Affiliation:
1. Department of Neurology Maastricht University Medical Center+ Maastricht The Netherlands
2. Department of Neurology, Brain Center Rudolph Magnus University Medical Center Utrecht Utrecht The Netherlands
3. Department of Neurology Tergooi Medical Center Hilversum The Netherlands
4. Department of Neurology Johns Hopkins University Baltimore Maryland USA
5. Department of Neurology Curacao Medical Center Willemstad Curaçao
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundInternational consensus on IgM ± anti‐MAG ± PNP (IgM PNP) is lacking. Despite increasing interest in clinical trials, validated disease‐specific measures are needed to adequately capture limitations and changes over time. The IMAGiNe (IgM ± anti‐myelin associated glycoprotein [MAG] peripheral neuropathy) study surges as an international collaboration to create a standardized registry of patients with IgM ± anti‐MAG PNP. The consortium, which currently consists of 11 institutions from 7 countries, presents here the IMAGiNe study design and protocol.AimsFunctional outcome measures will be constructed at the level of impairment, as well as activity and participation. We aim to describe the natural history of the cohort, the role of anti‐MAG antibodies, the presence of clinical subtypes, and potential biomarkers.MethodsThe IMAGiNe study is a prospective, observational cohort study with a 3‐year follow‐up. At each assessment, researchers collect clinical data and subjects complete a list of preselected outcome measures. Among these, the “Pre‐Rasch‐built Overall Disability Scale (Pre‐RODS)” questionnaire will be submitted to Rasch analysis to assess classic and modern clinimetric requirements.ResultsThe final measures will include the IgM‐PNP‐specific RODS and Ataxia Rating Scale (IgM‐PNP‐ARS). Descriptions of the disease course, clinical heterogeneity, treatment regimes, variations in laboratory values, and antibody titers will help reach consensus on diagnosis and follow‐up strategies.ConclusionThe constructed interval scales will be cross‐culturally valid and suitable for use in future clinical trials and daily practice. The ultimate goals are to improve functional individualized assessment, reach international consensus, and lay the foundations for successful designs in future studies.
Funder
GBS/CIDP Foundation International
Subject
Neurology (clinical),General Neuroscience
Cited by
3 articles.
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