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Botulinum toxin treatment of spasticity targeted to muscle endplates: an international, randomised, evaluator-blinded study comparing two different botulinum toxin injection strategies for the treatment of upper limb spasticity. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the effectiveness of botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT) injections specifically targeting neuromuscular junctions (NMJs) compared to standard injection practices for treating upper limb spasticity.
  • It was conducted as an open-label prospective study involving 88 participants across multiple Nordic medical centers from 2012 to 2015, focusing on individuals with spasticity post-stroke or brain injury.
  • Results indicated that the traditional injection method yielded a higher response rate (72.7%) compared to the NMJ-targeted approach (56.8%), suggesting that NMJ-targeted injections may not be as effective, particularly due to the limited participant number in the study.

Article Abstract

Objectives: The therapeutic effects of botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT) are well documented in upper limb spasticity. However, several factors may influence treatment efficacy, including targeting of neuromuscular junctions (NMJs). We examined whether NMJ-targeted BoNT injections were non-inferior, in terms of efficacy, to current injection practices.

Design: Open-label prospective evaluator-blinded study.

Setting: Conducted across 20 medical centres in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden (24 September 2012 to 11 March 2015).

Participants: Aged ˃18 years with upper limb spasticity (Modified Ashworth Scale [MAS] score of 2 or 3) following stroke or traumatic brain injury, had received ≥2 consecutive BoNT-A treatment cycles (the latest of which was abobotulinumtoxinA [aboBoNT-A]) and needed BoNT-A retreatment (same modality as previous cycle). Patients requiring aboBoNT-A doses >800units were excluded. In total, 88 patients were randomised (intention-to-treat [ITT] population), most were male (n=58/88, 65.9%) and 54/88 (61.4%) completed the study (per protocol [PP] population).

Interventions: Randomisation (1:1) to receive a single dose of aboBoNT-A (≤800 U) according to either current clinical practice (300 U/mL) or as an NMJ-targeted injection (100 U/mL).

Primary Outcome Measure: Proportion of patients with a ≥1 level reduction from baseline in MAS score at week 4 post-injection (responders).

Results: In the ITT population, the proportion of responders at elbow flexors was 72.7% in the current practice group and 56.8% in the NMJ-targeted group (adjusted difference -0.1673 [95% CIs: -0.3630 to 0.0284]; p=0.0986). Similar results were observed in the PP population (69.0% vs 68.0%, respectively, adjusted difference 0.0707 [-0.1948 to 0.3362]; p=0.6052).

Conclusions: Owing to the limited number of participants, non-inferiority of NMJ-targeted injections could not be determined. However, there was no statistical difference between groups. Larger studies are needed confirm whether the two techniques offer comparable efficacy.

Trial Registration Number: NCT01682148.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6502046PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2018-024340DOI Listing

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