Inhibition of the Nogo-pathway in experimental spinal cord injury: a meta-analysis of 76 experimental treatments

Author:

Hirt Julian,Khanteymoori Alireza,Hohenhaus Marc,Kopp Marcel A.,Howells David W.,Schwab Jan M.,Watzlawick Ralf

Abstract

AbstractRecovery after spinal cord injury (SCI) may be propagated by plasticity-enhancing treatments. The myelin-associated nerve outgrowth inhibitor Nogo-A (Reticulon 4, RTN4) pathway has been shown to restrict neuroaxonal plasticity in experimental SCI models. Early randomized controlled trials are underway to investigate the effect of Nogo-A/Nogo-Receptor (NgR1) pathway blockers. This systematic review and meta-analysis of therapeutic approaches blocking the Nogo-A pathway interrogated the efficacy of functional locomotor recovery after experimental SCI according to a pre-registered study protocol. A total of 51 manuscripts reporting 76 experiments in 1572 animals were identified for meta-analysis. Overall, a neurobehavioral improvement by 18.9% (95% CI 14.5–23.2) was observed. Subgroup analysis (40 experiments, N = 890) revealed SCI-modelling factors associated with outcome variability. Lack of reported randomization and smaller group sizes were associated with larger effect sizes. Delayed treatment start was associated with lower effect sizes. Trim and Fill assessment as well as Egger regression suggested the presence of publication bias. Factoring in theoretically missing studies resulted in a reduced effect size [8.8% (95% CI 2.6–14.9)]. The available data indicates that inhibition of the Nogo-A/NgR1pathway alters functional recovery after SCI in animal studies although substantial differences appear for the applied injury mechanisms and other study details. Mirroring other SCI interventions assessed earlier we identify similar factors associated with outcome heterogeneity.

Funder

Ministeriums für Wissenschaft, Forschung und Kunst (MWK), Baden-Württemberg, Germany

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

National Institutes of Neurological Disorders-NIH

Craig H. Neilsen Foundation

Wings-for-Life Spinal Cord Research Foundation

Era-Net-NEURON Program of the European Union

National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research

W.E. Hunt & C.M. Curtis Endowment

Universitätsklinikum Freiburg

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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