Investigators evaluated the utility of the MG Symptoms Patient-Reported Outcome (PRO) within the armamentarium of instruments that currently evaluate myasthenia gravis (MG) severity.
The comprehensiveness of its content and its modular nature were cited as benefits of the MG Symptoms Patient-Reported Outcome (PRO) instrument in adding to knowledge of the severity of myasthenia gravis (MG), the chronic, autoimmune, neuromuscular disease for which there is no known cure.1
With this knowledge, clinicians can more accurately monitor their patients and evaluate investigative treatment effectiveness, researchers wrote in Neurology & Therapy.2 Their post hoc analysis aimed to show how the MG Symptoms PRO, a new clinical instrument, could help to define MG severity and bridge knowledge gaps evident in current outcome measures: Quantitative MG (QMG) score, MG Composite (MGC) score, and MG-Activities of Daily Living (MG-ADL).
The phase 2a, multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled MG0002 study provided the data for their analysis. Within this study, patients received either rozanolixizumab 7 mg/kg or placebo at 17 sites in the United States, Canada, and Europe. There was a 50-day treatment period during which patients had 13 visits, and a 49-day observation period; 542 individual assessments of MG-related outcomes were collected.
Medical team having a meeting | Image Credit: mrmohock - stock.adobe.com
Overall, the study authors noted that each of the 4 scales they evaluated reliably measured ocular, bulbar, and respiratory muscle weakness. However, overall muscle weakness fatigability was only accurately captured by the MG Symptoms PRO and QMG, and neck muscle fatigability by the MGC and MG-ADL. In addition, the MG Symptoms PRO was shown to be more comprehensive, in that it covered general fatigue, limb and axial weakness, and limb heaviness vs just limb weakness by the QMG and MGC vs the MG-ADL, which does not measure limb weakness.
The mean (SD) patient age was 51.9 (15.1) years; 62.8% of the study population was female patients; most patients were from Canads (25.6%, Belgium (23.3%), or the United States (20.9%); 93.0% of patients were acetylcholine receptor antibody positive; 2.3% of patients were anti–muscle-specific kinase antibody positive; and the most common Myasthenia Gravis Foundation of America disease classes was class IIIa (34.9%), class IIb (27.9%), or class IIa (16.3%).
At baseline, mean scores were as follows:
When speaking to the comprehensive nature of the MG Symptoms PRO, the study authors noted that its high quality can be attributed to its evaluation of significantly more items compared with the other scales, “therefore, it provides greater granularity in terms of coverage of the different manifestations of MG, even within each symptom category.” The novel measure also contains a recommendation to evaluate the signs and symptoms of MG for 7 days prior to invoking its use vs no defined evaluation periods in the remaining 3 instruments, leading the authors to note they may not accurately capture patient symptom experiences.
Correlations of 0.57 to 0.71 were seen for the composite measures of overall MG symptom severity on the MG-ADL, QMG, and MGC, and of 0.56 to 0.74 for those instruments with the MG Symptoms PRO muscle weakness fatigability score.
“The newly developed MG Symptoms PRO complements the set of currently widely used measures of disease activity and severity of MG,” the authors conclude. “It provides greater granularity for the assessment of the cardinal symptoms of MG, providing more extensive coverage of the severity of MG, capturing even for mild symptoms that may be imperfectly captured by other measures.”
They also highlighted its ability to fill the gap on fatigue measurement and that its modular nature means individual assessment of each symptom can produce a more comprehensive and individualized overall picture of patient disease severity.
References
1. Myasthenia gravis. Mayo Clinic. June 22, 2023. Accessed October 31, 2023. https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/myasthenia-gravis/symptoms-causes/syc-20352036
2. Regnault A, Morel T, de la Loge C, Mazerolle F, Kaminski HJ, Habib AA. Neurol Ther. 2023;12(5):1573-1590. doi:10.1007/s40120-023-00464-x Measuringoverall severity of myasthenia gravis (mg): evidence for the added value of the MG Symptoms PRO.
Key Indicators of Myasthenia Gravis Disease Progression Reduced With Efgartigimod
April 18th 2025Research presented at the recent annual meeting of the Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy highlights outcomes among patients who have anti-acetylcholine receptor antibody-positive myasthenia gravis that include reduced exacerbations and need for immunoglobulin.
Read More
Racial Differences in CA-125 Levels Tied to Ovarian Cancer Treatment Delays
April 17th 2025Black and American Indian women with ovarian cancer were less likely to have elevated cancer antigen 125 (CA-125) levels at diagnosis, resulting in delayed chemotherapy initiation and highlighting the need for more inclusive guidelines.
Read More
Elevated Inflammatory Marker Levels Associated With Increased Overactive Bladder Risk
April 15th 2025Systemic immune inflammation index, neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio, and systemic inflammation response index levels may offer a noninvasive method to identify individuals at increased risk of developing overactive bladder.
Read More