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RECRUITINGINTERVENTIONAL

Evaluation of the Reproducibility of a Fatigability Test Fitted to Patients With Spinal Muscular Atrophy

Important: This information is not medical advice. Talk to your doctor about whether a clinical trial is right for you.

About This Trial

Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is an autosomal recessive neuromuscular disease caused by the degeneration of motor neurons in the anterior horn of the spinal cord, due to the absence of the SMN1 gene and the resulting lack of SMN protein. Some patients with particularly severe forms (types 0 or 1) die before the age of 2 in the absence of treatment, while others retain autonomous walking throughout their lives, with no reduction in life expectancy. Three treatments aimed at restoring SMN (TRS) protein expression have recently been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines Agency (i.e. Nusinersen / Onasemnogene Abeparvovec / Risdiplam). Patients treated with TRS after the onset of symptoms (symptomatic patients) may show significant motor improvement, but retain difficulties such as muscle weakness and fatigue leading to limitations in activities of daily living. The aim of this study is to adapt a fatigability test, widely validated in its original version in different populations (QIF test), but adapted in this protocol to the motor level and low abilities of certain SMA patients. Our objectives are to determine whether these assessments are feasible in SMA patients, reproducible, and relevant for monitoring this population, either routinely or for future clinical trials.

Who May Be Eligible (Plain English)

Who May Qualify: - Genetically confirmed spinal muscular atrophy - Age ≥ 6 years - No orthopaedic surgery in the 6 months prior to inclusion - willing to sign a consent form signed by the patient(s) or parent(s)/legal guardian(s) and assent of the patient - Affiliated or beneficiary of a health insurance scheme (for inclusion in France) Who Should NOT Join This Trial: - Other condition that may significantly interfere with the assessment of the SMA and which is clearly unrelated to the disease - Other associated neurological disease - Joint deformities that prevent correct and comfortable positioning with the various different measuring devices (thumb-index clamp, handgrip and QIF-test) - Contraindication to transcranial magnetic stimulation Always talk to your doctor about whether this trial is right for you.

Original Eligibility Criteria

View original clinical language
Inclusion Criteria: * Genetically confirmed spinal muscular atrophy * Age ≥ 6 years * No orthopaedic surgery in the 6 months prior to inclusion * Informed consent signed by the patient(s) or parent(s)/legal guardian(s) and assent of the patient * Affiliated or beneficiary of a health insurance scheme (for inclusion in France) Exclusion Criteria: * Other condition that may significantly interfere with the assessment of the SMA and which is clearly unrelated to the disease * Other associated neurological disease * Joint deformities that prevent correct and comfortable positioning with the various different measuring devices (thumb-index clamp, handgrip and QIF-test) * Contraindication to transcranial magnetic stimulation

Treatments Being Tested

OTHER

Thumb test

Thumb adduction test consisting of intermittent, repetitive isometric contractions lasting 5 seconds at incremental percentages of maximum force.

OTHER

Grip test

Muscle contraction gripping test, consisting of intermittent, repetitive isometric contractions lasting 5 seconds at incremental percentages of maximum force.

OTHER

Quadriceps Intermittent Fatigue test (QIF test))

Quadriceps muscle contraction test consisting of intermittent, repetitive isometric contractions lasting 5 seconds at incremental percentages of maximum force.

Locations (4)

HCL - Hôpital Croix Rousse
Lyon, France
HFME - Hospices Civils de Lyon
Lyon, France
Aphp - Hopital Pitie Salpetriere
Paris, France
Unités de Myologie et de Médecine du Sport
Saint-Etienne, France