| Literature DB >> 34790259 |
Qi-Lun Lai1, Yin-Xi Zhang2, Meng-Ting Cai2, Yang Zheng2, Song Qiao1, Gao-Li Fang3, Chun-Hong Shen4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A considerable number of patients with myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody-associated disease (MOGAD) will experience a relapse, but the effect of maintenance therapies on re-attack rates is currently unknown.Entities:
Keywords: immunosuppressive therapy; myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody–associated disease; relapses
Year: 2021 PMID: 34790259 PMCID: PMC8591780 DOI: 10.1177/17562864211054157
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Adv Neurol Disord ISSN: 1756-2856 Impact factor: 6.570
Figure 1.Study selection flow diagram.
Characteristics of the studies included in the final meta-analysis.
| Study (authors, year) | Study design | Region | Groups | No. of cases | Median or mean age | Female:male ratio | Clinical phenotype | Pre-treatment ARR, median (range) | Disease duration before treatment, years (median) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Montcuquet | Retrospective | France | Adults and children | 5 | 37.9 | 2.9:1 | NMO: 60% | 1 (1–1) | NA |
| Ramanathan | Retrospective | Australia | Adults and children | 22 | 12 | 2.11:1 | ADEM: 20% | MMF 1.83 (0.47–6) | MMF 0.67 |
| Zhou | Retrospective | China | Children | 14 | 5.4 | 1.3:1 | NMOSD: 47.8% | 1.17 (0.25–7.67) | RTX 1.05 |
| Pedapati | Retrospective | India | Adults and children | 18 | 30.5 | 3:1 | ON: 75% | AZA 3.24 ± 3.13
| NA |
| Tzartos | Retrospective | Greece | Adults | 7 | 34 | 1.33:1 | ON: 57.1% | 0.33 (0–5) | AZA 17 |
| Mao | Retrospective | China | Children | 5 | 6.6 | 1.08:1 | NMOSD: 60% | 2.4 (0.67–8) | 0.92 |
| Cobo-Calvo | Retrospective | France and Spain | Adults | 48 | 34.1 | 1.23:1 | ON: 65.6% | 0.79 ± 0.91
| AZA 2.4 |
| Albassam | Prospective | Canada | Children | 12 | 10 | 2:1 | NMOSD: 33.3% | NA | 0.41 |
| Durozard | Prospective | France | Adults | 16 | 33.5 | 1:1 | NA | 2 (1–10) | 0.65 |
| Chen | Retrospective | America | Adults and children | 70 | 29 | 1.38:1 | ON: 47% | 1.6 (0–9.7) | NA |
| Whittam | Retrospective | Multicenter | Adults and children | 121 | 23.2 | 1.42:1 | ON: 29% | 1.82 (0.74–3.4)
| 1.59 |
| Study (authors and year) | Other immunotherapies prior to MMF, AZA, and RTX | Concomitant CS | Concomitant IVIG/PE | Immunosuppressant (no. of cases) and dosage | Available index | Median follow-up duration, years | Quality score | ||
| Montcuquet | None | NA | None | MMF (5): 2000 mg daily | ARR, EDSS | 3.58 | 9 | ||
| Ramanathan | None | MMF: 16/16 | RTX: IVIG 1/6, PE 1/6 | MMF (16): 1000–2000mg daily; | ARR | MMF 1.25; | 10 | ||
| Study (authors and year) | Other immunotherapies prior to MMF, AZA, and RTX | Concomitant CS | Concomitant IVIG/PE | Immunosuppressant (no. of cases) and dosage | Available index | Median follow-up duration, years | Quality score | ||
| Zhou | None | None | None | RTX (8): NA; | ARR | 0.92 | 9 | ||
| Pedapati | None | None | None | AZA (15): NA; | ARR | AZA 1.0; | 8 | ||
| Tzartos | None | None | None | AZA (5): NA; | ARR | 7.8 | 8 | ||
| Mao | None | None | IVIG: 5/5 | RTX (5): 2 × 750mg/m2, Days 1 and 15 | ARR | 1.25 | 8 | ||
| Cobo-Calvo | Prior to AZA: 21.1% | None | None | AZA (11): 150 mg daily; | ARR, EDSS | AZA 2.1; | 8 | ||
| Albassam | None | None | None | RTX (12): Two doses of 500 mg/m2(max 1 g) given 10–14 days apart. Subsequently, one dose of 500 mg/m2 (max 1 g) was administered when CD19 cell counts >0 | EDSS | 2.0 | 10 | ||
| Durozard | Prior to RTX: 31.2%
| NA | None | RTX (16): Induction: 1000 mg infused twice at a 2-week interval. Maintenance: a single infusion of 1000 mg at 6 months or CD27-positive B-cells reached 0.05% | ARR, EDSS | 1.59 | 9 | ||
| Chen | Prior to MMF: 53% | MMF: 2/19 | None | MMF (19): NA; | ARR | MMF 1.1; | 9 | ||
| Whittam | Prior to RTX: 45.6%
| 32/121 | IVIG: 7/121 | RTX (121): Initial 1000 mg on Day 0 and 15 or 375 mg/m2 weekly for 4 weeks. Interval between subsequent treatment was either fixed at 6-months or determined by periodic testing of circulating CD19 + B-cell or CD19 + CD27 + memory B-cell levels | ARR, EDSS | 1.0 | 8 | ||
ADEM, acute disseminated encephalomyelitis; ARR, annualized relapse rate; AZA, azathioprine; CS, corticosteroids; EDSS, Expanded Disability Status Scale; IVIG, intravenous immune globulins; MMF, mycophenolate mofetil; NA, not available; NMO, neuromyelitis optica; NMOSD, neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder; ON, optic neuritis; PE, plasma exchange; RTX, rituximab; TM, transverse myelitis.
