| Literature DB >> 31677060 |
Brian Barry1, April A Erwin2, Jessica Stevens1, Carlo Tornatore3.
Abstract
Because the treatment of multiple sclerosis (MS) may span decades, the need often arises to make changes to the treatment plan in order to accommodate changing circumstances. Switching drugs, or the discontinuation of immunomodulatory agents altogether, may leave patients vulnerable to relapse or disease progression. In some cases, severe MS disease activity is noted clinically and on MRI after treatment withdrawal. When this disease activity is disproportionate to the pattern observed prior to treatment initiation, patients are said to have experienced rebound. Of the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved agents to treat MS, the drugs most commonly implicated in rebound are natalizumab and fingolimod. In this review based on the reported cases and data from clinical trials, we characterize disease rebound after fingolimod cessation. We also outline fingolimod rebound management considerations, summarizing what evidence is available to help clinicians mitigate the risk of rebound, switch therapies, and treat rebound events when they occur. The commonly encountered situation of fingolimod discontinuation prior to pregnancy is also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Disease-modifying therapy; Fingolimod; Multiple sclerosis; Rebound; Relapse
Year: 2019 PMID: 31677060 PMCID: PMC6858914 DOI: 10.1007/s40120-019-00160-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurol Ther ISSN: 2193-6536
Severe relapse rates after fingolimod discontinuation
| Series | Definition of severe relapse | Duration of follow-up | Time to relapse after discontinuation | Severe relapse rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hatcher et al. [ | Severe symptoms with multiple new or enhancing MRI lesions | 1–4 months | Mean 7.6 weeks | 10.9% (5/46) |
| Frau et al. [ | Increase in EDSS ≥ 2 OR ≥ 2 relapses in 6-month study period | 6 months | Not reported | 10% (10/100)a |
| Uygunoglu et al. [ | (1) More than 5 Gd-enhancing lesions or single tumefactive lesion AND (2) clinical and MRI activity worse than pre-fingolimod treatment course AND (3) increased of at least 1 point on EDSS | 6 months | Median 3 months | 25.8% (8/31)b |
| Vermersch et al. [ | Any “severe” relapse as assessed by investigator, any relapse with hospitalization, incomplete recovery, or unusual EDSS increase from baselinec | Up to 7 monthsd | Mean 15 weekse | 4.0% (8/201 FREEDOMS), 3.5% (7/201, FREEDOMS II) |
EDSS Expanded Disability Status Scale, Gd gadolinium
a5/10 (5% of total) of these severe relapse cases met investigators’ criteria for rebound, defined as a severe reactivation with a severity never before experienced by the patient prior to fingolimod
bOnly patients adherent to standard treatment protocol for fingolimod for at least 6 months, and who were available for follow-up for at least 6 months, and did not receive any subsequent DMT for 3 months were included. A total of 303 patients discontinued fingolimod in this cohort
cEDSS criteria defined as increase ≥ 3 if prior EDSS 0, ≥ 2 if prior EDSS 1–5, ≥ 1 for prior EDSS greater than 5
d37.8% of subjects available at 90 days following discontinuation, 17.2% of subjects available at 210 days
eCalculated from pooled data of fingolimod 0.5 mg dose group from FREEDOMS and FREEDOMS II available in supplementary materials to Vermersch et al. [46]
Fig. 1Proposed treatment algorithm for fingolimod rebound
| Multiple sclerosis is a complex inflammatory disease of the central nervous system (CNS). |
| Fingolimod’s mechanism of action includes not only diminished trafficking of inflammatory cells through the CNS but also altering the phenotypic profile of the trafficking cells to a less inflammatory state. |
| Withdrawal of fingolimod can result in a recurrence of MS-related disease activity which has been characterized as “rebound”. |
| Treatment or prevention of rebound includes the use of corticosteroids, plasma exchange, and B cell depleting therapies. |