| Literature DB >> 35303292 |
Charles B Malpas1,2, Izanne Roos1,2, Sifat Sharmin1,2, Katherine Buzzard3,4,5, Olga Skibina3,4,6, Helmut Butzkueven7,8,9, Ludwig Kappos10, Francesco Patti11,12, Raed Alroughani13, Dana Horakova14, Eva Kubala Havrdova14, Guillermo Izquierdo15, Sara Eichau15, Suzanne Hodgkinson16, Pierre Grammond17, Jeannette Lechner-Scott18,19, Tomas Kalincik20,21,22.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is growing interest in the issue of disease reactivation in multiple sclerosis following fingolimod cessation. Relatively little is known about modifiers of the risk of post-cessation relapse, including the delay to commencement of new therapy and prior disease activity.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35303292 PMCID: PMC8989797 DOI: 10.1007/s40261-022-01129-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Drug Investig ISSN: 1173-2563 Impact factor: 2.859
Sample characteristics
| Variable | Total sample | No relapse in 12 months following cessation | Any relapse in 12 months following cessation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clinicodemographic | |||
| Age at fingolimod cessation (years) | 39.56 (9.88) | 40.75 (10.05) | 37.02 (9.01) |
| Female, | 539 (79) | 356 (76) | 183 (84) |
| Disease duration at cessation (years) | 12.31 (7.23) | 12.61 (7.19) | 11.67 (7.30) |
| Treatment duration at cessation (years) | 2.51 (1.32) | 2.52 (1.32) | 2.49 (1.34) |
| No. of relapses year prior to cessation | 0.54 (0.42) | 0.45 (0.70) | 0.60 (0.77) |
| Last EDSS prior to cessation | 3.05 (2.50) | 3.17 (2.11) | 2.81 (1.82) |
| Pregnancy within 12 months, | 72 (11) | 47 (10) | 25 (12) |
| New therapy within 12 months, | |||
| None | 92 (13) | 70 (15) | 22 (10) |
| Low efficacy | 184 (27) | 117 (25) | 67 (31) |
| High efficacy | 409 (60) | 280 (60) | 129 (59) |
| Delay to new therapy (months), | |||
| 0–2 | 322 (47) | 240 (51) | 82 (38) |
| 2–4 | 108 (16) | 60 (13) | 48 (22) |
| 4–6 | 48 (7) | 25 (5) | 23 (11) |
| 6–8 | 25 (4) | 13 (3) | 12 (6) |
| 8–10 | 19 (3) | 12 (3) | 7 (3) |
| 10–12 | 22 (3) | 11 (2) | 11 (5) |
| > 12 | 141 (21) | 106 (23) | 35 (16) |
Point and interval estimates are mean (SD), unless specified otherwise
EDSS Expanded Disability Status Scale
Fig. 1Frequency distribution of relapses occurring in the first year following treatment cessation
Annualised relapse rates (ARR) [95% CI]
| ARR [95% CI] | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Cohort | Before treatment | During treatment | After cessation |
| All ( | 1.71 [1.59, 1.85] | 0.50 [0.44, 0.55] | 0.43 [0.38, 0.49] |
| Switch to new therapy (12 months) | |||
| None ( | 1.38 [1.09, 1.73] | 0.28 [0.17, 0.42] | 0.26 [0.16, 0.36] |
| Low efficacy ( | 1.38 [1.17, 1.60] | 0.33 [0.24, 0.41] | 0.51 [0.40, 0.62] |
| High efficacy ( | 1.95 [1.79, 2.13] | 0.62 [0.54, 0.69] | 0.44 [0.36, 0.51] |
| Time to switch (months) | |||
| 0–2 ( | 1.87 [1.68, 2.07] | 0.58 [0.50, 0.67] | 0.38 [0.27, 0.42] |
| 2–4 ( | 1.72 [1.43, 2.03] | 0.52 [0.39, 0.67] | 0.53 [0.41, 0.65] |
| 4–6 ( | 1.21 [0.81, 1.68] | 0.29 [0.13, 0.48] | 0.71 [0.46, 0.98] |
| 6–8 ( | 1.72 [0.96, 2.64] | 0.44 [0.16, 0.84] | 0.80 [0.44, 1.37] |
| 8–10 ( | 1.74 [1.11, 2.32] | 0.32 [0.11, 0.58] | 0.84 [0.32, 1.68] |
| 10–12 ( | 1.23 [0.64, 2.18] | 0.23 [0.05, 0.36] | 0.86 [0.45, 1.41] |
| 12+ ( | 1.60 [1.35, 1.88] | 0.42 [0.31, 0.54] | 0.28 [0.20, 0.38] |
ARRs were computed as the total number of relapses observed over the specific 12-month period divided by the number of patients. ‘Switch to new therapy’ shows the ARRs stratified by the efficacy of the new therapy commenced within 12 months of fingolimod cessation. ‘Time to switch’ shows the ARRs stratified by the time to commencement of any new therapy following fingolimod cessation
Fig. 2Annualised relapse rates (ARR) during the 12 months before treatment commencement (before treatment), 12 months before treatment cessation (during treatment) and 12 months after treatment cessation (after cessation). The black line shows the mean relapse rate for the whole cohort, with the shaded area indicating a 95% bootstrapped bias corrected and accelerated confidence intervals. Points with whiskers show the relapse rates stratified by the class of immunotherapy started in the 12 months following cessation (high efficacy, low efficacy or none)
