- Paganoni, Sabrina;
- Hendrix, Suzanne;
- Dickson, Samuel P;
- Knowlton, Newman;
- Berry, James D;
- Elliott, Michael A;
- Maiser, Samuel;
- Karam, Chafic;
- Caress, James B;
- Owegi, Margaret Ayo;
- Quick, Adam;
- Wymer, James;
- Goutman, Stephen A;
- Heitzman, Daragh;
- Heiman-Patterson, Terry D;
- Jackson, Carlayne;
- Quinn, Colin;
- Rothstein, Jeffrey D;
- Kasarskis, Edward J;
- Katz, Jonathan;
- Jenkins, Liberty;
- Ladha, Shafeeq S;
- Miller, Timothy M;
- Scelsa, Stephen N;
- Vu, Tuan H;
- Fournier, Christina;
- Johnson, Kristin M;
- Swenson, Andrea;
- Goyal, Namita;
- Pattee, Gary L;
- Babu, Suma;
- Chase, Marianne;
- Dagostino, Derek;
- Hall, Meghan;
- Kittle, Gale;
- Eydinov, Mathew;
- Ostrow, Joseph;
- Pothier, Lindsay;
- Randall, Rebecca;
- Shefner, Jeremy M;
- Sherman, Alexander V;
- Tustison, Eric;
- Vigneswaran, Prasha;
- Yu, Hong;
- Cohen, Joshua;
- Klee, Justin;
- Tanzi, Rudolph;
- Gilbert, Walter;
- Yeramian, Patrick;
- Cudkowicz, Merit
Background
Coformulated sodium phenylbutyrate/taurursodiol (PB/TURSO) was shown to prolong survival and slow functional decline in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).Objective
Determine whether PB/TURSO prolonged tracheostomy/ventilation-free survival and/or reduced first hospitalisation in participants with ALS in the CENTAUR trial.Methods
Adults with El Escorial Definite ALS ≤18 months from symptom onset were randomised to PB/ TURSO or placebo for 6 months. Those completing randomised treatment could enrol in an open-label extension (OLE) phase and receive PB/TURSO for ≤30 months. Times to the following individual or combined key events were compared in the originally randomised treatment groups over a period spanning trial start through July 2020 (longest postrandomisation follow-up, 35 months): death, tracheostomy, permanent assisted ventilation (PAV) and first hospitalisation.Results
Risk of any key event was 47% lower in those originally randomised to PB/TURSO (n=87) versus placebo (n=48, 71% of whom received delayed-start PB/TURSO in the OLE phase) (HR=0.53; 95% CI 0.35 to 0.81; p=0.003). Risks of death or tracheostomy/PAV (HR=0.51; 95% CI 0.32 to 0.84; p=0.007) and first hospitalisation (HR=0.56; 95% CI 0.34 to 0.95; p=0.03) were also decreased in those originally randomised to PB/TURSO.Conclusions
Early PB/TURSO prolonged tracheostomy/PAV-free survival and delayed first hospitalisation in ALS.Trial registration number
NCT03127514; NCT03488524.