Literature DB >> 32935843

Disease-modifying drugs can reduce disability progression in relapsing multiple sclerosis.

Maria Pia Amato1,2, Mattia Fonderico1, Emilio Portaccio3, Luisa Pastò1, Lorenzo Razzolini1, Elio Prestipino1, Angelo Bellinvia1, Laura Tudisco1, Roberto Fratangelo1, Giancarlo Comi4, Francesco Patti5, Giovanna De Luca6, Vincenzo Brescia Morra7, Eleonora Cocco8, Carlo Pozzilli9, Patrizia Sola10, Roberto Bergamaschi11, Giuseppe Salemi12, Matilde Inglese13,14, Enrico Millefiorini15, Simonetta Galgani16, Mauro Zaffaroni17, Angelo Ghezzi17, Marco Salvetti18,19, Giacomo Lus20, Ciro Florio21, Rocco Totaro22, Franco Granella23, Marika Vianello24, Maurizia Gatto25, Giancarlo Di Battista26, Umberto Aguglia27, Francesco Ottavio Logullo28, Marta Simone29, Giuseppe Lucisano30,31, Pietro Iaffaldano31, Maria Trojano31.   

Abstract

An ever-expanding number of disease-modifying drugs for multiple sclerosis have become available in recent years, after demonstrating efficacy in clinical trials. In the real-world setting, however, disease-modifying drugs are prescribed in patient populations that differ from those included in pivotal studies, where extreme age patients are usually excluded or under-represented. In this multicentre, observational, retrospective Italian cohort study, we evaluated treatment exposure in three cohorts of patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis defined by age at onset: paediatric-onset (≤18 years), adult-onset (18-49 years) and late-onset multiple sclerosis (≥50 years). We included patients with a relapsing-remitting phenotype, ≥5 years follow-up, ≥3 Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) evaluations and a first neurological evaluation within 3 years from the first demyelinating event. Multivariate Cox regression models (adjusted hazard ratio with 95% confidence intervals) were used to assess the risk of reaching a first 12-month confirmed disability worsening and the risk of reaching a sustained EDSS of 4.0. The effect of disease-modifying drugs was assessed as quartiles of time exposure. We found that disease-modifying drugs reduced the risk of 12-month confirmed disability worsening, with a progressive risk reduction in different quartiles of exposure in paediatric-onset and adult-onset patients [adjusted hazard ratios in non-exposed versus exposed >62% of the follow-up time: 8.0 (3.5-17.9) for paediatric-onset and 6.3 (4.9-8.0) for adult-onset, P < 0.0001] showing a trend in late-onset patients [adjusted hazard ratio = 1.9 (0.9-4.1), P = 0.07]. These results were confirmed for a sustained EDSS score of 4.0. We also found that relapses were a risk factor for 12-month confirmed disability worsening in all three cohorts, and female sex exerted a protective role in the late-onset cohort. This study provides evidence that sustained exposure to disease-modifying drugs decreases the risk of disability accumulation, seemingly in a dose-dependent manner. It confirms that the effectiveness of disease-modifying drugs is lower in late-onset patients, although still detectable.
© The Author(s) (2020). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Entities:  

Keywords:  clinical trials; clinically isolated syndrome; demyelination; multiple sclerosis epidemiology; neuroinflammation

Year:  2020        PMID: 32935843     DOI: 10.1093/brain/awaa251

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain        ISSN: 0006-8950            Impact factor:   13.501


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