| Literature DB >> 30105527 |
Abstract
Cladribine is a deoxyadenosine analogue prodrug that preferentially depletes lymphocytes, key cells underlying multiple sclerosis (MS) pathogenesis. Cladribine tablets (Mavenclad®) represent the first short-course oral disease-modifying drug (DMD) for use in MS. The tablets, administered in two short courses 1 year apart, are indicated for the treatment of adults with highly active relapsing MS on the basis of data from pivotal clinical trials, including the phase 3 study CLARITY and its extension. A cumulative cladribine tablets dose of 3.5 mg/kg administered in this fashion in CLARITY reduced clinical relapse, disability progression and MRI-assessed disease activity and also improved some aspects of health-related quality of life (HR-QOL) versus placebo over 96 weeks in adults with relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS). Moreover, in the 96-week extension (plus 24 weeks' supplemental follow-up), no additional clinical benefit was gained from continuing versus discontinuing cladribine tablets after the first two annual courses of therapy, although MRI activity was more notable in a subset of cladribine tablet recipients who discontinued the drug. In post hoc analyses of CLARITY and/or a phase 2b trial, benefits of cladribine tablets were seen in patients with high disease activity (HDA) relapsing MS that were sometimes greater than in patients without HDA. Cladribine tablets have an acceptable tolerability profile and do not appear to be associated with an increased risk of overall infection or with an increased risk of malignancy (vs. matched reference populations). Active comparisons and longer-term follow-up would be beneficial, although current data indicate that for adults with highly active relapsing MS, cladribine tablets are an effective treatment option with the convenience of low-burden, short-course, oral administration.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30105527 PMCID: PMC6353806 DOI: 10.1007/s40263-018-0562-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CNS Drugs ISSN: 1172-7047 Impact factor: 5.749
Efficacy of cladribine tablets in adults with RRMS in the 96-week phase 3 trial CLARITY and its 96-week extension plus 24 weeks of supplemental follow-up
| Endpoints | CLARITY [ | CLARITY extension (includes supplemental
follow-up)a [ | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cladribine ( | Placebo ( | Cladribine → cladribine ( | Cladribine → placebo ( | Placebo → cladribine ( | |
| Clinical outcomes | |||||
| Annualized relapse rate | 0.14**b | 0.33b | 0.10 | 0.15 | 0.10δδ |
| Pts (%) without relapse | 79.7** | 60.9 | 81.2 | 75.6 | 79.6δδ |
| Pts (%) without 3-mo sustained cDP | 85.7* | 79.4 | 77.4 | 72.4 | 75.8 |
| MRI-assessed lesions (values are means) | |||||
| Gd+ T1 lesions | 0.12** | 0.91 | 0.03†δ | 0.28δ | 0.07δ |
| Active T2 lesions | 0.38** | 1.43 | 0.88 | 1.42 | 1.07 |
| Combined unique lesionsc | 0.43** | 1.72 | |||
| T1 hypointense lesions | 6.7** | 6.9 | NRd | NRd | NRd |
Cladribine (as one or two 10 mg tablets) or placebo was administered daily for 4–5 days in weeks 1 and 5 (course 1; cumulative dose 1.75 mg/kg) and weeks 48 and 52 (course 2; cumulative dose 1.75 mg/kg) of both CLARITY and its extension; the overall cumulative cladribine dose in each of these 96-week studies was 3.5 mg/kg. During supplemental follow-up, use of disease-modifying drugs (other than cladribine) was permitted if necessary
cDP confirmed disability progression, Gd+ gadolinium enhancing, mo month, NR not reported, pts patients, → switched to
*p < 0.05, **p < 0.001 vs. PL; †p < 0.001 vs. cladribine → placebo; δp < 0.001, δδp < 0.0001 vs. at end of CLARITY
aStatistical comparisons included cladribine → placebo vs. cladribine → cladribine or placebo → cladribine
bPrimary endpoint
cDefined as new Gd+ T1 lesions and/or new non-enhancing or enlarging T2 lesions (without double counting)
dBetween-group differences were reported as being not significant; endpoint was not prespecified
Key disease-modifying agents currently available for MS in the EU
|
|
|
|---|---|
| Cladribine | Highly active relapsing MS [2 short courses 1 year apart] |
| Fingolimod | Highly active relapsing-remitting MS [daily] |
| Teriflunomide | Relapsing-remitting MS [daily] |
| Dimethyl fumarate | Relapsing-remitting MS [twice daily] |
IM intramuscular, IV(s) intravenous infusion(s), MS multiple sclerosis
| Convenient short-course oral administration regimen |
| Reduce clinical relapse, disability progression and MRI-assessed disease activity and improve some aspects of HR-QOL in adults with RRMS |
| Provide clinical and MRI-assessed benefit in patients with high disease activity relapsing MS |
| Benefits continue well beyond the dosing period |
| Acceptable tolerability; lymphopenia is the most common issue |
| Duplicates removed | 104 |
| Excluded during initial screening (e.g. press releases; news reports; not relevant drug/indication; preclinical study; reviews; case reports; not randomized trial) | 316 |
| Excluded during writing (e.g. reviews; duplicate data; small patient number; nonrandomized/phase I/II trials) | 50 |
|
| 18 |
|
| 45 |
| Search Strategy: EMBASE, MEDLINE and PubMed from 2014 to present. Previous Adis Drug Evaluation published in 2014 was hand-searched for relevant data. Clinical trial registries/databases and websites were also searched for relevant data. Key words were Cladribine, Mavenclad, 2-Chlorodeoxyadenosine, 2-CdA, multiple sclerosis, RRMS, relapsing MS, remitting MS. Records were limited to those in English language. Searches last updated 27 July 2018 | |