| Literature DB >> 24740824 |
Amit Bar-Or1, Andrew Pachner, Francoise Menguy-Vacheron, Johanne Kaplan, Heinz Wiendl.
Abstract
Treatment of multiple sclerosis (MS) is challenging: disease-modifying treatments (DMTs) must both limit unwanted immune responses associated with disease initiation and propagation (as T and B lymphocytes are critical cellular mediators in the pathophysiology of relapsing MS), and also have minimal adverse impact on normal protective immune responses. In this review, we summarize key preclinical and clinical data relating to the proposed mechanism of action of the recently approved DMT teriflunomide in MS. Teriflunomide selectively and reversibly inhibits dihydro-orotate dehydrogenase, a key mitochondrial enzyme in the de novo pyrimidine synthesis pathway, leading to a reduction in proliferation of activated T and B lymphocytes without causing cell death. Results from animal experiments modelling the immune activation implicated in MS demonstrate reductions in disease symptoms with teriflunomide treatment, accompanied by reduced central nervous system lymphocyte infiltration, reduced axonal loss, and preserved neurological functioning. In agreement with the results obtained in these model systems, phase 3 clinical trials of teriflunomide in patients with MS have consistently shown that teriflunomide provides a therapeutic benefit, and importantly, does not cause clinical immune suppression. Taken together, these data demonstrate how teriflunomide acts as a selective immune therapy for patients with MS.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24740824 PMCID: PMC4003395 DOI: 10.1007/s40265-014-0212-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drugs ISSN: 0012-6667 Impact factor: 9.546
Fig. 1An overview of the roles of immune cells in multiple sclerosis pathogenesis. T cells are stimulated to proliferate when they encounter antigen-presenting cells in the lymph node. Circulating T cells and B cells can traffic from the circulation across the blood–brain barrier. In the CNS, T cells encounter CNS antigens presented by dendritic cells. Macrophages and activated T cells can attack components of the CNS directly or release cytokines to activate other cell types, including B cells, which mature into antibody-producing plasma cells. T T cell, B B cell, CNS central nervous system, BBB blood–brain barrier, APC antigen-presenting cell, DC dendritic cell [64, 81, 89, 94]
Fig. 2Proposed MoA of teriflunomide. Resting lymphocytes are unaffected by teriflunomide. They self-renew without any requirement for de novo pyrimidine synthesis, as they can meet their pyrimidine requirements from the salvage pathway. Proliferation of activated lymphocytes relies on de novo pyrimidine synthesis by DHODH, so their proliferation is inhibited by teriflunomide. MoA mechanism of action, DHODH dihydro-orotate dehydrogenase, T T cell, B B cell. Homeostatic proliferation refers to self-renewal, and proliferation refers to expansion in response to stimulus
Reported MoA of MS therapiesa
| Drug | MoA (included in labelb) | MoA (evidence for additional mechanisms) | |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Alemtuzumab [ | Binds CD52, expressed at high levels on the surface of T and B cells, to cause their depletion from circulation [ | Repopulation of lymphocytes rebalances the immune system to reduce MS disease activity [ | |
| Dimethyl fumarate (BG-12) [ | Protects against oxidative stress-induced cellular injury and loss in neurons and astrocytes via up-regulation of an Nrf2-dependent antioxidant response [ | Neuroprotective effects are immune mediated [ Induces apoptosis in polyclonally activated T cells [ Promotes a Th1–Th2 shift in cytokine response [ Modulates DC differentiation [ Down-regulates lymphocyte adhesion [ Impairs macrophage infiltration into the CNS [ | |
| Fingolimod [ | Binds the S1P receptor [ | Alters the balance of NK-cell subsets [ Protects oligodendrocytes from insult [ May modulate remyelination [ Increases astrocyte migration [ Antigen-experienced and naïve T cells are sequestered [ | |
