Transformative approaches for effective clinical trials to reduce the disease burden of osteoarthritis

IF 4.6 2区 医学 Q1 RHEUMATOLOGY
Constance R. Chu , Marc Hochberg , Daniel White , Scott Rodeo , Johnny Huard , Shane Shapiro , Christian Lattermann , Farshid Guilak
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Osteoarthritis (OA) is a leading cause of disability and morbidity that has eluded development of effective disease modifying drugs and therapies. While established OA in the form of symptomatic radiographic disease is a recognizable final common pathway, OA development encompasses a broad spectrum of pathological changes, susceptibilities, and etiological pathways that cannot be considered a single disease process. Beginning with preclinical disease where radiographs are normal, the concept of pre-osteoarthritis (pre-OA) offers a systems-based approach to OA prevention by targeting reduction of OA risk prior to the onset of definable OA. Early OA ensues when cellular, molecular, and joint tissue changes begin to overlap that of OA, a process that can begin before the onset of definitive symptoms or radiographic changes. A myriad of pathways and crossroads of pre-OA and early OA eventually leads to poorly irreversible symptomatic radiographic OA. With increasing recognition of pre-OA and early OA markers, pathways and subtypes, opportunities arise to address these new therapeutic targets. The current status of clinical trials in OA was identified as a critical barrier to progress by the 2022 National Institute of Arthritis, Musculoskeletal, and Skin Diseases (NIAMS) Roundtable on “Cartilage Preservation and Restoration in Knee Osteoarthritis: Challenges, Gaps, and Opportunities”. This manuscript summarizes the recommendations of the work group established from the Roundtable to address this issue. The work group recommends that clinical trial design and endpoints evolve to effectively evaluate new treatment approaches suitable for pre-osteoarthritis and early OA by different criteria than what has been set for symptomatic radiographic OA. While symptomatic improvement is the primary goal for palliation of irreversible established OA, important goals for treating earlier disease states include disease modification and prevention, with the potential to alter the natural history of progressive OA. Because symptoms may not correlate with structural changes in pre-OA and early OA, the primary outcomes in these trials need to match the intended mechanistic target and the therapeutic goal for the disease state being treated. The purpose of this manuscript is to transform the approach to clinical trials in OA by establishing a new benchmark of identifying critical outcomes that are appropriate for the joint disease states and subtypes of the target patient population, and the therapeutic or mechanistic target of the intervention being tested. By shifting the approach from using standardized outcomes based on established OA towards customizing clinical trials according to these principles, new precision medicine strategies to address the full spectrum of disease from pre-OA to OA can be more readily advanced into clinical practice.
有效临床试验的变革性方法以减轻骨关节炎的疾病负担
骨关节炎(OA)是致残和发病的主要原因,一直没有开发出有效的疾病调节药物和疗法。虽然以症状性放射学疾病的形式建立的OA是一个可识别的最终共同途径,但OA的发展包括广泛的病理变化、易感性和病因途径,不能被视为单一的疾病过程。从影像学检查正常的临床前疾病开始,预骨关节炎(pre-osteoarthritis, pre-OA)的概念提供了一种基于系统的OA预防方法,通过在可定义的OA发病之前降低OA风险。当细胞、分子和关节组织的变化开始与骨关节炎重叠时,就会发生早期骨关节炎,这一过程可以在出现明确症状或影像学改变之前开始。骨关节炎前期和早期骨关节炎的无数途径和交叉最终导致不可逆的症状性骨关节炎。随着对骨关节炎前期和早期骨关节炎标志物、途径和亚型认识的增加,出现了解决这些新的治疗靶点的机会。骨性关节炎临床试验的现状被2022年国家关节炎、肌肉骨骼和皮肤疾病研究所(NIAMS)关于“膝关节骨性关节炎的软骨保存和修复:挑战、差距和机遇”的圆桌会议确定为进展的关键障碍。本手稿总结了圆桌会议为解决这一问题而建立的工作组的建议。工作组建议临床试验设计和终点的发展,以有效评估适用于骨关节炎前期和早期OA的新治疗方法,其标准不同于对症状性OA设定的标准。虽然症状改善是缓解不可逆OA的主要目标,但治疗早期疾病状态的重要目标包括疾病改变和预防,有可能改变进行性OA的自然史。由于症状可能与骨关节炎前期和早期骨关节炎的结构变化无关,因此这些试验的主要结果需要与所治疗疾病状态的预期机制目标和治疗目标相匹配。本文的目的是通过建立一个新的基准来确定适合于目标患者群体的关节疾病状态和亚型的关键结果,以及正在测试的干预措施的治疗或机制目标,从而改变OA临床试验的方法。通过将方法从使用基于既定OA的标准化结果转变为根据这些原则定制临床试验,新的精准医学策略可以更容易地推进临床实践,以解决从OA前到OA的全谱疾病。
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
CiteScore
9.20
自引率
4.00%
发文量
176
审稿时长
46 days
期刊介绍: Seminars in Arthritis and Rheumatism provides access to the highest-quality clinical, therapeutic and translational research about arthritis, rheumatology and musculoskeletal disorders that affect the joints and connective tissue. Each bimonthly issue includes articles giving you the latest diagnostic criteria, consensus statements, systematic reviews and meta-analyses as well as clinical and translational research studies. Read this journal for the latest groundbreaking research and to gain insights from scientists and clinicians on the management and treatment of musculoskeletal and autoimmune rheumatologic diseases. The journal is of interest to rheumatologists, orthopedic surgeons, internal medicine physicians, immunologists and specialists in bone and mineral metabolism.
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