| Literature DB >> 28608280 |
Abstract
Multiple sclerosis (MS) has a profound impact on health-related quality of life (HRQoL), a comprehensive subjective measure of the patient's health status. Assessment of HRQoL informs on the potential advantages and disadvantages of disease-modifying drugs (DMDs) beyond their effects on observer-based disability and magnetic resonance imaging abnormalities. This article reviews published data from randomized controlled trials and observational studies regarding the effects of currently available DMDs on HRQoL. Data indicate that DMD treatment is associated with prevention of worsening or with improvement of HRQoL, and that, in general, second-line DMDs may have a greater impact on HRQoL than first-line DMDs. In clinical practice, monitoring of HRQoL provides clinicians with unique information regarding disease impact and potential benefits and adverse effects of DMD treatment that may not be obtained otherwise; it might also permit early detection of an unfavorable disease course. It is suggested to assess HRQoL at the time of diagnosis and before starting or switching DMD treatment. Regular HRQoL measurements contribute to a comprehensive clinical evaluation, and may help to elucidate and quantify the patient's contribution to shared decision making regarding DMD treatment. Further studies are needed to better determine the role of HRQoL assessments in daily MS care.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28608280 PMCID: PMC5511298 DOI: 10.1007/s40263-017-0444-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CNS Drugs ISSN: 1172-7047 Impact factor: 5.749
Overview of MS-specific HRQoL questionnaires most commonly used in DMD studies
| Instrument | No. of items | Domains assessed (no. of items) | Time period assessed | Time taken to complete | Primary outcome measures |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MSQoL-54 [ | 54 | Generic (SF-36), energy (1), pain (1), sexual function/satisfaction (5), cognitive function (4), health distress/overall QoL (6), social (1) | Past 4 weeks | ~15 min | No total score; generates two separate composite scores for physical and mental health (0–100); higher scores indicate better QoL |
| MSQLI [ | 138 (80a) | Generic (SF-36), fatigue (21), pain (6), sexual function (4), bladder function (4), bowel function (4), visual function (5), cognitive function (20), emotional function (18), social (18) | Past 4 weeks | 45 min (30 min for short form) | No total score; each of the individual component scales generates a separate score |
| FAMS [ | 59 | Symptoms (7), mobility (7), family/social wellbeing (7), general contentment (7), thinking/fatigue (9), emotional wellbeing (7), additional concerns (15) | Past 7 days | 20–30 min | Provides a total score (0–176) based on 44 items, with higher scores indicating better QoL; the additional-concerns subscale score is not included in the total FAMS score |
| HAQUAMS [ | 38 | Fatigue/thinking (4), mobility of lower limbs (5), mobility of upper limbs (5), social function (6), mood (8), sensory symptoms (2), bladder/bowel control/sexuality (3), main symptoms (1), recent health changes (2), disturbed vision (1) and general rating of handicap (1) | Past weekb | 20 min | Provides a total score (0.00–5.00) based on five main subdomains; higher scores indicate poorer QoL; clinically relevant change defined as >0.22 change in total score from baseline [ |
| LMSQoL [ | 8 | Family/social (2), fatigue/energy (2), psychological status (3), self-confidence/appearance (1) | Past month | ~2 min | Provides a total score (0–32); higher scores indicate better QoL; clinically relevant improvement defined as ≥3-point increase from baseline [ |
| MSIS-29 [ | 29 | Physical impact (20), psychological impact (9) | Past 2 weeks | 5–10 min | A combined score can be generated, or both components can be reported separately (0–100); higher scores indicate greater impact of MS; clinically relevant change defined as ≥7.5 change from baseline for physical impact score [ |
| MusiQoL [ | 31 | Physical (8), symptoms (4), psychological (8), self-esteem (4), relationships/friends (3), relationships/family (4) | Past 4 weeks | ~5 min | Provides a total score (0–100); higher scores indicate better QoL |
