| Literature DB >> 35289375 |
Joachim Havla1,2,3, Reinhard Hohlfeld4,5,6.
Abstract
Progressive multiple sclerosis (PMS) is clinically distinct from relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS). In PMS, clinical disability progression occurs independently of relapse activity. Furthermore, there is increasing evidence that the pathological mechanisms of PMS and RRMS are different. Current therapeutic options for the treatment of PMS remain inadequate, although ocrelizumab, a B-cell-depleting antibody, is now available as the first approved therapeutic option for primary progressive MS. Recent advances in understanding the pathophysiology of PMS provide hope for new innovative therapeutic options: these include antibody therapies with anti-inflammatory, neuroprotective, and/or remyelination-fostering effects. In this review, we summarize the relevant trial data relating to antibody therapy and consider future antibody options for treating PMS.Entities:
Keywords: Antibody therapy; CD20; Ocrelizumab; PMS; Progressive multiple sclerosis; Rituximab
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35289375 PMCID: PMC9294105 DOI: 10.1007/s13311-022-01214-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurotherapeutics ISSN: 1878-7479 Impact factor: 6.088
Monoclonal antibodies for progressive multiple sclerosis (table according to [6, 101, 103]
| Monoclonal antibody | Study | Details | Primary endpoint | Key results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phase III | |||||
| Natalizumab | Phase III SPMS (ASCEND) | MC, R, DB, PC, SD 2 years, 887 patients, MA(y) 47, MDoP(y) 5, eEDSS 3.0–6.5 | Time to 3 month composite CDP | Negative (no treatment effect on multicomponent outcome, EDSS or the T25FW; but reduced 9HPT progression) | [ |
| Rituximab | Phase II/III PPMS (OLYMPUS) | MC, R, DB, PC, 2 years, 439 patients, MA(y) 49, MDoP(y) 9, eEDSS 2.0–6.5 | Time to CDP | Negative (no significant benefit in CDP for RIX vs. placebo) | [ |
| Ocrelizumab | Phase III PPMS (ORATORIO) | MC, R, DB, PC, minimum 120 weeks, event driven study, 732 patients, MA(y) 45, MDoP(y) 6, eEDSS 3.0–6.5 | Time to 12-week confirmed CDP | Positive (the relative risk of 12-week confirmed disability progression was significantly decreased by 24% ( | [ |
| Phase III PPMS (O`Hand) | MC, R, DB, PC, 27 months, aim 1000 patients, eEDSS ≥ 3.0–8.0 | Time to upper limb disability progression confirmed For at least 12 weeks | Recruiting | Analysis ongoing | |
| Phase III PPMS/SPMS (Consonance) | MC, open-label, single-arm, aim 900 patients, 4 years, eEDSS ≤ 6.5 | Proportion of patients with no evidence of progression (NEP) on 6 month EDSS CDP | Recruiting | Analysis ongoing | |
| Phase II | |||||
| Opicinumab | Phase II ON (RENEW) | MC, R, DB, PC, 32 weeks | Remyelination at 24 weeks, measured as recovery using full-field visual evoked potential (FF-VEP) | Negative (remyelination did not differ significantly between the opicinumab and placebo groups in the ITT population at week 24) | [ |
| Temelimab | Phase II RMS (ProTEct-MS) | MC, R, DB, PC, 1 year, eEDSS 2.5–5.5 | Mean overall response score (ORS): EDSS, T25FW, 9HPT-DH, 9HPT-NDH | Ongoing | Pre-study [ |
| Elezanumab | Phase II PPMS/SPMS | MC, R, DB, PC, 123 patients, 1 year | Composite score of EDSS, T25FW, 9HPT | Completed | Analysis ongoing |
SC single center, MC multicenter, R randomized, DB double blinded, eEDSS entry EDSS, PC placebo controlled, SD study duration, MA(y) mean age years, MDoP(y) mean duration of progression years