Systematic, comprehensive, evidence-based approach to identify neuroprotective interventions for motor neuron disease: using systematic reviews to inform expert consensus
Author:
Wong CharisORCID, Gregory Jenna M, Liao Jing, Egan KierenORCID, Vesterinen Hanna M, Ahmad Khan Aimal, Anwar MaarijORCID, Beagan Caitlin, Brown Fraser S, Cafferkey John, Cardinali Alessandra, Chiam Jane Yi, Chiang Claire, Collins VictoriaORCID, Dormido Joyce, Elliott Elizabeth, Foley Peter, Foo Yu Cheng, Fulton-Humble Lily, Gane Angus B, Glasmacher Stella AORCID, Heffernan ÁineORCID, Jayaprakash Kiran, Jayasuriya Nimesh, Kaddouri Amina, Kiernan Jamie, Langlands Gavin, Leighton D, Liu Jiaming, Lyon James, Mehta Arpan R, Meng Alyssa, Nguyen Vivienne, Park Na Hyun, Quigley Suzanne, Rashid Yousuf, Salzinger Andrea, Shiell Bethany, Singh Ankur, Soane Tim, Thompson Alexandra, Tomala OlafORCID, Waldron Fergal M, Selvaraj Bhuvaneish T, Chataway JeremyORCID, Swingler Robert, Connick Peter, Pal SuvankarORCID, Chandran SiddharthanORCID, Macleod MalcolmORCID
Abstract
ObjectivesMotor neuron disease (MND) is an incurable progressive neurodegenerative disease with limited treatment options. There is a pressing need for innovation in identifying therapies to take to clinical trial. Here, we detail a systematic and structured evidence-based approach to inform consensus decision making to select the first two drugs for evaluation in Motor Neuron Disease-Systematic Multi-arm Adaptive Randomised Trial (MND-SMART:NCT04302870), an adaptive platform trial. We aim to identify and prioritise candidate drugs which have the best available evidence for efficacy, acceptable safety profiles and are feasible for evaluation within the trial protocol.MethodsWe conducted a two-stage systematic review to identify potential neuroprotective interventions. First, we reviewed clinical studies in MND, Alzheimer’s disease, Huntington’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and multiple sclerosis, identifying drugs described in at least one MND publication or publications in two or more other diseases. We scored and ranked drugs using a metric evaluating safety, efficacy, study size and study quality. In stage two, we reviewed efficacy of drugs in MND animal models, multicellular eukaryotic models and human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) studies. An expert panel reviewed candidate drugs over two shortlisting rounds and a final selection round, considering the systematic review findings, late breaking evidence, mechanistic plausibility, safety, tolerability and feasibility of evaluation in MND-SMART.ResultsFrom the clinical review, we identified 595 interventions. 66 drugs met our drug/disease logic. Of these, 22 drugs with supportive clinical and preclinical evidence were shortlisted at round 1. Seven drugs proceeded to round 2. The panel reached a consensus to evaluate memantine and trazodone as the first two arms of MND-SMART.DiscussionFor future drug selection, we will incorporate automation tools, text-mining and machine learning techniques to the systematic reviews and consider data generated from other domains, including high-throughput phenotypic screening of human iPSCs.
Funder
Rowling Fellowship Alzheimer's Society Marie Sklodowska-Curie Medical Research Council Alzheimer's Research UK Motor Neurone Disease Association Doddie Foundation Chief Scientist Office UK DRI Ltd MND Scotland
Cited by
4 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|