Long‐term survival of participants in the <scp>CENTAUR</scp> trial of sodium phenylbutyrate‐taurursodiol in <scp>amyotrophic lateral sclerosis</scp>

Sabrina Paganoni(Harvard University), Suzanne Hendrix(TetraLogic Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Samuel P. Dickson(TetraLogic Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Newman Knowlton(TetraLogic Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Eric A. Macklin(Harvard University), James D. Berry(Massachusetts General Hospital), Michael A. Elliott(Swedish Medical Center), Samuel Maiser(Hennepin Healthcare Research Institute), Chafic Karam(Oregon Health & Science University), James B. Caress(Wake Forest University), Margaret Owegi(Memorial Medical Center), Adam Quick(The Ohio State University), James Wymer(University of Florida), Stephen A. Goutman(University of Michigan), Daragh Heitzman(Texas Neurology), Terry Heiman‐Patterson(Temple University), Carlayne E. Jackson(The University of Texas at San Antonio Health Science Center), Colin Quinn(University of Pennsylvania), Jeffrey D. Rothstein(Johns Hopkins University), Edward J. Kasarskis(University of Kentucky), Jonathan Katz(California Pacific Medical Center), Liberty Jenkins(California Pacific Medical Center), Shafeeq Ladha(Barrow Neurological Institute), Timothy M. Miller(Washington University in St. Louis), Stephen N. Scelsa(Mount Sinai Beth Israel), Tuan Vu(University of South Florida), Christina Fournier(Emory University), Jonathan D. Glass(Emory University), Kristin Johnson(Ochsner Health System), Andrea Swenson(University of Iowa), Namita Goyal(University of California, Irvine), Gary L. Pattee(McBride and Associates (United States)), Patricia L. Andres(Oldham Council), Suma Babu(Massachusetts General Hospital), Marianne Chase(Massachusetts General Hospital), Derek D’Agostino(Massachusetts General Hospital), Meghan Hall(Barrow Neurological Institute), Gale Kittle(Barrow Neurological Institute), Matthew Eydinov(Massachusetts General Hospital), Michelle McGovern(Massachusetts General Hospital), Joseph Ostrow(Massachusetts General Hospital), Lindsay Pothier(Massachusetts General Hospital), Rebecca Randall(Barrow Neurological Institute), Jeremy M. Shefner(Barrow Neurological Institute), Alexander Sherman(Massachusetts General Hospital), Maria E. St. Pierre(Massachusetts General Hospital), Eric Tustison(Massachusetts General Hospital), Prasha Vigneswaran(Massachusetts General Hospital), Jason Walker(Massachusetts General Hospital), Hong Yu(Massachusetts General Hospital), James Chan(Harvard University), Janet Wittes(Statistics Collaborative), Zi‐Fan Yu(Statistics Collaborative), Joshua Cohen(Amplyx Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Justin Klee(Amplyx Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Kent Leslie(Amplyx Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Rudolph E. Tanzi(Massachusetts General Hospital), Walter Gilbert(Harvard University Press), Patrick Yeramian(Amplyx Pharmaceuticals (United States)), David Schoenfeld(Harvard University), Merit Cudkowicz(Massachusetts General Hospital)
Muscle & Nerve
October 16, 2020
Cited by 177Open Access
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Abstract

An orally administered, fixed-dose coformulation of sodium phenylbutyrate-taurursodiol (PB-TURSO) significantly slowed functional decline in a randomized, placebo-controlled, phase 2 trial in ALS (CENTAUR). Herein we report results of a long-term survival analysis of participants in CENTAUR. In CENTAUR, adults with ALS were randomized 2:1 to PB-TURSO or placebo. Participants completing the 6-month (24-week) randomized phase were eligible to receive PB-TURSO in the open-label extension. An all-cause mortality analysis (35-month maximum follow-up post-randomization) incorporated all randomized participants. Participants and site investigators were blinded to treatment assignments through the duration of follow-up of this analysis. Vital status was obtained for 135 of 137 participants originally randomized in CENTAUR. Median overall survival was 25.0 months among participants originally randomized to PB-TURSO and 18.5 months among those originally randomized to placebo (hazard ratio, 0.56; 95% confidence interval, 0.34-0.92; P = .023). Initiation of PB-TURSO treatment at baseline resulted in a 6.5-month longer median survival as compared with placebo. Combined with results from CENTAUR, these results suggest that PB-TURSO has both functional and survival benefits in ALS.


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