| Literature DB >> 32530366 |
Georgina Arrambide1, Ellen Iacobaeus2, Maria Pia Amato3, Tobias Derfuss4, Sandra Vukusic5, Bernhard Hemmer6, Lou Brundin2, Mar Tintore1.
Abstract
The natural history of multiple sclerosis (MS) is highly heterogeneous. A subgroup of patients has what might be termed aggressive MS. These patients may have frequent, severe relapses with incomplete recovery and are at risk of developing greater and permanent disability at the earlier stages of the disease. Their therapeutic window of opportunity may be narrow, and while it is generally considered that they will benefit from starting early with a highly efficacious treatment, a unified definition of aggressive MS does not exist and data on its treatment are largely lacking. Based on discussions at an international focused workshop sponsored by the European Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ECTRIMS), we review our current knowledge about treatment of individuals with aggressive MS. We analyse the available evidence, identify gaps in knowledge and suggest future research needed to fill those gaps. A companion paper details the difficulties in developing a consensus about what defines aggressive MS.Entities:
Keywords: Aggressive; disability; highly active; multiple sclerosis; relapsing–remitting; treatment response
Year: 2020 PMID: 32530366 PMCID: PMC7412878 DOI: 10.1177/1352458520924595
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mult Scler ISSN: 1352-4585 Impact factor: 6.312
Treatment of severe relapse: types of patients included and definitions of relapse severity.
| Author | Treatment | Type of inflammatory demyelinating diseases studied | Definition of severe relapse |
|---|---|---|---|
| Weinshenker et al.[ | PLEX | CDMS, acute transverse myelitis, acute disseminated encephalomyelitis, Marburg variant of MS, NMO, recurrent myelitis and focal cerebral demyelination | One or more of the following: coma, aphasia, acute severe cognitive dysfunction, hemiplegia, paraplegia or quadriplegia |
| Keegan et al.[ | PLEX | MS, NMO, Marburg variant of MS and ADEM | Severe attack not defined: retrospective analysis of patients receiving PLEX for CNS demyelinating diseases between 1984 and 2000[ |
| Schilling et al.[ | PLEX | CIS, RRMS and NMO | Corticosteroid-refractory relapses |
| Magana et al.[ | PLEX | Probable or definite MS (RR, SP, PP), NMOSD (NMO, LETM, recurrent ON), monophasic ON, ADEM, short TM and CIS | Corticosteroid-refractory CNS IDD |
| Llufriu et al.[ | PLEX | MS, CIS, Marburg disease, ADEM, NMO, idiopathic ON and idiopathic TM | Non-responders to corticosteroid treatment (at least one course of IV methylprednisolone 1 g/day for 3–5 days) |
| Meca-Lallana et al.[ | PLEX | RRMS, CIS, recurrent myelitis, TM, LETM, ADEM, Baló’s concentric sclerosis and NMO | Corticosteroid-refractory CNS IDD |
| Mauch et al.[ | IA | RRMS, SPMS and NMO | Corticosteroid-unresponsive relapses |
| Schimrigk et al.[ | IA | RRMS and pMS with relapses | Corticosteroid-refractory MS relapse |
| Visser et al.[ | IVIg | CDMS | A relapse with ⩾ 1-point increase in the EDSS |
PLEX: plasma exchange; CDMS: clinically definite multiple sclerosis; MS: multiple sclerosis; NMO: neuromyelitis optica; ADEM: acute disseminated encephalomyelitis; CNS: central nervous system; CIS: clinically isolated syndrome; RRMS: relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis; RR: relapsing–remitting; SP: secondary progressive; PP: primary progressive; NMOSD: neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders; LETM: longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis; ON: optic neuritis; TM: transverse myelitis; IDD: inflammatory demyelinating diseases; IA: immunoadsorption; SPMS: secondary progressive multiple sclerosis; pMS: progressive MS; IVIg: intravenous immunoglobulin; EDSS: Expanded Disability Status Scale.