DMD disease-modifying drug, FAMS Functional Assessment of Multiple Sclerosis, HAQUAMS Hamburg Quality of Life Questionnaire in Multiple Sclerosis, HRQoL health-related quality of life, LMSQoL Leeds Multiple Sclerosis Quality of Life, MS multiple sclerosis, MSIS-29 Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale-29, MSQLI Multiple Sclerosis Quality of Life Inventory, MSQoL-54 Multiple Sclerosis Quality of Life-54, MusiQoL Multiple Sclerosis International Quality of Life, QoL quality of life, SF-36 Medical Outcomes Study Short-Form (36-item) Health Survey
aShort form
bAll domain items refer to the past week; however, the questionnaire contains two items asking about changes in health status within the past month and the past year
Overview of studies of the effects of DMDs on HRQoL in patients with MS
| DMD | Study, year | No. of patients/MS type | Study design | Time frame | HRQoL scale | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IM IFNβ-1a | Miller et al., 2011 (MSCRG study) [ | 158/RRMS | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 24 months | SIP | Increase in overall, physical and psychological SIP scores at 24 months |
| IM IFNβ-1a | Mokhber et al., 2015 [ | 90/RRMS | Single-blind, randomized | 12 months | MSQoL-54 | Increase in MCS in the IFNβ-1b group at 12 months ( |
| SC pegIFNβ-1a | Newsome et al., 2015 (ADVANCE) [ | 1512/RRMS | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 48 weeks | MSIS-29 | No differences in physical and psychological subscale scores between groups |
| IFNβ-1b | Freeman et al., 2001 [ | 718/SPMS | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 36 months | SIP | Decrease in physical component of SIP vs. placebo at 6 and 12 months and at the final follow-up visit; however, only 10% of patients were assessed at 36 months |
| IM IFNβ-1a | Cohen et al., 2002 [ | 436/SPMS | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 24 months | MSQLI | Increase in 8 of 11 subscales vs. placebo at 24 months |
| IM IFNβ-1a | Arnoldus et al., 2000 [ | 51/RRMS | Observational | 6 months | SF-36 | Increase in role-physical score of SF-36 |
| IM IFNβ-1aa
| Lily et al., 2006 [ | 182/RRMS | Observational | 36 months | LMSQoL | Increase in LMSQoL score after 1 months, which was sustained over 36 months of treatment |
| IM IFNβ-1a | Zivadinov et al., 2003 [ | 27/RRMS | Observational | 12 months | FAMS | No change in FAMS score from baseline at 6 or 12 months |
| IM IFNβ-1a | Vermersch et al., 2002 [ | 121/RRMS | Observational | 12 months | SF-36 | No change in PCS or MCS, with worsening from baseline in physical function score |
| IM IFNβ-1a | Jongen et al., 2010 (FLAIR) [ | 284/RRMS | Observational | 24 months | MSQoL-54 | Increase in PCS and a trend towards increase in MCS at 24 months |
| SC IFNβ-1a | Patti et al., 2011 (COGIMUS) [ | 331/RRMS | Observational | 36 months | MSQoL-54 | PCS and MCS, depression and fatigue remained stable over the 3 years of follow-up |
| SC IFNβ-1a | Patti et al., 2014 [ | 384/RRMS | Observational, untreated control group | 24 months | MSQoL-54 | Increase in PCS and MCS in treated patients at 24 months |
| SC IFNβ-1a | Vickrey et al., 2015 (COMPARE) [ | 196/RRMS | Observational | 24 months | MSQoL-54 | Increase in PCS and MCS at 24 months |
| SC IFNβ-1a | Pakdaman et al., 2016 [ | 400/RRMS | Observational | 12 months | MusiQol and SF-36 | Decrease in overall MusiQol score and SF-36 PCS and MCS at 12 months |
| GA | Wolinsky et al., 2015 (GLACIER) [ | 209/RRMS | Open-label, randomized | 4 months | MSIS-29 | No change in HRQoL, although trend towards decrease in MSIS-29 physical score for GA 40 mg vs. GA 20 mg |
| GA | Jongen et al., 2010; Jongen et al., 2014 (FOCUS) [ | 197/RRMS | Observational | 24 months | LMSQoL | Increase in LMSQOL score in treatment-naive patients at 6 and 12 months, 43% showing improvement (≥3-point increase) at 12 months |
| GA | Ziemssen et al. 2014 (COPTIMIZE) [ | 218/RRMS | Observational | 24 months | FAMS | Increase in HRQoL and positive changes in fatigue, depression and cognition at 24 months in this population of patients switching to GA from another DMD |
| GA | Ziemssen et al., 2016 (QualiCOP) [ | 754/RRMS | Observational | 24 months | FAMS | HRQoL remained stable over the 24 months of follow-up in the overall population and in both treatment-naive and pretreated patients |
