingzhao comparisonofdiseaseactivityinspmsandppmsinthecontextofmulticenterclinicaltrials
AT yongchengwang comparisonofdiseaseactivityinspmsandppmsinthecontextofmulticenterclinicaltrials
AT gilmoreoneill comparisonofdiseaseactivityinspmsandppmsinthecontextofmulticenterclinicaltrials
AT diegocadavid comparisonofdiseaseactivityinspmsandppmsinthecontextofmulticenterclinicaltrials
_version_ 1724773820315729920