| Literature DB >> 34626224 |
Massimo Filippi1,2, Romano Danesi3, Tobias Derfuss4, Martin Duddy5, Paolo Gallo6, Ralf Gold7, Eva Kubala Havrdová8, Barbara Kornek9, Francesco Saccà10, Mar Tintoré11, Jörg Weber12, Maria Trojano13.
Abstract
Early intervention with high-efficacy disease-modifying therapy (HE DMT) may be the best strategy to delay irreversible neurological damage and progression of multiple sclerosis (MS). In European healthcare systems, however, patient access to HE DMTs in MS is often restricted to later stages of the disease due to restrictions in reimbursement despite broader regulatory labels. Although not every patient should be treated with HE DMTs at the initial stages of the disease, early and unrestricted access to HE DMTs with a positive benefit-risk profile and a reasonable value proposition will provide the freedom of choice for an appropriate treatment based on a shared decision between expert physicians and patients. This will further optimize outcomes and facilitate efficient resource allocation and sustainability in healthcare systems and society.Entities:
Keywords: Benefit–risk profile; Healthcare system; High-efficacy disease-modifying therapy; Multiple sclerosis; Pharmacoeconomics; Unrestricted access
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34626224 PMCID: PMC8501364 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-021-10836-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 4.849
Fig. 1Reimbursement status for RMS for ocrelizumab compared with its EMA label (based on national reimbursement status; see supplementary material for the full list of sources). EMA European Medicines Agency, RMS relapsing multiple sclerosis
Fig. 2Different factors highlighting the need for early initiation of HE DMTs in PLwMS. EDSS Expanded Disability Status Scale, DMT disease-modifying therapy, HE high efficacy, ME moderate efficacy, MS multiple sclerosis, NEDA no evidence of disease activity, PLwMS people living with MS, SPMS secondary progressive MS
Studies demonstrating favorable outcomes with early initiation of HE DMTs in PLwMS [23–26]
| Study | Study details | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|
| He et al. [ | Retrospective data from the MSBase registry and the Swedish MS registry | Compared long-term disability outcomes of PLwMS starting HE DMTs within two years of disease onset vs those starting only 4–6 years after disease onset |
| Study reported lower EDSS progression of PLwMS on early HE treatment after 6–10 years of follow-up, amounting to an adjusted mean difference in EDSS score between groups over the whole follow-up period of -0.98 points | ||
| Harding et al. [ | Single-center study on population-based cohort of PLwMS in southeast Wales | Classified data according to first-line treatment strategy into early intensive vs escalation strategy |
| Study reported more favorable long-term outcomes, measured by EDSS, following early intensive therapy vs escalation therapy | ||
| Brown et al. [ | Prospective cohort study utilizing propensity score matched data from 68 neurology centers in 21 countries | Study highlights the risk of disease progression with later initiation of HE DMTs, associating a lower risk of RRMS to SPMS conversion in PLwMS receiving an initial HE DMT (fingolimod, alemtuzumab or natalizumab) vs glatiramer acetate or interferon |
| Uher et al. [ | Longitudinal study of patients with RRMS | Study demonstrated efficacy of HE DMTs to decelerate progression, as characterized by brain volume loss |
| Effects were only measurable two years after escalation to a HE DMT, again highlighting the time lost in case of treatment escalation |
EDSS Expanded Disability Status Scale, DMT disease-modifying therapy, HE high efficacy, ME moderate efficacy, MS multiple sclerosis, PLwMS people living with MS, RRMS relapsing–remitting MS, SPMS secondary progressive MS