作者
Gil I. Wolfe,Henry J. Kaminski,Inmaculada Aban,Greg Minisman,Hui-Chien Kuo,Alexander Marx,Philipp Ströbel,Claudio Mazia,Jôel Oger,João Guilherme Gabriel,Jeannine M. Heckmann,Amelia Evoli,Wilfred A. Nix,Emma Ciafaloni,Giovanni Antonini,Rawiphan Witoonpanich,John King,Said R. Beydoun,Colin Chalk,Alexandru Barboi,Anthony A. Amato,Aziz Shaibani,Bashar Katirji,Bryan Lecky,Camilla Buckley,Angela Vincent,Elza Dias‐Tosta,Hiroaki Yoshikawa,Márcia Waddington-Cruz,Michael Pulley,Michael H. Rivner,Anna Kostera‐Pruszczyk,Robert M. Pascuzzi,Carlayne E. Jackson,Jan J. Verschuuren,Janice M. Massey,John T. Kissel,Lineu César Werneck,Michael Benatar,Richard J. Barohn,Rup Tandan,Tahseen Mozaffar,Nicholas J. Silvestri,Robin Conwit,Joshua R. Sonett,Alfred Jaretzki,John Newsom‐Davis,Gary Cutter,Michelle Feese,Gil I. Wolfe,Valeria Saluto,M Rosenberg,Valeria Alvarez,Lisa A. Rocca Rey,Helmut Butzkueven,John Goldblatt,John Carey,John R. Pollard,Stephen Reddel,Nicholas Handel,Brian C. McCaughan,Linda Pallot,Ricardo Novis,Carlos Henrique Ribeiro Boasquevisque,Rubens N. Morato-Fernandez,Manoel Ximenes,Rosana Hermínia Scola,Paulo Roberto Soltoski,Fraser Moore,David T. Mulder,Lisa Wadup,Michele Mezei,Kenneth G. Evans,Theresa Jiwa,Anne Schaffar,C Michael White,Cory Toth,Gary Gelfand,Susan Wood,Elizabeth Pringle,Jocelyn Zwicker,Donna E. Maziak,Farid M. Shamji,Sudhir Sundaresan,Andrew J. E. Seely,Gabriel Cea,Renato Verduga,Alberto Aguayo,Sebastian Jander,Philipp Zickler,Michael D. Klein,Cleo–Aron Weis,Arthur Melms,Felix Bischof,Hermann Aebert,Gerhard Ziemer,Björn Thümler,Thomas Wilhem-Schwenkmezger,Eckhard Mayer,Berthold Schalke
摘要
Background The Thymectomy Trial in Non-Thymomatous Myasthenia Gravis Patients Receiving Prednisone (MGTX) showed that thymectomy combined with prednisone was superior to prednisone alone in improving clinical status as measured by the Quantitative Myasthenia Gravis (QMG) score in patients with generalised non-thymomatous myasthenia gravis at 3 years. We investigated the long-term effects of thymectomy up to 5 years on clinical status, medication requirements, and adverse events. Methods We did a rater-blinded 2-year extension study at 36 centres in 15 countries for all patients who completed the randomised controlled MGTX and were willing to participate. MGTX patients were aged 18 to 65 years at enrolment, had generalised non-thymomatous myasthenia gravis of less than 5 years' duration, had acetylcholine receptor antibody titres of 1·00 nmol/L or higher (or concentrations of 0·50–0·99 nmol/L if diagnosis was confirmed by positive edrophonium or abnormal repetitive nerve stimulation, or abnormal single fibre electromyography), had Myasthenia Gravis Foundation of America Clinical Classification Class II–IV disease, and were on optimal anticholinesterase therapy with or without oral corticosteroids. In MGTX, patients were randomly assigned (1:1) to either thymectomy plus prednisone or prednisone alone. All patients in both groups received oral prednisone at doses titrated up to 100 mg on alternate days until they achieved minimal manifestation status. The primary endpoints of the extension phase were the time-weighted means of the QMG score and alternate-day prednisone dose from month 0 to month 60. Analyses were by intention to treat. The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00294658. It is closed to new participants, with follow-up completed. Findings Of the 111 patients who completed the 3-year MGTX, 68 (61%) entered the extension study between Sept 1, 2009, and Aug 26, 2015 (33 in the prednisone alone group and 35 in the prednisone plus thymectomy group). 50 (74%) patients completed the 60-month assessment, 24 in the prednisone alone group and 26 in the prednisone plus thymectomy group. At 5 years, patients in the thymectomy plus prednisone group had significantly lower time-weighted mean QMG scores (5·47 [SD 3·87] vs 9·34 [5·08]; p=0·0007) and mean alternate-day prednisone doses (24 mg [SD 21] vs 48 mg [29]; p=0·0002) than did those in the prednisone alone group. 14 (42%) of 33 patients in the prednisone group, and 12 (34%) of 35 in the thymectomy plus prednisone group, had at least one adverse event by month 60. No treatment-related deaths were reported during the extension phase. Interpretation At 5 years, thymectomy plus prednisone continues to confer benefits in patients with generalised non-thymomatous myasthenia gravis compared with prednisone alone. Although caution is appropriate when generalising our findings because of the small sample size of our study, they nevertheless provide further support for the benefits of thymectomy in patients with generalised non-thymomatous myasthenia gravis. Funding National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.