BACKGROUND: Glatiramer acetate (GA) and interferon-beta (INFb) are first-line disease modifying drugs for relapsing remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS). Treatment with INFb is associated with a significant increase in health-related quality of life (HR-QoL) in the first 12 months. It is not known whether HR-QoL increases during treatment with GA. METHODS: 197 RRMS patients, 106 without and 91 with prior immunomodulation/immunosuppression, were studied for HR-QoL (Leeds Multiple Sclerosis-QoL [LMS-QoL] scale, score range 0 - 32), fatigue (Fatigue Impact Scale [FIS]) and depressed mood (Beck Depression Inventory-Short Form [BDI-SF]) at baseline and 6 and 12 months after start of GA treatment. RESULTS: At 6 and 12 months mean LMS-QoL scores were significantly increased in the treatment-naive patient group (p < 0.001), not in the pre-treated group. At month 12 43% of treatment-naïve patients had improved HR-QoL (increase LMS-QoL score 3 or more points) (p < 0.001). Likewise, mean FIS scores were decreased at months 6 and 12 in the treatment-naïve group (p < 0.01), not in the pre-treated group. In both groups mean BDI-SF scores did not change. No demographic or clinical baseline factor was predictive of HR-QoL increase. HR-QoL changes were zero to negative for patients who had discontinued GA before month 12 (28.4% of patients). CONCLUSIONS: In RRMS patients without prior immunomodulation/immunosuppression treatment with GA was associated with an increase in HR-QoL in the first 6 months, that was sustained at 12 months. In 4 out of 10 patients HR-QoL improved. Increase in HR-QoL was associated with decrease in fatigue.
BACKGROUND:Glatiramer acetate (GA) and interferon-beta (INFb) are first-line disease modifying drugs for relapsing remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS). Treatment with INFb is associated with a significant increase in health-related quality of life (HR-QoL) in the first 12 months. It is not known whether HR-QoL increases during treatment with GA. METHODS: 197 RRMS patients, 106 without and 91 with prior immunomodulation/immunosuppression, were studied for HR-QoL (Leeds Multiple Sclerosis-QoL [LMS-QoL] scale, score range 0 - 32), fatigue (Fatigue Impact Scale [FIS]) and depressed mood (Beck Depression Inventory-Short Form [BDI-SF]) at baseline and 6 and 12 months after start of GA treatment. RESULTS: At 6 and 12 months mean LMS-QoL scores were significantly increased in the treatment-naive patient group (p < 0.001), not in the pre-treated group. At month 12 43% of treatment-naïve patients had improved HR-QoL (increase LMS-QoL score 3 or more points) (p < 0.001). Likewise, mean FIS scores were decreased at months 6 and 12 in the treatment-naïve group (p < 0.01), not in the pre-treated group. In both groups mean BDI-SF scores did not change. No demographic or clinical baseline factor was predictive of HR-QoL increase. HR-QoL changes were zero to negative for patients who had discontinued GA before month 12 (28.4% of patients). CONCLUSIONS: In RRMS patients without prior immunomodulation/immunosuppression treatment with GA was associated with an increase in HR-QoL in the first 6 months, that was sustained at 12 months. In 4 out of 10 patients HR-QoL improved. Increase in HR-QoL was associated with decrease in fatigue.
Authors: Joseph B Guarnaccia; Mihaela Aslan; Theresa Z O'Connor; Maryann Hope; Lewis Kazis; C Michael Kashner; John Booss Journal: J Rehabil Res Dev Date: 2006 Jan-Feb
Authors: K P Johnson; B R Brooks; J A Cohen; C C Ford; J Goldstein; R P Lisak; L W Myers; H S Panitch; J W Rose; R B Schiffer Journal: Neurology Date: 1995-07 Impact factor: 9.910
Authors: L M Metz; S B Patten; C J Archibald; J I Bakker; C J Harris; D G Patry; R B Bell; M Yeung; W F Murphy; C A Stoian; K Billesberger; L Tillotson; S Peters; D McGowan Journal: J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry Date: 2004-07 Impact factor: 10.154
Authors: Kimberly Beckwith McGuire; Jelena Stojanovic-Radic; Lauren Strober; Nancy D Chiaravalloti; John DeLuca Journal: Int J MS Care Date: 2015 Jan-Feb
Authors: Peter J Jongen; Gerald Hengstman; Raymond Hupperts; Hans Schrijver; Job Gilhuis; Joseph H Vliegen; Erwin Hoogervorst; Marc van Huizen; Eric van Munster; Johnny Samijn; Els de Schryver; Theodora Siepman; Martijn Tonk; Eveline Zandbergen; Jacques ten Holter; Ruud van der Kruijk; George Borm Journal: BMC Neurol Date: 2011-03-30 Impact factor: 2.474