| Glatiramer acetate (GA) [ | Modifies many immune processes [ Induces suppressor T cells [ | Promiscuous high-affinity binding to MHC to prevent presentation of CNS antigens [ Induces a Th1–Th2 shift in T-cell responses through effects on DCs [ Promotes migration of Th2 cells into the CNS [ Inhibits MBP-specific T-cell responses [ May exert direct neurotrophic effects and promote remyelination through induction of BDNF [ | |
| Interferon beta (IFNβ) [ | Decreases T-cell activation through binding to IFN receptors [ Enhances suppressor T-cell activity [ Modulates MHC expression [ | Pleiotropic effects on immune system function [ Promotes a Th1–Th2 shift in cytokine response [ Modulates co-stimulatory molecules on APCs [ Decreases T-cell migration [ | |
| Mitoxantrone [ | Intercalates with DNA and causes single- and double-strand breaks, and inhibits DNA repair through inhibition of DNA topoisomerase II [ Cytotoxic to stimulated T and B lymphocytes [ | Modulates astrocyte activity [ Induces suppressive T cells [ | |
| Natalizumab [ | Targets integrin α4β1 (VLA-4), restricts T-cell and NK-cell extravasation and migration into the CNS [ | May down-modulate VLA-4 ligand VCAM-1 [ Mild pro-inflammatory stimulatory effect on CD4+ helper T cells, leading to increases in IL-2, IFN-γ, and IL-17 expression [ Increases effector-memory T-cell pool [ Reduces the ability of DCs to stimulate antigen-specific T-cell responses [ | |
| Teriflunomide [ | Inhibits proliferation of activated T and B lymphocytes through inhibition of DHODH [ | Impairs formation of immunological synapse [ Decreases release of IL-6, IL-8, and MCP-1 from monocytes [ Preferentially affects proliferation of high-avidity T cells [ | |
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| Daclizumab | Promotes differentiation and expansion of CD56 (bright) immunoregulatory NK cells [ Blocks activation and expansion of autoreactive T cells through binding to CD25 [ Reduces numbers of Treg and lymphoid tissue-inducer cells [ Impedes T-cell transactivation by DCs [ | ||
| Laquinimod | Decreases Treg numbers in the CNS [ Decreases lymphocyte migration [ Decreases IL-17 production [ Increases B-cell expression of markers of regulatory activity, such as CD25, IL-10, and CD86 [ Increases IL-10 and TGFβ production by T cells (B-cell mediated) [ Augments BDNF expression [ Induces type II monocytes [ Causes a Th1–Th2 shift in CD4+ T cells [ | ||
| Ocrelizumab | Binds CD20 to cause complement-dependent lysis of and/or antibody-dependent cytotoxicity towards B cells [ | ||
MoA mechanism of action, MS multiple sclerosis, Th T helper, DC dendritic cell, CNS central nervous system, NK natural killer, MHC major histocompatibility complex, MBP myelin basic peptide, BDNF brain-derived neurotrophic factor, IFN interferon, APC antigen-presenting cell, DNA deoxyribonucleic acid, VLA very late activation, VCAM vascular cell adhesion molecule, IL interleukin, DHODH dihydro-orotate dehydrogenase, MCP-1 monocyte-derived chemotactic protein 1, Treg T regulatory cell, TGFβ transforming growth factor beta, RRMS relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis
aThe MoA of these therapies is not completely understood and the listed mechanisms are hypotheses
bIncluded in labels where drug is approved
cTrials in patients with RRMS as of October 2013
MoA of immunosuppressive therapies occasionally or historically used off-label in patients with MSa
| Drug | MoA (included in labelb) | MoA (evidence for additional mechanisms) | Safety |
|---|---|---|---|
| Azathioprine [ | A purine analogue that is incorporated into DNA and blocks the de novo purine synthesis pathway [ | Induces apoptosis in stimulated T cells [ | Over 10 % of patients experience leukopenia, cancer risk increases with treatment duration and cumulative dose [ |