| Natalizumab | Rudick et al., 2007 (AFFIRM) [ | 942/RRMS | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 104 weeks | SF-36 | PCS and MCS scores were higher in natalizumab-treated patients at 24, 52 and 104 weeks |
| Natalizumab | Stephenson et al., 2012 [ | 333/RRMS | Observational | 12 months | SF-12 and MSIS-29 | Increase in general and disease-specific HRQoL after 3 infusions and sustained after 12 infusions |
| Natalizumab | Svennigsson et al., 2013 (TYNERGY) [ | 195/RRMS | Observational | 12 months | SF-12 | Increase in SF-36 PCS and MCS at 12 months |
| Fingolimod | Montalban et al., 2011 [ | 281/RRMS | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 6 months | HAQUAMS | HAQUAMS total score stabilized with fingolimod 1.25 mg vs. placebo |
| Fingolimod | Calabresi et al., 2014 (FREEDOMS II) [ | 1083/RRMS | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 24 months | PRIMUS and EQ-5D | No differences in PRIMUS scores, EQ-5D utility score or EQ-VAS vs. placebo |
| Fingolimod | Calkwood et al., 2014 (EPOC) [ | 1053/RRMS | Open-label, randomized study vs. iDMDs | 6 months | SF-36 | Increase in SF-36 PCS and MCS scores with fingolimod 0.5 mg vs. remaining on SC IFNβ-1a (PCS only) or IFNβ-1b |
| Fingolimod | Hersh et al., 2015 [ | 317/MSb | Observational | 12 months | EQ-5D | QoL remained stable over the 12 months of follow-up |
| DMF | Kappos et al., 2014 (DEFINE) [ | 1237/RRMS | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 24 months | SF-36 | PCS and MCS scores increased in patients treated with DMF and decreased in those who received placebo |
| DMF | Kita et al., 2014 (CONFIRM) [ | 1417/RRMS | Double-blind, placebo-controlled and active comparator (GA) | 24 months | SF-36 | PCS and MCS scores increased in patients treated with DMF and decreased in those who received placebo |
| DMF | Kita et al., 2014 (DEFINE/CONFIRM integrated analysis) [ | 2301/RRMS | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 24 months | SF-36 | PCS and MCS increased in patients treated with DMF and decreased in those who received placebo |
| DMF | Lee et al., 2017 [ | 31/RRMS | Observational survey study | >12 months | HAQUAMS and EQ-5D | DMF was associated with better HAQUAMS and EQ-5D scores than IFNβ and GA |
| Teriflunomide | Confavreux et al., 2012 [ | 147/RRMS | Observational follow-up after phase II RCT | 8.5 years | MSQoL-54 | Over 7.2-y (median) follow-up stable PCS and increase in MCS (effect size 0.35) |
| Alemtuzumab | Arroyo Gonzalez et al., 2016 (CARE-MS I) [ | 563/RRMS | Double-blind, active comparator (SC IFNβ-1a) | 24 months | FAMS and SF-36 | Greater increase in all measures of HRQoL in alemtuzumab-treated patients over the 24 months of follow-up |
| Alemtuzumab | Arroyo Gonzalez et al., 2016 (CARE-MS II) [ | 628/RRMS | Double-blind, active comparator (SC IFNβ-1a) | 24 months | FAMS and SF-36 | Greater increase in all measures of HRQoL in alemtuzumab-treated patients over the 24 months of follow-up |
| Daclizumab | Gold et al., 2013; Phillips et al., 2016 (SELECT) [ | 621/RRMS | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 12 months | SF-12 and MSIS-29 | At 12 months patients treated with daclizumab 150 mg had higher HRQoL compared with placebo and less frequent worsening of physical MSIS-29 (20 vs. 28%) |
| Daclizumab | Liu et al. 2017 (DECIDE) [ | 1841/RRMS | Double-blind, active comparator (IM IFNβ-1a) | 24 months | MSIS-29 and EQ-5D | At 24 months patients treated with daclizumab had higher HRQoL than those treated with IM IFNβ-1a |
| Ocrelizumab | Hauser et al., 2017 (OPERA I) [ | 821/RRMS | Double-blind, active comparator (SC IFNβ-1a) | 24 months | SF-36 | At 24 months no change in SF-36 PCS from baseline in either group |
| Ocrelizumab | Hauser et al., 2017 (OPERA II) [ | 835/RRMS | Double-blind, active comparator (SC IFNβ-1a) | 24 months | SF-36 | At 24 months the adjusted mean change in SF-36 PCS from baseline was higher in the ocrelizumab group than in the SC IFNβ-1a group |
| Ocrelizumab | Montalban et al., 2017 (ORATORIO) [ | 732/PPMS | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | >120 weeks | SF-36 | No change in SF-36 PCS from baseline in either group |
