Literature DB >> 29141791

Comparing the efficacy of disease-modifying therapies in multiple sclerosis.

Dimos D Mitsikostas1, Douglas S Goodin2.   

Abstract

Establishing the relative efficacy and safety of the different disease modifying therapies (DMTs) in multiple sclerosis (MS) is critical to the choice of agent that clinicians recommend for individual MS patients. The best evidence for the relative efficacy of the different DMTs comes from head-to-head randomized clinical trials (RCTs). Understanding that outcome-measures with the best established validity are the relapse rate and the actual (not the "confirmed") change in the extended disability status scale (EDSS), we conclude from these head-to-head RCTs that interferon-beta (IFNβ) given subcutaneously multiple times per week (either IFNβ-1b or IFNβ-1a) and glatiramer acetate (GA) are about equivalent in terms of efficacy and that both of these agents, as well as many of the other DMTs, are superior to weekly intramuscular IFNβ-1a. Nevertheless, as ever-newer agents with novel mechanisms of action are brought to the marketplace, such direct head-to-head trials are becoming increasingly impractical, raising the need for alternative methods to draw reasonable inferences from less rigorous clinical data. One possible approach to judging comparative efficacy is to make comparisons across clinical trials using the complimentary analytic methods of calculating both the relative risk/rate and the absolute risk/rate reductions. A consideration and application of this analytic approach is undertaken here. It is only with an understanding of the safety and efficacy of the different agents that we can select, together with the patient, the right agent for the right person. Published by Elsevier B.V.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Absolute risk reduction; Comparison; Cross-trial; Efficacy; Evidence-based; Multiple sclerosis; Number needed to treat; Relative risk; Safety; Therapy

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29141791     DOI: 10.1016/j.msard.2017.08.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mult Scler Relat Disord        ISSN: 2211-0348            Impact factor:   4.339


  6 in total

1.  Oral Disease-Modifying Treatments for Relapsing Multiple Sclerosis: A Likelihood to Achieve No Evidence of Disease Activity or Harm Analysis.

Authors:  Dimitrios Papadopoulos; Dimos-Dimitrios D Mitsikostas
Journal:  CNS Drugs       Date:  2018-11       Impact factor: 5.749

2.  Differences in Age-related Retinal and Cortical Atrophy Rates in Multiple Sclerosis.

Authors:  Christian Cordano; Bardia Nourbakhsh; Hao H Yiu; Nico Papinutto; Eduardo Caverzasi; Ahmed Abdelhak; Frederike C Oertel; Alexandra Beaudry-Richard; Adam Santaniello; Simone Sacco; Daniel J Bennett; Apraham Gomez; Christina J Sigurdson; Stephen L Hauser; Roberta Magliozzi; Bruce A C Cree; Roland G Henry; Ari J Green
Journal:  Neurology       Date:  2022-08-29       Impact factor: 11.800

3.  EMR-integrated minimal core dataset for routine health care and multiple research settings: A case study for neuroinflammatory demyelinating diseases.

Authors:  Sophia von Martial; Tobias J Brix; Luisa Klotz; Philipp Neuhaus; Klaus Berger; Clemens Warnke; Sven G Meuth; Heinz Wiendl; Martin Dugas
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-10-15       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  PECAM-1 Stabilizes Blood-Brain Barrier Integrity and Favors Paracellular T-Cell Diapedesis Across the Blood-Brain Barrier During Neuroinflammation.

Authors:  Isabella Wimmer; Silvia Tietz; Hideaki Nishihara; Urban Deutsch; Federica Sallusto; Fabien Gosselet; Ruth Lyck; William A Muller; Hans Lassmann; Britta Engelhardt
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2019-04-05       Impact factor: 7.561

5.  Persistence, adherence, healthcare resource utilisation and costs for interferon Beta in multiple sclerosis: a population-based study in the Campania region (southern Italy).

Authors:  Marcello Moccia; Ilaria Loperto; Roberta Lanzillo; Antonio Capacchione; Antonio Carotenuto; Maria Triassi; Vincenzo Brescia Morra; Raffaele Palladino
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2020-08-26       Impact factor: 2.655

6.  European Headache Federation recommendations for placebo and nocebo terminology.

Authors:  Dimos D Mitsikostas; Charlotte Blease; Elisa Carlino; Luana Colloca; Andrew L Geers; Jeremy Howick; Andrea W M Evers; Magne A Flaten; John M Kelley; Irving Kirsch; Regine Klinger; Antoinette MaassenVanDenBrink; Daniel E Moerman; Petros P Sfikakis; Lene Vase; Tor D Wager; Fabrizio Benedetti
Journal:  J Headache Pain       Date:  2020-09-25       Impact factor: 7.277

  6 in total

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