Of the 59 patients, 25 were included in the 1999 PLEX clinical trial.[13]
Studies investigating the use of oral DMTs for the treatment of aggressive MS.[a].
| Author | Study and DMT | Definition(s) of aggressive MS | Disease activity outcomes | Disability outcomes | NEDA as outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bar-Or J et al.[ | DEFINE subgroup analysis, DMF[ | a. ⩾ 2 relapses in the 12 months prior to study entry | ARR at 2 years compared to placebo, RR (95% CI) | CDP at 2 years, HR (95% CI)[ | NA |
| Hutchinson et al.[ | CONFIRM subgroup analysis, DMF[ | a. ⩾ 2 relapses in the 12 months prior to study entry | ARR at 2 years compared to placebo, RR (95% CI) | Not analysed (non-significant results in the ITT population of the CONFIRM trial) | NA |
| Devonshire et al.[ | FREEDOMS subgroup analysis, fingolimod[ | Group E: treatment-naïve patients with rapidly evolving severe RRMS (⩾ 2 relapses within the year prior to study inclusion and ⩾ 1 Gd+ lesions at baseline) | ARR at 2 years compared to placebo, RR (95% CI): | CDP at 2 years, HR (95% CI)[ | NA |
| Derfuss et al.[ | FREEDOMS and FREEDOMS II post hoc analysis, fingolimod | Disease activity despite previous DMTs: | ARR at 2 years compared to placebo, RR (95% CI): | CDP at 6 months, HR (95% CI): | NA |
| Derfuss et al.[ | FREEDOMS, FREEDOMS II and TRANSFORMS pooled data, fingolimod[ | a. ⩾ 3 relapses in the 2 years prior to study inclusion | ARR at 2 years compared to placebo: relative reduction of 46%–59% across the three subgroups ( | NA | NA |
| Prosperini et al.[ | Propensity score-matched cohort study comparing natalizumab, fingolimod and self-injectables | a. Non-responders to first-line DMTs: either ⩾ 2 relapses or 1 relapse associated with a residual EDSS score ⩾ 2.0 in the previous year while on DMTs | NA | NA | NEDA-3[ |
| Huisman et al.[ | Systematic review and meta-analysis, efficacy of fingolimod relative to DMF in a. and natalizumab in b. | a. HA RRMS: unchanged or increased relapse rate or ongoing severe relapses compared with the previous year despite treatment with ⩾ 1 DMT | ARR at 2 years, HR (CrIs)g,h: | 3-month CDP at 2 years, HR (CrIs)[ | — |
| Giovannoni et al.[ | CLARITY post hoc and subgroup analysis, cladribine | ⩾ 2 relapses in the previous year and either ⩾ 1 T1 Gd+ lesions or ⩾ 9 T2 lesions on baseline MRI | NA | NA | NEDA[ |
| Giovannoni et al.[ | CLARITY post hoc and subgroup analysis, cladribine 3.5 mg/kg | Two overlapping, categorical subgroups: | ARR at 2 years compared to placebo, RR (95% CI): | 6-month CDP, HR (95% CI): | Proportion of patients achieving NEDA[ |
DMT: disease-modifying treatment; MS: multiple sclerosis; NEDA: no evidence of disease activity; DMF: dimethyl fumarate; Gd+: gadolinium-enhancing; ARR: annualized relapse rate; RR: risk ratios; 95% CI: 95% confidence intervals; CDP: confirmed disability progression; HR: hazard ratios; NA: not assessed; ITT: intention-to-treat analysis; RRMS: relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis; EDSS: Expanded Disability Status Scale; IFN: interferon; IM: intramuscular; HA: highly active; MRI: magnetic resonance imaging; RES: rapidly evolving severe; SUCRA: surface under the cumulative ranking curve; OR: odds ratio; HRA: high relapse activity; DAT: disease activity on treatment.
p-values shown when available.
Results for DMF BID. Results for DMF TID were similar (data not shown).
⩾ 1.0-point increase in the EDSS in patients with a baseline score ⩾ 1.0, or a ⩾ 1.5-point increase in patients with a baseline score of 0, sustained for 12 weeks.
Results for fingolimod 0.5 mg. Results for fingolimod 1.25 mg were similar (data not shown).
Time to disability progression confirmed after 3 months: increase in 1-point on the EDSS from baseline, or 0.5 points if the EDSS score was ⩾ 5.5.
Absence of clinical relapses, disability worsening and radiological activity.
