Journal
JAMA NEUROLOGY
Volume 70, Issue 8, Pages 981-987Publisher
AMER MEDICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2013.3178
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Categories
Funding
- Muscular Dystrophy Association
- Charcot-Marie-Tooth Association
- National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
- Office of Rare Diseases
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IMPORTANCE No current medications improve neuropathy in subjects with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 1A (CMT1A). Ascorbic acid (AA) treatment improved the neuropathy of a transgenic mouse model of CMT1A and is a potential therapy. A lower dosage (1.5 g/d) did not cause improvement in humans. It is unknown whether a higher dosage would prove more effective. OBJECTIVE To determine whether 4-g/d AA improves the neuropathy of subjects with CMT1A. DESIGN A futility design to determine whether AA was unable to reduce worsening on the CMT Neuropathy Score (CMTNS) by at least 50% over a 2-year period relative to a natural history control group. SETTING Three referral centers with peripheral nerve clinics (Wayne State University, Johns Hopkins University, and University of Rochester). PARTICIPANTS One hundred seventy-four subjects with CMT1A were assessed for eligibility; 48 did not meet eligibility criteria and 16 declined to participate. The remaining 110 subjects, aged 13 to 70 years, were randomly assigned in a double-masked fashion with 4: 1 allocation to oral AA (87 subjects) or matching placebo (23 subjects). Sixty-nine subjects from the treatment group and 16 from the placebo group completed the study. Two subjects from the treatment group and 1 from the placebo group withdrew because of adverse effects. INTERVENTIONS Oral AA (4 g/d) or matching placebo. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Change from baseline to year 2 in the CMTNS, a validated composite impairment score for CMT. RESULTS The mean 2-year change in the CMTNS was -0.21 for the AA group and -0.92 for the placebo group, both better than natural history (+1.33). This was well below 50% reduction of CMTNS worsening from natural history, so futility could not be declared (P > .99). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Both treated patients and those receiving placebo performed better than natural history. It seems unlikely that our results support undertaking a larger trial of 4-g/d AA treatment in subjects with CMT1A.
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