Reply: Comment on alemtuzumab and inclusion body myositis
Author(s) -
M. C. Dalakas,
Goran Rakočević,
Jan Schmidt,
B. McElroy,
Michael O. HarrisLove,
Joseph A. Shrader,
Ellen Levy,
James M. Dambrosia
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
brain
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.142
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1460-2156
pISSN - 0006-8950
DOI - 10.1093/brain/awp276
Subject(s) - inclusion body myositis , alemtuzumab , clinical neurology , myositis , inclusion (mineral) , medicine , physical medicine and rehabilitation , psychology , neuroscience , pathology , immunology , social psychology , antibody
Sir, Dr Greenberg misinterprets several important aspects of our study, including the scope and applied methodology. Below we have addressed the points raised in his correspondence.This was a proof-of principle molecular clinicopathological study designed to investigate the effect of alemtuzumab on endomysial T cells and disease progression; it was not primarily a trial of clinical efficacy. As stated, alemtuzumab did not significantly improve patients’ strength and function but only induced short-term stability based on the difference between two time periods. Contrary to Dr Greenberg's comments, outcome was not based on any predetermined percentages that were subsequently amended. The percentages mentioned by Dr Greenberg were used only to power the sample size. As our results show, these percentages do not relate to the outcome or conclusions of the study because, regardless of whether a 10%, 13% or 15% difference is used, there is no significant improvement in the patients’ strength (as he correctly points out, only 4 of 13 patients improved, by only 4%–19%, while the mean strength for all patients declined by 1.9%).Our data and the interpretation of results have now been ratified in an independent review by the National Institutes of Health. The main finding was a significant reduction of relevant molecules seen in repeated muscle biopsies, combined with short-term clinical stability; this is encouraging and, as we stressed, warrants a controlled study. One should not read more than that from these results. The study was arguably small and uncontrolled but taught us a lot about …
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