Credible intervals (CrIs) used instead of CIs. CrIs assume the true value of the point estimate is within 95% of the range, whereas CIs assume that, if the analysis was replicated 100 times, 95% of the CIs would include the true value of the parameter.
HRs < 1 favour fingolimod and > 1 favour the comparator.
6-month confirmed disability progression also available for subgroup b. comparison, with similar results to 3-month CDP.
No relapses, no 3-month sustained change in EDSS and no T1 Gd+ or active T2 lesions. Time to NEDA not specified.
Similar results at 24 and 48 weeks and with cladribine 5.25 mg/kg.
Studies investigating the use of monoclonal antibodies for the treatment of aggressive MS.
| Author | Study and DMT | Definition(s) of aggressive MS | Disease activity outcomes | Disability outcomes | NEDA as outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kappos et al.[ | AFFIRM post hoc analysis, natalizumab | ⩾ 2 relapses in the year before study entry and ⩾ 1 Gd+ lesion at study entry | ARR at 3 months, compared to placebo, RR (95% CI): | NA | NA |
| Havrdova et al.[ | AFFIRM post hoc analysis, natalizumab | ⩾ 2 relapses in the year before study entry and ⩾ 1 Gd+ lesion at study entry | NA | NA | Absence of disease activity[ |
| Hutchinson et al.[ | AFFIRM and SENTINEL post hoc analysis, natalizumab | 1. ⩾ 3 relapses in the year prior to screening | ARR at 2 years, RR (95% CI): | 12-week CDP at 2 years, HR (95% CI): | NA |
| Hutchinson et al.[ | AFFIRM subanalysis, natalizumab | ⩾ 2 relapses in the year prior to study entry and ⩾ 1 Gd+ lesion at study entry | ARR over 2 years, % reduction compared to placebo, RR (95% CI): | 12-week CDP at 2 years[ | NA |
| Hutchinson et al.[ | SENTINEL subanalysis, natalizumab | ⩾ 2 relapses in the year prior to study entry and ⩾ 1 Gd+ lesion at study entry | ARR over 2 years, % reduction natalizumab + IFN-β1a versus IFN-β1a alone: | 12-week CDP at 2 years[ | NA |
| Lorscheider et al.[ | Registry of the Swiss Federation for Common Tasks of Health Insurances, patients on natalizumab and fingolimod | ⩾ 1 relapse in the year before switching from IFN-β or glatiramer acetate to natalizumab or fingolimod[ | Natalizumab compared to fingolimod over a 2-year period, HR (95% CI) for a. and RR (95% CI) for b.:[ | Compared to fingolimod, HR (95% CI):[ | NA |
| Curti et al.[ | Hospital-based multi-centric study with prospectively collected data, natalizumab and fingolimod | a. Unchanged or increased relapse rate or ongoing severe relapses compared with the previous year despite treatment with ⩾ 1 DMT, or b. Patients with a rapidly evolving severe course: ⩾ 2 disabling relapses in the past year and ⩾ 1 Gd+ lesions on MRI or significant increase in T2 lesion load compared with a previous MRI | Natalizumab compared to fingolimod over a 2-year period: | Compared to fingolimod over a 2-year period, (%) for CDP, OR (95% CI) for CDR: | Compared to fingolimod, NEDA after 2 years of treatment, (%): |
| Cobo-Calvo et al.[ | Hospital-based study with prospectively collected data, natalizumab | ⩾ 2 relapses and disability progression ⩾ 1 point during the year before natalizumab initiation sustained for at least 6 months | Freedom from clinical activity[ | Freedom from radiological activity[ | Freedom of disease activity[ |
| Coles et al.[ | CAMMS223 post hoc and subset analysis, alemtuzumab | > 2 relapses in the year prior to inclusion | ARR, at 36 months, compared to SC IFN-β1aj,k, RR (95% CI): | 6-month CDPl, m,n, at 36 months, alemtuzumab compared to SC IFN-β1a, HR (95% CI): | Clinical disease activity (relapses and CDP) at 36 months, compared to SC IFN-β1a, HR (95% CI): |