| Cyclophosphamide [ | Active metabolites of cyclophosphamide alkylate DNA during cell division, impairing DNA synthesis and leading to apoptosis in actively proliferating cells [ | Inhibits the suppressive capability of Treg (at low doses) [ Suppresses Th1/enhances Th2 T-cell responses [ | Side effects include risk of malignancy [ |
| Methotrexate [ | Competitive inhibitor of DHFR, leading to a deficiency of nucleic acid precursors and impaired DNA synthesis [ | Impairs lymphocyte activation and adhesion [ Increases sensitivity to apoptosis [ | Rare cases of severe pancytopenia [ |
| Mycophenolate mofetil [ | Reversible inhibitor of IMD type II, an enzyme mainly found in lymphocytes and responsible for de novo synthesis of the purine nucleotide guanine [ Impairs DNA synthesis and increases apoptosis in activated T cells and impairs proliferation in B and T cells [ | Inhibits antigen presentation by DCs [ Impairs recruitment of lymphocytes and monocytes to sites of inflammation [ | Risk of transitory leukopenia, digestive disorders, and benign infections [ |
MoA mechanism of action, MS multiple sclerosis, DNA deoxyribonucleic acid, Treg T regulatory cell, Th T helper, DHFR dihydrofolate reductase, IMD inosine 5’-monophosphate dehydrogenase, DC dendritic cell
aThe MoA of these therapies is not completely understood and the listed mechanisms are hypotheses
bIncluded in labels where drug is approved, though drug may be used off-label in treatment of MS
Fig. 3In vitro, preclinical, and clinical evidence for the selective immunomodulatory MoA of teriflunomide. Teriflunomide inhibits the proliferation of a CD4+ and b CD8+ T-cell subsets, and c B cells, in vitro, in a DHODH-dependent (uridine-reversible) manner. Graphs show the degree of inhibition of proliferation in response to anti-CD3 antibody (a, b) or CpG oligonucleotide (c), measured by CFSE dye dilution and flow cytometry; data presented as mean ± standard error. d In the Dark Agouti EAE rat model of MS, teriflunomide treatment attenuates the number of T cells (identified by anti-CD3 staining and flow cytometry) in cervical spinal cord at all phases of disease; data presented as lease square mean ± standard error of the mean. e White blood cell counts in patients treated with teriflunomide 14 mg remain within the normal range and stabilize after the first 3 months of treatment. f Responses to seasonal influenza vaccine, by influenza strain, in patients treated with teriflunomide 14 mg. Dotted line shows European criteria for vaccine efficacy (70 % of patients with post-vaccination titres ≥40), error bars show 90 % confidence interval. MoA mechanism of action, EAE experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, DHODH dihydro-orotate dehydrogenase, CFSE carboxyfluorescein succinimidyl ester, SEM standard error of the mean. Reproduced with permission from [64] (a–c), [81] (d), [94] (f)
Overview of the safety profile of teriflunomide in three placebo-controlled studies [96]
| Placebo | Teriflunomide (7 mg) | Teriflunomide (14 mg) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number (%) of patients | n = 806 | n = 838 | n = 786 |
| Any TEAE | 697 (86.5) | 734 (87.6) | 702 (89.3) |
| Any serious TEAE | 101 (12.5) | 107 (12.8) | 109 (13.9) |
| Any TEAE leading to study discontinuation | 56 (6.9) | 92 (11.0) | 107 (13.6) |
| Maximum intensity of TEAEs | |||
| Mild | 218 (27.0) | 225 (26.8) | 201 (25.6) |
| Moderate | 374 (46.4) | 400 (47.7) | 385 (49.0) |
| Severe | 105 (13.0) | 109 (13.0) | 116 (14.8) |
| Most common TEAEa | |||
| Alanine aminotransferase increased | 62 (7.7) | 100 (11.9) | 110 (14.0) |
| Diarrhea | 63 (7.8) | 109 (13.0) | 113 (14.4) |
| Nausea | 63 (7.8) | 74 (8.8) | 97 (12.3) |
| Headache | 125 (15.5) | 156 (18.6) | 128 (16.3) |
| Hair thinningb | 35 (4.3) | 90 (10.7) | 111 (14.1) |
Pooled data from TEMSO, TOWER, and Phase 2 Study [96]
TEAE treatment-emergent adverse event
aOccurring in ≥10 % of patients in any treatment group and ≥2 % in either teriflunomide group compared with placebo
bMedical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities preferred term: alopecia