| Literature DB >> 22096630 |
Mazen Abu-Mugheisib1, Reiner Benecke, Uwe K Zettl.
Abstract
At the present time, anti-inflammatory, immunomodulatory, or immunosuppressive treatments of multiple sclerosis (MS) are mainly effective in the early phases of the disease but are of less advantage in progressive phases. Current therapeutic strategies of both primary and secondary progressive MS are rare. One alternative may be intrathecal application of triamcinolone acetonide (TCA). Number of papers deal with advantages and disadvantages of intrathecal administration in MS. Former trials lacked detailed selection of MS patients, with small sample sizes, low steroid dosages, and only a small number of intrathecal administration of short acting steroids. The present paper summarizes recent trials performed following a different treatment regime. They were conducted in patients with progressive MS suffering mainly from spinal symptoms and documented a significant improvement of EDSS and walking distance (WD). Intrathecal TCA administration is a proposal to take into account as one therapy option in patients with a progressive clinical course and predominantly spinal symptoms.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22096630 PMCID: PMC3196978 DOI: 10.1155/2011/219049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mult Scler Int ISSN: 2090-2654
Representative intrathecal steroid trials 1953–1992 [21, 22].
| Design | Patients included, MS type | Dosage and duration | Primary outcome | Results | Evidence | |
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| Kamen and Erdman, 1953 [ | Case report | 1; RR | Intrathecal HC and intramuscular ACTH; no specific data available | Recovery | Patient recovered | IV |
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| Boines, 1961 and 1963 [ | Open-label, uncontrolled, retrospective, unblinded follow up of 12–52 weeks | 42; no specific data available | 40–100 mg intrathecal MPA every 2-3 weeks for a total of 6 injections, then “follow-up booster injections” | “recovery, particular of spasticity”; no specific outcome data available | “80% of patients improved/showed excellent or good results” | IV |
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| Van Buskirk et al., 1964 [ | Open-label, uncontrolled, prospective, unblinded | 20; no specific data available | Weekly increasing doses intrathecal MPA (20–80 mg), then booster injection monthly (80–100 mg MPA); follow up 1 week-16–months | “clinical improvement” | “no effect on frequency of exacerbations, but improvement in spasticity in 14 patients” | IV |
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| Goldstein et al., 1970 [ | Open-label, uncontrolled, retrospective, unblinded | 38; no specific data available | 40–80 mg intrathecal MPA/4–8 times within 1-2 weeks; follow up 2–8 years | “improvement” | “79% improvement” | IV |
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| Nelson et al., 1973 [ | Open-label, uncontrolled, prospective, unblinded | 23; RR, SP | 40–120 mg intrathecal MPA/1–23 times within 2 months; follow up 1–84 months | EDSS CSF changes | EDSS: 4 patients (17%) improved; significant increase of CSF protein | IV |
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| Rohrbach et al., 1988 [ | double-blind, randomized, prospective | 42, “mainly chronic progressive” | Intrathecal TCA: 80 mg/3-4 times within 14 days | “spinal score” | Intrathecal TCA: “better improvement in the spinal score” | II |
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| Heun et al., 1992 [ | open-label, prospective, randomized, unblinded, follow up of 21 days | Intrathecal TCA: 25 Systemic MPA: 25 | TCA: 40 mg on days 1, 8, and 15 | EDSS AI SSEP | EDSS improved in both groups ( | III |
TCA: triamcinolone-acetonide acid; HC: hydrocortisone; ACTH: adrenocorticotropic hormone; MPA: methylprednisolone acetate; RR: relapsing-remitting MS; PP: primary chronic progressive MS; SP: secondary chronic progressive MS; MIX: mitoxantrone, EDSS: expanded disability status scale; WD: maximum walking distance; WT: maximum walking time; SSEP: somatosensory evoked potentials; AI: ambulation index; CSF: cerebrospinal fluid; n.s: non significant.
Representative intrathecal steroid investigations in multiple sclerosis (since 2003).
| Design | Patients included, MS type | Dosage and duration | Primary and secondary outcomes | Results | Evidence | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hoffmann et al., 2003 [ | Open-label, prospective, uncontrolled, unblinded, short follow up | 36 (SP, PP) | TCA 40 mg/6 times within 3 weeks; follow up with 40 mg every 6–12 weeks; 13.1 ± 6.22, 3–23 (mean ± SD., range) months | EDSS WD | initial phase: | IV |
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| Hellwig et al., 2004 [ | Open-label, prospective, uncontrolled, unblinded, short follow up | 161 (RR, SP, PP) | TCA 40 mg/6 times within 3 weeks | EDSS WD SSEP | EDSS: (initial: 6.44 ± 1.06; end: 5.47 ± 1.24): | IV |
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| Hoffmann et al., 2006 [ | Open-label, prospective, uncontrolled, unblinded, short follow up | 27 (SP, PP) | TCA 40 mg/6 times within 3 weeks | EDSS WD WT 25- | EDSS: (initial: 5.4 ± 1.3; end: 4.9 ± 1.1; | IV |
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| Hellwig et al., 2006 [ | open-label over a 52-week long interval, prospective, randomized, unblinded | TCA: 34 (SP, PP) | TCA: 40 mg every 6–12 weeks, 52 weeks | EDSS WD | TCA: EDSS decreased ( | III |
TCA: triamcinolone-acetonide acid; RR: relapsing-remitting MS; PP: primary chronic progressive MS; SP: secondarychronic progressive MS; MIX: mitoxantrone; EDSS: expanded disability status scale; WD: maximum walking distance; WT: maximum walking time; SSEP: somatosensory evoked potentials; CSF: cerebrospinal fluid; n.s: non significant.