| Literature DB >> 28247239 |
Nicola De Stefano1, Diego G Silva2, Michael H Barnett3.
Abstract
Brain atrophy occurs at a faster rate in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) than in healthy individuals. In three randomized, controlled, phase III trials, fingolimod reduced the annual rate of brain volume loss (BVL) in patients with relapsing MS (RMS) by approximately one-third relative to that in individuals receiving placebo or intramuscular interferon beta-1a. Analysis of brain volume changes during study extensions has shown that this reduced rate of BVL is sustained in patients with RMS receiving fingolimod continuously. Subgroup analyses of the core phase III and extension studies have shown that reductions in the rate of BVL are observed irrespective of levels of inflammatory lesion activity seen by magnetic resonance imaging at baseline and on study; levels of disability at baseline; and treatment history. The rate of BVL in these studies was predicted independently by T2 lesion and gadolinium-enhancing lesion burdens at baseline, and correlations observed between BVL and increasing levels of disability strengthened over time. In another phase III trial in patients with primary progressive MS (PPMS), fingolimod did not reduce BVL overall relative to placebo; however, consistent with findings in RMS, there was a treatment effect on BVL in patients with PPMS with gadolinium-enhancing lesion activity at baseline. The association between treatment effects on BVL and future accumulation of disability argues in favor of measuring BVL on a more routine basis and with a more structured approach than is generally the case in clinical practice. Despite several practical obstacles, progress is being made in achieving this goal.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28247239 PMCID: PMC5374177 DOI: 10.1007/s40263-017-0415-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CNS Drugs ISSN: 1172-7047 Impact factor: 5.749
Study designs of the pivotal phase III and IV trials of daily oral fingolimod in patients with MS
| Study name and identifier | Design | Duration | Patients | Intervention/s | Brain volume assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| FREEDOMS | Multicenter, phase III, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group | 2 years | Aged 18–55 years; RMS according to 2005 revised McDonald criteria; ≥1 confirmed relapses during the preceding year (or ≥2 during the previous 2 years); EDSS score of 0.0–5.5; treatment-naïve or previously treated; no relapse or steroid treatment within 30 days of randomization ( | Fingolimod 1.25 mg ( | MRI scan at screening, 6, 12, and 24 months; PBVC evaluated with SIENA |
| FREEDOMS II | Multicenter, phase III, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, double-dummy, parallel-group | 2 years | Aged 18–55 years; RMS according to 2005 revised McDonald criteria; ≥1 confirmed relapses during the preceding year (or ≥2 during the previous 2 years); EDSS score of 0.0–5.5; treatment-naïve or previously treated; no relapse or steroid treatment within 30 days of randomization ( | Fingolimod 1.25 mg ( | MRI scan at screening, 6, 12, and 24 months; PBVC evaluated with SIENA |
| TRANSFORMS | Multicenter, phase III, randomized, double-blind, active-controlled, double-dummy, parallel-group | 1 year | Aged 18–55 years; RMS according to 2005 revised McDonald criteria; ≥1 confirmed relapses during the preceding year (or ≥2 during the previous 2 years); EDSS score of 0.0–5.5; treatment-naïve or previously treated with IFNβ or GA; no relapse or steroid treatment within 30 days of randomization ( | Fingolimod 1.25 mg ( | MRI scan at screening and 12 months; PBVC evaluated with SIENA |
| FREEDOMS extension | Dose-blinded, parallel-group extension | 2 years | Completed FREEDOMS; did not discontinue study owing to an AE; did not experience onset of chronic immune system disease requiring immunosuppressive treatment ( |
| MRI scan every 12 months; PBVC evaluated with SIENA |
| FREEDOMS II extension [ | Randomized, dose-blinded, then open-label extension | 2 years | Completed FREEDOMS II ( |
| MRI scan at baseline, month 12, month 24, and EOS; PBVC evaluated with SIENA |
| TRANSFORMS extension | Randomized, dose-blinded, double-blinded, then open-label extension | 2 years, then up to 4.5 years | Completed TRANSFORMS ( |
| MRI scan at screening, month 12, and month 24, at study discontinuation and at a 3-month follow-up visit; PBVC evaluated with SIENA |
| LONGTERMS | Single-arm, open-label, long-term follow-up extension | Up to 7 years | Completed phase II, III and IIIb trials or extension studies ( |
| MRI scan at screening and at months 6, 12, 24, 36, 48, 60, and 72; PBVC evaluated with SIENA |
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| INFORMS | Multicenter, phase III, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled | 3–5 years | Aged 25–65 years old; PPMS according to 2005 revised McDonald criteria; at least 1 year of disease progression; two or more of the following: positive brain MRI; positive spinal cord MRI; positive cerebrospinal fluid; EDSS score of 3.5–5.6; increase in EDSS score of ≥0.5 points in the past 2 years ( |
| MRI scan at screening and every 12 months; PBVC evaluated with SIENA |
AE adverse event, EDSS Expanded Disability Status Scale, EOS end of study, GA glatiramer acetate, IFNβ-1a interferon beta-1a, IM intramuscular, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, MS multiple sclerosis, PBVC percentage brain volume change, PPMS primary progressive multiple sclerosis, RMS relapsing multiple sclerosis, SIENA Structural Image Evaluation, using Normalization, of Atrophy
