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ID 118371
Title Alternative
発症早期ALS患者に対する超高用量メチルコバラミンの有効性・安全性について : ランダム化比較試験
Author
Oki, Ryosuke Tokushima University
Sato, Yasutaka Tokushima University
Nokihara, Hiroshi Tokushima University
Kanai, Kazuaki Fukushima Medical University|Juntendo University
Tsunemi, Taiji Juntendo University
Hattori, Nobutaka Juntendo University
Hatanaka, Yuki Teikyo University
Sonoo, Masahiro Teikyo University
Atsuta, Naoki Nagoya University
Sobue, Gen Nagoya University
Shimizu, Toshio Tokyo Metropolitan Neurological Hospital
Shibuya, Kazumoto Chiba University
Ikeda, Ken Toho University
Kano, Osamu Toho University
Nishinaka, Kazuto Sumitomo Hospital
Kojima, Yasuhiro Takeda General Hospital
Oda, Masaya Vihara Hananosato Hospital
Komai, Kiyonobu National Hospital Organization lou Hospital
Kikuchi, Hitoshi Murakami Karindoh Hospital
Kohara, Nobuo Kobe City Medical Center General Hospital
Urushitani, Makoto Shiga University of Medical Science
Nakayama, Yoshiaki Wakayama Medical University
Ito, Hidefumi Wakayama Medical University
Nagai, Makiko Kitasato University
Nishiyama, Kazutoshi Kitasato University
Kuzume, Daisuke Chikamori Hospital
Shimohama, Shun Sapporo Medical University
Shimohata, Takayoshi Gifu University
Abe, Koji Okayama University
Ishihara, Tomohiko Niigata University
Onodera, Osamu Niigata University
Isose, Sagiri National Hospital Organization Chibahigashi Hospital
Araki, Nobuyuki National Hospital Organization Chibahigashi Hospital
Morita, Mitsuya Jichi Medical University
Noda, Kazuyuki Juntendo University
Toda, Tatsushi The University of Tokyo
Maruyama, Hirofumi Hiroshima University
Furuya, Hirokazu Kochi University
Teramukai, Satoshi Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine
Kagimura, Tatsuo Foundation for Biomedical Research and Innovation
Noma, Kensuke Hiroshima University
Kuwabara, Satoshi Chiba University
Kaji, Ryuji Tokushima University|National Hospital Organization Utano Hospital Tokushima University Educator and Researcher Directory KAKEN Search Researchers
Keywords
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS)
Ultrahigh-Dose Methylcobalamin
Treatment
Updated Awaji criteria
Homocysteine
Content Type
Thesis or Dissertation
Description
Importance:
Post hoc analysis in a phase 2/3 trial indicated ultra-high dose methylcobalamin slowed decline of the Revised Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Functional Rating Scale (ALSFRS-R) total score at week 16 as well as at week 182, without increase of adverse events, in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) who were enrolled within 1 year from onset.
Objective:
To validate the efficacy and safety of ultra-high dose methylcobalamin for patients with ALS enrolled within 1 year of onset.
Design:
A multicenter, placebo-controlled, double-blind, randomized phase 3 trial with 12-week observation and 16-week randomized period, conducted from October 2017 to September 2019.
Setting:
Twenty-five neurology centers in Japan.
Participants:
Patients with ALS diagnosed within 1 year of onset by the updated Awaji criteria were initially enrolled. Of those, patients fulfilling the following criteria after 12-week observation were eligible for randomization: 1- or 2-point decrease in ALSFRS-R total score, a percent forced vital capacity over 60%, no history of noninvasive respiratory support and tracheostomy, and being ambulant. The target number was 64 in both methylcobalamin and placebo groups. Of 203 patients enrolled in the observation, 130 patients (age, 61.0 ± 11.7 years; female, 56) met the criteria and were randomly assigned through an electronic web-response system to methylcobalamin or placebo (65 for each). Of these, 129 patients were eligible for the full analysis set, and 126 completed the double-blind stage.
Interventions:
Intramuscular injection of methylcobalamin 50 mg or placebo twice weekly for 16 weeks.
Main outcomes and measures:
The primary endpoint was change in ALSFRS-R total score from baseline to week 16 in the full analysis set.
Results:
The least-squares mean difference in ALSFRS-R total score at week 16 of the randomized period was 1.97 points greater with methylcobalamin than placebo (−2.66 versus −4.63; 95% CI, 0.44–3.50; P = 0.012). The incidence of adverse events was similar between the two groups.
Conclusions and relevance:
Ultra-high dose methylcobalamin was efficacious in slowing functional decline and safe in the 16-week treatment period in ALS patients in the early stage and with moderate progression rate.
Trial registration:
UMIN-CTR Identifier: UMIN000029588 (umin.ac.jp/ctr); ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03548311 (clinicaltrials.gov)
Journal Title
JAMA Neurology
ISSN
21686149
21686157
NCID
AA12602673
AA12722358
Publisher
American Medical Association
Volume
79
Issue
6
Start Page
575
End Page
583
Published Date
2022-05-09
Remark
内容要旨・審査要旨・論文本文の公開
本論文は,著者Ryosuke Okiの学位論文として提出され,学位審査・授与の対象となっている。
EDB ID
DOI (Published Version)
URL ( Publisher's Version )
FullText File
language
eng
TextVersion
ETD
MEXT report number
甲第3738号
Diploma Number
甲医第1576号
Granted Date
2023-04-27
Degree Name
Doctor of Medical Science
Grantor
Tokushima University
departments
University Hospital
Medical Sciences