Assessing Communication Impairments in a Rare Neurodevelopmental Disorder: The SCN2A Clinical Trials Readiness Study.

IF 2.3 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Neurology. Clinical practice Pub Date : 2025-02-01 Epub Date: 2024-10-18 DOI:10.1212/CPJ.0000000000200391
Anne T Berg, Amanda N Nili, Lindsey Evans, Katherine C Paltell, Ariela J E Kaiser, Erica L Anderson, Shawn M Egan, Aaron J Kaat, Gerry Nesbitt, Leah S Myers
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Abstract

Background and objectives: SCN2A-related disorders (SCN2A-RDs) entail severe impairments in multiple domains that could serve as nonseizure outcomes in clinical trials. This study evaluated the fitness for purpose of several clinical instruments with both standardized and alternative scoring and with some measures used out of their intended age range for assessing communication in SCN2A-affected participants.

Methods: Parents of SCN2A-affected children were recruited through FamilieSCN2A Foundation outreach for a combined cross-sectional and longitudinal study. They completed assessments of their children at study entry and 6 and 12 months later. Assessments included the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scale (VABS-3), Adaptive Behavior Assessment System (ABAS), Communication Matrix, and Communication and Symbolic Behavior Scale (CSBS). Analyses examined floor and ceiling effects, inter-rater and test-retest reliability, discrimination among different levels of functional impairment, and sensitivity to clinical aspects of SCN2A-RDs.

Results: Of 65 participants (28 females, median age 6.4 years, IQR 4.1-10.5), 56 (86%) had epilepsy. Eleven (17%) used speech as their primary communication mode; 84% were considered ineffective communicators. The mean Vineland composite standardized score (SS) was 34 (IQR 26-46). Cross-sectionally, standardized scores decreased with increasing age. There were substantial floor effects for receptive (75%) and expressive (83%) communication. SSs discriminated poorly between verbal vs nonverbal and communicative vs noncommunicative participants and were not sensitive to features reflecting epilepsy severity (e.g., epileptic spasms and number of current medications). By contrast, Vineland growth scale value (GSV) and ABAS, Matrix, and CSBS raw scores had minimal floor effects; most increased with age. These alternative scores distinguished clearly between participants with different levels of communication and were sensitive to aspects of epilepsy severity. Longitudinally, SSs decreased, but other scores remained relatively stable over a year.

Discussion: SCN2A-RD is characterized by severe-to-profound impairment with a SS <4 SDs of the norm-referenced mean. Owing to severe floor effects and their insensitivity to markers of communication function, age-standardized scores (e.g., Vineland SS) are not fit for purpose in clinical trials or other settings for evaluating nonseizure outcomes such as communication. GSVs and alternative scoring and assessments have much better measurement profiles in all these regards and should be considered in future precision medicine trials for SCN2A-RDs and other similar rare diseases.

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评估罕见神经发育障碍中的交流障碍:SCN2A 临床试验准备研究。
背景和目的:SCN2A相关疾病(SCN2A-RDs)会导致多个领域的严重障碍,可作为临床试验中的非癫痫结果。本研究对几种临床工具的适用性进行了评估,这些工具既有标准化评分,也有替代性评分,而且有些测量方法超出了评估 SCN2A 患者交流能力的年龄范围:通过 FamilieSCN2A 基金会的外联活动招募了 SCN2A 受影响儿童的家长,进行横断面和纵向相结合的研究。他们在研究开始时以及 6 个月和 12 个月后完成了对子女的评估。评估包括维尼兰适应行为量表 (VABS-3)、适应行为评估系统 (ABAS)、沟通矩阵以及沟通和符号行为量表 (CSBS)。研究分析了底限效应和上限效应、评分者之间和测试-复测的可靠性、不同功能障碍水平之间的区分度以及对 SCN2A-RDs 临床方面的敏感性:在 65 名参与者(28 名女性,中位年龄为 6.4 岁,IQR 为 4.1-10.5 岁)中,56 人(86%)患有癫痫。11人(17%)以言语作为主要交流方式;84%被认为是无效交流者。维尼兰综合标准化评分(SS)的平均值为 34(IQR 26-46)。横截面来看,标准化得分随着年龄的增长而降低。在接受性(75%)和表达性(83%)交流方面,存在很大的底线效应。SS对言语与非言语、沟通与非沟通参与者的区分度较低,对反映癫痫严重程度的特征(如癫痫痉挛和当前药物数量)不敏感。相比之下,维尼兰生长量表值(GSV)以及 ABAS、Matrix 和 CSBS 原始分数的底限效应最小;大多数分数会随着年龄的增长而增加。这些替代性分数可以清楚地区分不同沟通水平的参与者,并对癫痫严重程度的各个方面非常敏感。纵向来看,SSs 分数有所下降,但其他分数在一年内保持相对稳定:讨论:SCN2A-RD 的特点是严重至发现性障碍,伴有 SS SCN2A-RDs 和其他类似罕见疾病。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Neurology. Clinical practice
Neurology. Clinical practice CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
77
期刊介绍: Neurology® Genetics is an online open access journal publishing peer-reviewed reports in the field of neurogenetics. The journal publishes original articles in all areas of neurogenetics including rare and common genetic variations, genotype-phenotype correlations, outlier phenotypes as a result of mutations in known disease genes, and genetic variations with a putative link to diseases. Articles include studies reporting on genetic disease risk, pharmacogenomics, and results of gene-based clinical trials (viral, ASO, etc.). Genetically engineered model systems are not a primary focus of Neurology® Genetics, but studies using model systems for treatment trials, including well-powered studies reporting negative results, are welcome.
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