Open Access
CC BY 4.0 · Arq Neuropsiquiatr 2024; 82(S 02): S53-S176
DOI: 10.1055/s-0045-1807093
ID: 707
Area: Neuromuscular diseases
Presentation method: Presentation Poster

Age at loss of ambulation in patients with DMD from the stride registry and the CINRg natural history study: a matched cohort analysis

Eugenio Mercuri
,
Ana Paula Carneiro
,
Daiana Suelen Machado
,
Andressa Federhen
,
Craig M. McDonald
 

    *Correspondence: adossantos@ptcbio.com.br.

    Abstract

    We examined if nonsense mutation Duchenne muscular dystrophy (nmDMD) patients receiving ataluren plus standard of care (SoC) in the Strategic Targeting of Registries and International Database of Excellence (STRIDE) Registry (NCT02369731) experienced a delay in age at loss of ambulation (LOA) versus DMD patients receiving SoC alone in the Cooperative International Neuromuscular Research Group (CINRG) Duchenne Natural History Study (NCT00468832). STRIDE is an ongoing, multicenter, observational registry providing data on ataluren use in nmDMD patients in routine clinical practice. Data were extracted on January 31, 2022. Propensity score matching identified STRIDE and CINRG patient cohorts (N=260) comparable in established predictors of disease progression: age at first symptoms; age at initiation of corticosteroid use; duration of deflazacort use; and duration of other corticosteroid use. Patients from CINRG who had received investigational drugs for DMD were excluded. Kaplan–Meier analyses were used to estimate age at LOA. The mean (standard deviation) ages at first symptoms in the STRIDE and CINRG cohorts (N=260 per cohort) were 2.8 (1.7) and 2.8 (1.5) years, respectively. Most patients (STRIDE vs CINRG) received corticosteroids for ≥12 months (85.0% vs 83.8%), with a similar proportion receiving deflazacort (47.7% vs 44.2%) or other corticosteroids (41.9% vs 43.5%). In the STRIDE cohort, 26.5% (69/260) of patients lost ambulation compared with 54.6% (142/260) of patients in the CINRG cohort. The median (95% confidence interval) ages at LOA (STRIDE vs CINRG) were 17.9 (14.8, not estimable) and 12.5 (12.0, 13.5) years, respectively. Kaplan–Meier analyses showed that ataluren plus SoC delayed age at LOA compared with SoC alone (p<0.0001). These Kaplan–Meier analyses showed that in routine clinical practice ataluren plus SoC delayed age at LOA by 5.4 years compared with SoC alone in patients with nmDMD.


    Publication History

    Article published online:
    12 May 2025

    © 2024. The Author(s). This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, permitting copying and reproduction so long as the original work is given appropriate credit (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

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