Represents mean ± SD.
Represents median (interquartile range).
Previous treatments included mycophenolate mofetil for two and natalizumab, fingolimod, and teriflunomide for the remaining three patients.
Previous treatments included azathioprine (27), mycophenolate mofetil (20), intravenous immune globulins (7), maintenance plasma exchange (2), cyclophosphamide (6), mitoxantrone (3), methotrexate (2), tacrolimus (1), ciclosporin (1), and multiple sclerosis—disease-modifying therapies (11).
Figure 2.Forest plot of the mean difference in annualized relapse rate associated with the rituximab therapy in patients with myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody–associated disease.
The results of meta-analysis and subgroup analysis in myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody–associated disease.
| Subgroup | Studies no. | Patients no. | MD (95% CI) fixed model | MD (95% CI) random model | Heterogeneity test | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| RTX on ARR | 7 | 199 | –1.25 (–1.50, –0.99) | –1.35 (–1.85, –0.85) | 65.6% | 0.008 |
| Adults | 4 | 143 | –1.30 (–1.67, –0.93) | –1.67 (–2.63, –0.72) | 81.9% | 0.001 |
| Children | 4 | 50 | –1.09 (–1.60, –0.58) | –1.06 (–1.99, –0.13) | 57.2% | 0.071 |
| RTX on EDSS | 4 | 175 | –0.80 (–1.08, –0.53) | –0.80 (–1.08, –0.53) | 0.0% | 0.955 |
| MMF on ARR | 7 | 59 | –1.00 (–1.00, –1.00) | –0.83 (–1.35, –0.31) | 67.8% | 0.005 |
| Adults | 3 | 28 | –1.12 (–1.77, –0.47) | –1.12 (–1.77, –0.47) | 0.0% | 0.697 |
| Children | 2 | 7 | –1.40 (–2.40, –0.40) | –1.40 (–2.40, –0.40) | 0.0% | 0.843 |
| MMF on EDSS | 2 | 16 | –0.23 (–1.50, 1.04) | –0.23 (–1.50, 1.04) | 0.0% | 0.666 |
| AZA on ARR | 5 | 56 | –1.49 (–2.04, –0.95) | –1.71 (–2.58, –0.83) | 55.7% | 0.061 |
| Adults | 3 | 30 | –0.97 (–1.60, –0.34) | –0.97 (–1.60, –0.34) | 0.0% | 0.482 |
| Children | 2 | 11 | –2.01 (–3.42, –0.61) | –2.01 (–3.42, –0.61) | 0.0% | 0.753 |
ARR, annualized relapse rate; AZA, azathioprine; CI, confidence interval; EDSS, Expanded Disability Status Scale; MD, mean difference; MMF, mycophenolate mofetil; RTX, rituximab.
Figure 3.Forest plot of the mean difference in Expanded Disability Status Scale score associated with the rituximab therapy in patients with myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody–associated disease.
Figure 4.Forest plot of the mean difference in annualized relapse rate associated with the mycophenolate mofetil therapy in patients with myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody–associated disease.
Figure 5.Forest plot of the mean difference in Expanded Disability Status Scale score associated with the mycophenolate mofetil therapy in patients with myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody–associated disease.
Figure 6.Forest plot of the mean difference in the annualized relapse rate associated with the azathioprine therapy in patients with myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody–associated disease.
Discontinuation and adverse effects of immunosuppressive therapy in patients with myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody–associated disease.
| Immunosuppressant | Discontinuation of treatment | Manifestations of adverse effects |
|---|---|---|
| RTX[ | 27/197 (13.71%) discontinued | 7/149 (4.70%) experienced infusion related reactions |
| MMF[ | 13/39 (33.33%) discontinued | 1/3 (33.3%) developed diarrhea |
| AZA[ | 9/37 (24.32%) discontinued | 0/15 (0%) experienced adverse effects |
AZA, azathioprine; MMF, mycophenolate mofetil; RTX, rituximab.