Percentage change in BV during three pivotal phase III trials of fingolimod in patients with RMS
| Endpoint | Fingolimod 0.5 mg, oral | Placebo | IFNβ-1a IM 30 μg/week |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) change in BV from 0 to 6 months, % | |||
| FREEDOMS [ | −0.22 (0.81); | −0.34 (0.73) | |
| FREEDOMS II [ | −0.23 (0.87); | −0.38 (0.91) | |
| Mean (SD) change in BV from 0 to 12 months, % | |||
| FREEDOMS [ | −0.50 (1.05); | −0.65 (1.05) | |
| FREEDOMS II [ | −0.38 (0.97); | −0.63 (1.05) | |
| TRANSFORMS [ | −0.31 (0.65); | −0.45 (0.73) | |
| Mean (SD) change in BV from 12 to 24 months, % | |||
| FREEDOMS [ | −0.37 (0.81); | −0.67 (1.07) | |
| FREEDOMS II [ | −0.49 (0.90); | −0.68 (1.10) | |
| Mean (SD) change in BV from 0 to 24 months, % | |||
| FREEDOMS [ | −0.84 (1.31); | −1.31 (1.50) | |
| FREEDOMS II [ | −0.86 (1.22); | −1.28 (1.50) | |
Measured by SIENA
BV brain volume, IFNβ-1a interferon beta-1a, IM intramuscular, RMS relapsing multiple sclerosis, SD standard deviation, SIENA Structural Image Evaluation, using Normalization, of Atrophy
p Values in FREEDOMS and FREEDOMS II are versus placebo; p values in TRANSFORMS are versus IFNβ-1a IM
Fig. 1Mean percentage change in BV (measured with SIENA) from day 0 to EOS in FREEDOMS, FREEDOMS II and their extensions [27, 29]. All p values are versus the respective extension study switch group. BV brain volume, EOS end of study, SIENA Structural Image Evaluation, using Normalization, of Atrophy
Fig. 2Mean percentage change in BV (measured with SIENA) from core study baseline in the continuous and switched groups of patients participating in TRANSFORMS and its extension. In the switched group, patients were switched from IFN beta-1a IM to fingolimod at month 12. Adapted with permission from Cohen et al. [33]. BV brain volume, EOS end of study, IFN beta-1a interferon beta-1a, IM intramuscular, SIENA Structural Image Evaluation, using Normalization, of Atrophy; ***p < 0.001 versus switch group
Fig. 3Mean percentage change in BV (measured with SIENA) from baseline (core FREEDOMS and FREEDOMS II) in the continuous and switched groups of patients participating in the LONGTERMS extension study [34]. In the switched groups, patients were switched from placebo to fingolimod at month 24. BV brain volume, SIENA Structural Image Evaluation, using Normalization, of Atrophy
Fig. 4Mean percentage change in BV (measured with SIENA) from baseline in the 2-year FREEDOMS trial, in subgroups of patients with and without gadolinium-enhancing lesions at baseline [35]. BV brain volume, Gd+ gadolinium-enhancing, SIENA Structural Image Evaluation, using Normalization, of Atrophy; *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001 versus placebo
Summary of methodology used for examining correlates of BV and the associated clinical relevance [45]
| Evaluation | BV parameter | Patient/disease parameters | Analysis methodology |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline correlation | Baseline NBV | Baseline parameters: | Pairwise Pearson (or Spearman) correlation: data presented with 95% CIs and |
| Baseline predictors of on-study change | PBVC on-study | Baseline parameters | Pairwise Pearson or Spearman correlation as above |
| Longitudinal (on-study) correlation | PBVC on-study | On-study parameters: | Pairwise Pearson or Spearman correlation: data were presented with 95% CIs and |
AIC Akaike Information Criterion, BV brain volume, CI confidence interval, EDSS Expanded Disability Status Scale, Gd gadolinium, MS multiple sclerosis, MSFC MS Functional Composite, NBV normalized brain volume, PBVC percentage brain volume change
Fig. 5Relationships between individual outcomes and disability progression in the FREEDOMS trial. Reproduced from Sormani et al. [50]. Pies show the PTE of fingolimod on disability progression at 2 years accounted for by its effect on active T2 lesions at 1 year, on relapses at 1 year, on PBVC at 2 years, and on relapses and PBVC combined, both of which were determined to be independent predictors of disability progression. PBVC percentage brain volume change, PTE proportion of treatment effect
Challenges to the adoption of BV assessment in routine clinical practice
| Category | Topic |
|---|---|
| Physiological factors [ | Age |
| Disease-related factors [ | Fluid-level changes attributable to inflammation (edema) |
| Habits and comorbidities [ | Alcohol consumption |
| MRI-related factors [ | Changes in acquisition protocols |
| Logistical factors [ | Reimbursement |
ApoE apolipoprotein E gene, BV brain volume, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, PACS Picture Archiving and Communication System
| Fingolimod reduces the rate of brain volume loss in patients with relapsing multiple sclerosis (RMS), and this effect is independent of disease status and previous treatment history. |
| Brain volume is clinically relevant in RMS because it tracks disease progression, and the rate of brain volume loss predicts long-term disability. |
| Routine measurement of brain volume in RMS could be valuable in informing treatment decisions. |
| Although reliable, longitudinal measurement of brain volume to determine rate of loss is difficult in routine clinical practice; developments in magnetic resonance imaging analysis are beginning to address the challenges faced. |