Data are presented for each DMD in order of market authorization, except for the IFNβ products, which are grouped together. RCTs on efficacy are presented first, followed by randomized and observational studies on effectiveness of DMD treatment. All presented changes are statistically significant according to the source documents, and indicated as ‘increase’ or ‘decrease’. Clinically relevant changes according to the source documents are indicated as ‘improvement’ or ‘worsening’
DMD disease-modifying drug, DMF dimethyl fumarate, EQ-5D EuroQol 5-Dimensions questionnaire, FAMS Functional Assessment of Multiple Sclerosis, GA glatiramer acetate, HAQUAMS Hamburg Quality of Life Questionnaire in Multiple Sclerosis, HRQoL health-related quality of life, iDMD injectable disease-modifying drug (GA, IM IFNβ-1a, SC IFNβ-1a or IFNβ-1b), IFN interferon, IM intramuscular, LMSQoL Leeds Multiple Sclerosis Quality of Life, MCS mental composite score, MS multiple sclerosis, MSCRG Multiple Sclerosis Collaborative Research Group, MSQLI Multiple Sclerosis Quality of Life Inventory, MSQoL-54 Multiple Sclerosis Quality of Life-54, MSIS-29 Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale-29, MusiQoL Multiple Sclerosis International Quality of Life, PCS physical composite score, peg pegylated, PPMS primary progressive multiple sclerosis, PRIMUS Patient Reported Indices in Multiple Sclerosis, QoL quality of life, RCT randomized controlled trial, RRMS relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis, SC subcutaneous, SF-12 Medical Outcomes Study Short-Form (12-item) Health Survey, SF-36 Medical Outcomes Study Short-Form (36-item) Health Survey, SIP Sickness Impact Profile, SPMS secondary progressive multiple sclerosis
aIM IFNβ-1a (n = 18), SC IFNβ-1a (n = 50), IFNβ-1b (n = 99), GA (n = 8)
bIncluding 81% with RRMS, 16% with SPMS and 2% with PPMS
Overview of efficacy of DMDs and effectiveness of DMD treatments regarding HRQoL in RRMS patients (unless otherwise denoted)
| IFNβ-1b | IM | SC | Peg | GA | Natalizumb | Fingolimod | DMF | Teriflunomide | Alemtuzumab | Daclizumab | Ocrelizumab | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Efficacy (placebo-RCT) | + [ | + [ | − [ | + [ | − [ | + [ | + [ | + [ | ||||
| Relative efficacy (AC-RCT) | + [ | + [ | ||||||||||
| Effectiveness (vs. baseline) | + [ | + [ | + [ | + [ | + [ | = [ | − [ | |||||
| Relative effectiveness | + [ | = [ | + [ | + [ |
AC active comparator, DMD disease-modifying drug, DMF dimethyl fumarate, GA glatiramer acetate, HRQoL health-related quality of life, IFN interferon, IM intramuscular, MCS mental composite score, MusiQoL Multiple Sclerosis International Quality of Life, peg pegylated, PCS physical composite score, PPMS primary progressive multiple sclerosis, RCT randomized controlled trial, RRMS relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis, SC subcutaneous, SF-36 Medical Outcomes Study Short-Form (36-item) Health Survey, SIP sickness impact profile, SPMS secondary progressive multiple sclerosis, + indicates statistically significant increase in HRQoL, − indicates statistically significant decrease in HRQoL, = indicates no change in HRQoL
aSPMS
bPhysical score in patients with SIP score ≥10
cOPERA II
dPPMS
eOPERA I
fVs. SC IFNβ-1a
gCARE-MS I
hCARE-MS II
iVs. IM IFNβ-1a
jOverall MusiQoL index score effect size −0.16, SF-36 PCS −0.28 and MCS −0.53
kIn treatment-naive subgroup
l7.2 years extension of phase II trial
mVs. IM IFNβ-1a and SC IFNβ-1a
nGA 20 mg daily vs. GA 40 mg three times weekly
oVs. IM IFNβ-1a, SC IFNβ-1a, IFNβ-1b or GA
pVs. IFNβ or GA
| Health-related quality of life (HRQoL) is a patient-reported outcome that comprises a comprehensive subjective measure of the patient’s health status. |
| HRQoL provides information on beneficial and adverse treatment effects from the patient’s perspective, complementing observer-based outcome measures. |
| Assessment of HRQoL contributes to an integrated evaluation of the effects of treatment with disease-modifying drugs (DMDs), predicts disability progression, and helps to formalize patients’ input in shared decision making. |
| Data from randomized controlled trials and observational studies indicate that in relapsing-remitting MS, second-line DMDs are generally more strongly associated with prevention of worsening or with improvement of HRQoL than first-line DMDs. |