Predictors of relapse after fingolimod cessation (all patients)
| Term | Exp(B) [95% CI] | |
|---|---|---|
| Number of relapses | First relapse | |
| Clinicodemographic | ||
| Sex (male) | 0.89 [0.67, 1.18] | |
| Age at cessation | ||
| Disease duration at cessation | 1.01 | 1.01 [0.99, 1.03] |
| Treatment duration | 1.02 | 1.02 [0.93, 1.12] |
| ARR year before cessation | ||
| EDSS before cessation | 1.02 | 1.00 [0.94, 1.07] |
| Pregnancy post-fingolimod | 1.35 | 0.88 [0.58, 1.33] |
| Switch to new therapy (12 months)a | ||
| Switched to no treatment | 0.89 | 1.49 [0.84, 2.65] |
| Switched to low efficacy | ||
| Time to switchb (months) | ||
| 2–4 | ||
| 4–6 | ||
| 6–8 | ||
| 8–10 | ||
| 10–12 | ||
| 12+ | 0.79 | 0.83 [0.50, 1.37] |
Parameters under “Number of relapses” are from negative binomial model predicting relapse count in the first 12 months after cessation of fingolimod. Parameters under “First relapse” are derived from the Cox proportional hazards model
Bold values indicate CIs that do not capture the null hypothesis value
ARR annualised relapse rate, EDSS Expanded Disability Status Scale
aSwitch to high-efficacy treatment is used as the reference class
bSwitched to new therapy at 0–2 months is used as the reference class
Fig. 3Annualised relapse rates (ARR) 12 months before treatment commencement (before treatment), 12 months before treatment cessation (during treatment) and 12 months after treatment cessation (after cessation) stratified by the time until recommencement of therapy
Relapse incidence by time interval and treatment status
| Time interval (months) | No. of relapses | ARR [95% CI] | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| On treatment | Not on treatment | On treatment | Not on treatment | |
| 0–2 | 19 | 34 | 0.72 [0.25, 1.19] | 0.39 [0.20, 0.57] |
| 2–4 | 32 | 41 | 0.49 [0.24, 0.76] | 0.81 [0.45, 1.18] |
| 4–6 | 23 | 23 | 0.30 [0.12, 0.48] | 0.60 [0.26, 0.95] |
| 6–8 | 27 | 14 | 0.33 [0.15, 0.51] | 0.43 [0.11, 0.76] |
| 8–10 | 29 | 14 | 0.34 [0.16, 0.52] | 0.49 [0.13, 0.83] |
| 10–12 | 31 | 8 | 0.35 [0.17, 0.52] | 0.32 [0.01, 0.62] |
Relapse rates are given as ARRs with 95% CIs in square brackets. ARRs were computed as the total number of relapses observed over the specific 12-month period divided by the number of patients. ‘Time interval’ indicates time from fingolimod cessation
ARRs annualised relapse rates
Severe relapse rates
| ARR [95%] | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Cohort | Before treatment | During treatment | After cessation |
| All ( | 0.05 [0.03, 0.07] | 0.02 [0.01, 0.03] | 0.02 [0.01, 0.04] |
| Switch to new therapy (12 months) | |||
| None ( | 0.05 [0.01, 0.12] | 0.01 [0.00, 0.03] | – |
| Low efficacy ( | 0.04 [0.02, 0.08] | 0.01 [0.00, 0.02] | 0.04 [0.02, 0.08] |
| High efficacy ( | 0.05 [0.03, 0.08] | 0.03 [0.01, 0.04] | 0.02 [0.01, 0.04] |
| Time to switch (months) | |||
| 0–2 ( | 0.04 [0.02, 0.07] | 0.02 [0.01, 0.03] | 0.03 [0.01, 0.04] |
| 2–4 ( | 0.07 [0.02, 0.16] | 0.04 [0.01, 0.07] | 0.04 [0.00, 0.09] |
| 4–6 ( | 0.02 [0.00, 0.06] | 0.02 [0.00, 0.06] | 0.02 [0.00, 0.06] |
| 6–8 ( | – | – | 0.08 [0.00, 0.02] |
| 8–10 ( | 0.11 [0.00, 0.21] | 0.05 [0.00, 0.16] | 0.05 [00.0, 0.16] |
| 10–12 ( | 0.14 [0.00, 0.41] | 0 | 0.05 [0.00, 0.14] |
| 12+ ( | 0.05 [0.01, 0.09] | 0.01 [0.00, 0.02] | – |
ARRs were computed as the total number of relapses observed over the specific 12-month period divided by the number of patients. ‘Switch to new therapy’ shows the ARRs stratified by the efficacy of the new therapy commenced within 12 months of fingolimod cessation. ‘Time to switch’ shows the ARRs stratified by the time to commencement of any new therapy following fingolimod cessation
ARRs annualised relapse rates
| In patients with multiple sclerosis treated with fingolimod, there is a risk of disease relapse following cessation of this treatment. |
| This study investigated the risk factors associated with an increased disease relapse. |
| Disease reactivation following fingolimod cessation is more common in younger patients, those with greater disease activity prior to cessation and those who switch to a low-efficacy therapy. |