| Le Page et al.[ | Study (type) | RRMS before treatment: mean (range) ARR of 2.9 (1–5), and EDSS worsened by 2.2 (0–5) points, and a mean number of Gd+ lesions > 15 (2 to > 20) | Disease activity: | EDSS improvement after first alemtuzumab cycle: | Disease-free at last follow-up after one cycle: 4 |
| Turner et al.[ | OPERA I and OPERA II subgroup analysis, ocrelizumab | ⩾ 1 relapse in the year prior to randomization and ⩾ 9 T2 lesions or ⩾ 1 T1 Gd+ lesion at baseline | ARR over 2 years, % reduction compared to SC IFN-β1a: | 12-week CDP at 2 years, % reduction compared to SC IFN-β1a: | NA |
| Durozard et al.[ | French retrospective multicentre study, off-label rituximab | Refractory RRMS: ⩾ 1 T1 Gd + lesion and/or new T2 lesions despite treatment with fingolimod, natalizumab, mitoxantrone, cyclophosphamide or alemtuzumab[ | ARR, rituximab compared to previous immunosuppressive treatment, median (range): | EDSS, rituximab compared to previous immunosuppressive treatment, median (range): | NEDA at the last clinical evaluation while on rituximab, |
MS: multiple sclerosis; DMT: disease-modifying treatment; NEDA: no evidence of disease activity; Gd+: gadolinium-enhancing; ARR: annualized relapse rate; RR: rate ratio; 95% CI: 95% confidence interval; IFN: interferon; CDP: confirmed disability progression; HR: hazard ratio; MRI: magnetic resonance imaging; OR: odds ratio; SD: standard deviation; CDR: confirmed disability regression; SRD: sustained reduction in disability; RRMS: relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis; SPMS: secondary progressive multiple sclerosis; EDSS: Expanded Disability Status Scale.
No relapses, no progression of disability (sustained for 12 weeks), no Gd+ lesions and no new or enlarging T2-hyperintense lesions.
Similar results for 24-week CDP at 2 years.
Mean (SD) number of relapses in the year prior to inclusion after matching: 2.8 (2.0) for natalizumab and 2.7 (3.1) for fingolimod.
After propensity score matching.
Increase in ⩾ 1.5 points from an EDSS score of 0, ⩾ 1.0 point from an EDSS score of 1.0–5.5, or ⩾ 0.5 point from an EDSS score of ⩾ 6.0.
Decrease in ⩾ 1 EDSS step or 0.5 steps if baseline EDSS ⩾ 6.0.
Increase in ⩾ 1.0 points if baseline EDSS score < 5.5 or ⩾ 0.5 point if baseline EDSS ⩾ 5.5, confirmed at 6 months.
Decrease in ⩾ 1 point if baseline EDSS < 5.5 or ⩾ 0.5 points if baseline EDSS ⩾ 5.5, confirmed at 6 months.
No relapses or increase in disability.
Absence of both new lesions and Gd+ lesions.
No relapses, no increase in disability and absence of both new lesions and Gd+ lesions.
Results at 24 months were similar.
Pooled 12 and 24 mg analysis.
⩾ 1.0-point increase in EDSS score if the baseline EDSS score was > 0, or a ⩾ 1.5 increase if the baseline EDSS score was 0, sustained for a 6-month period. Results for CDP sustained for 3 months were similar.
Decrease in EDSS score by ⩾ 1 point, sustained for a consecutive 6-month period, for patients with a baseline EDSS score ⩾ 2.0; given patients with a baseline EDSS score of 0 are not accessible for SRD; in accordance to a previous study,[86] only patients with an EDSS score ⩾ 2.0 at baseline were included in the analysis.
24-week CDP: 50% (p = 0.082).
Of fingolimod, natalizumab, mitoxantrone, cyclophosphamide or alemtuzumab as treatments prior to rituximab, only the first three DMTs were included in the analysis after patient selection.
Gd+ lesions on first MRI after rituximab initiation.
