Post-hoc Analysis of the LEROS Study: Impact of Time to Idebenone Initiation on Visual Acuity in Leber Hereditary Optic Neuropathy
Nancy J Newman1, Patrick Yu-Wai-Man2, Valerio Carelli3, Xavier Llòria4, Magda Joana Silva5, Thomas Klopstock6
1Departments of Ophthalmology, Neurology, and Neurological Surgery, Emory University School of Medicine, 2John van Geest Centre for Brain Repair, University of Cambridge, 3IRCCS Istituto di Scienze Neurologiche di Bologna, 4Chiesi Farmaceutici S.p.A, 5All is Data, 6Department of Neurology, Friedrich Baur Institute
Objective:

To assess visual acuity (VA) endpoints according to time of idebenone treatment initiation from symptom onset (Ti) in patients with Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) in the LEROS study.

Background:

It is not yet established whether Ti impacts the clinical outcome of patients with LHON. LEROS, a Phase IV, open-label, international, natural-history controlled study (NCT02774005), assessed the long-term efficacy of idebenone in the treatment of LHON.

Design/Methods:

In this post-hoc analysis, VA at last visit of the LEROS study was assessed in the eyes of idebenone-treated patients with the m.11778G>A mitochondrial DNA mutation with an observation time of 12–24 months (m). Eyes were stratified by Ti.

Results:

Median [range, n] age (years [y]) at baseline was similar regardless of Ti (0–3m: 32.2y [12.6–49.6, 10]; 3–6m: 36.2y [12.6–62.5, 21]; 6–9m: 37.4y [12.6–64.5, 20]; 9–12m: 33.0y [19.5–49.6, 19]; 12–24m: 32.4y [12.1–60.2, 44]; >24m: 34.7y [12.4–62.4, 61]). Regardless of Ti, VA endpoints at last visit were similar, with minor differences observed. Eyes that were 3–6m from symptom onset at treatment initiation had the best median [interquartile range (IQR)] VA (in logMAR) at last visit (0–3m: 1.27 [0.40–1.68]; 3–6m: 1.22 [0.30–1.80]; 6–9m: 1.40 [1.02–1.56]; 9–12m: 1.52 [0.98–1.60]; 12–24m: 1.39 [0.58–1.74]; >24m: 1.32 [0.90–1.62]) and the best median [IQR] VA change from last visit to baseline (0–3m: 0.08 [-0.20–0.62]; 3–6m: -0.20 [-0.46–0.10]; 6–9m: -0.11 [-0.19–0.00]; 9–12m: -0.10 [-0.48– -0.04]; 12–24m: -0.09 [-0.47–0.00]; >24m: -0.06 [-0.18–0.00]).

Conclusions:

This post-hoc analysis of the LEROS study offers valuable insights into the impact of treatment initiation timing on VA, despite the small sample size and large variability of the data.

10.1212/WNL.0000000000208977
Disclaimer: Abstracts were not reviewed by Neurology® and do not reflect the views of Neurology® editors or staff.