Studies investigating the use of aHSCT in the treatment of aggressive MS.
| Author | Study | Definition(s) of aggressive MS | Disease activity outcomes | Disability outcomes | NEDA as outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fagius et al.[ | Case series | Early, malignant MS: frequent (⩾ 4/year) and severe (EDSS ⩾ 6.0) relapses, disease duration or duration of aggressive disease ⩽ 1.5 years, and clearly documented recent improvement periods indicative of non-irreversible damage of the CNS | Relapses in patient-months: | Median (range) EDSS | NA |
| Atkins et al.[ | Multi-centric, single-group Phase 2 trial | Multiple early relapses, early development of sustained disability measured by EDSS affecting motor control with cerebellar or pyramidal functional system scores ⩾ 3.0 within 5 years of disease onset, evidence of ongoing clinical disease activity despite ⩾ 1 year of DMT or immunosuppressive treatment[ | With up to 13 years of follow-up after aHSCT: | With up to 13 years of follow-up after aHSCT: | Primary outcome: activity-free survival at 3 years[ |
| Nash et al.[ | Phase 2, multicentre high-dose immunosuppression and autologous transplantation for MS (HALT-MS) clinical trial | EDSS 3.0–5.5 at baseline and disease duration < 15 years, with failure of DMT[ | Relapse-free survival: 86.9 (69.5–94.7)% | Progression-free survival: 91.3 (74.7–97.2)% | Primary endpoint: event-free survival[ |
| Mancardi et al.[ | ASTIMS, multicentre, randomized, Phase 2 study to assess the effect of aHSCT versus mitoxantrone on disease activity in MS | SPMS or RRMS that accumulates disability between relapses, with a documented worsening during the last year[ | Primary endpoint: cumulative number of new T2 lesions in the 4 years after randomization, compared to mitoxantrone ( | Disability accrual at 4 years: aHSCT 57% versus mitoxantrone 48%, | NA |
| Muraro et al.[ | Long-term, multicentre, observational, retrospective cohort study of patients who received aHSCT between January 1995 and December 2006 | At the time of aHSCT, 171 of 281 patients (60.9%) had | NA | Progression-free survival[ | NA |
| Sormani et al.[ | Meta-analysis of 15 studies including 764 patients from 1995 to 2016 | Median (range) follow-up time of 41.7 (24–80.4) months. Baseline EDSS ( | ARR (11 of 15 studies), pooled estimate rate post-transplant (95% CI) | Rate of disease progression, pooled estimate rate (95% CI) | NEDA (5 of 15 studies), proportion (range) |
aHSCT: autologous haematopoietic stem cell transplantation; MS; multiple sclerosis; NEDA: no evidence of disease activity; CP: cyclophosphamide; G-CSF: granulocyte colony stimulating factor; BEAM: carmustine (BCNU), etoposide, cytosine-arabinoside, melphalan; EDSS: Expanded Disability Status Scale; CNS: central nervous system; NA: not assessed; DMT: disease-modifying treatment; ATG: anti-thymocyte globulin:d+:: gadolinium-enhancing; MRI: magnetic resonance imaging; IQR95% CI: 95% confidence interval; : interquartile range; SPMS: secondary progressive multiple sclerosis; RRMS: relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis; IFN: interferon; RR: rate ratio; vs: versus; TRM: transplant-related mortality; ARR: annualized relapse rate.
BEAM dose not specified.
Either ⩾ 2 disabling relapses in the year before enrolment, 3 disabling relapses in the 2 years before enrolment or deterioration of the EDSS in the 18 months before enrolment (1.0 point if EDSS ⩽ 5.0 or 0.5 points if EDSS > 5.5).
No relapses, new or Gd+ lesions and sustained progression of EDSS.
⩾ 2 relapses over 18 months while on DMT and associated with a ⩾ 4-week sustained EDSS increase (1.0 for EDSS 3.0–3.5 or 0.5 for EDSS 4.0–5.5).
Three deaths occurred during follow-up at 2.5, 3.5 (MS-related) and 4.5 years (cardiorespiratory arrest).
Survival without death or disease activity (disability progression, relapse or new lesions on MRI).
One step of EDSS or 0.5 when EDSS is between 5.5 and 6.5.
IFN β or glatiramer acetate or immunosuppressive therapy.
Progression: increase in 1 point in the EDSS score confirmed at 12 months (0.5 points if the baseline EDSS score was ⩾ 5.5) compared with the pre-treatment baseline, which was defined as the last assessment before mobilization of peripheral blood stem cells (for peripherally mobilized autologous grafts) or before immunosuppressive conditioning (for bone marrow autologous grafts).