| Literature DB >> 35869335 |
Abstract
Multiple sclerosis treatment made substantial headway during the last two decades with the implementation of therapeutics with new modes of action and routes of application. We are now in the situation that second-generation molecules, approved since 2018, are on the market, characterized by reduced side effects using a more tailored therapeutic approach. Diroximel fumarate is a second-generation fumarate with reduced gastrointestinal side effects. Moreover, several novel, selective, sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor modulators with reduced off-target effects have been developed; namely siponimod, ozanimod, and ponesimod; all oral formulations. B-cell-targeted therapies such as ocrelizumab, given intravenously, and since 2021 ofatumumab, applied subcutaneously, complement the spectrum of novel therapies. The glycoengineered antibody ublituximab is the next anti-CD20 therapy about to be approved. Within the next years, oral inhibitors of Bruton's tyrosine kinase, currently under investigation in several phase III trials, may be licensed for multiple sclerosis. Those developments currently offer an individualized multiple sclerosis therapy, targeting patient needs with substantial effects on relapses, disability progression, and implications for daily life. In this up-to-date review, we provide a holistic overview about novel developments of the therapeutic landscape and upcoming approaches for multiple sclerosis treatment.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35869335 PMCID: PMC9307218 DOI: 10.1007/s40263-022-00939-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CNS Drugs ISSN: 1172-7047 Impact factor: 6.497
Pivotal clinical trial data
| Study | Study type | Course | Number of patients | Groups | Primary endpoint | Secondary endpoint | Side effects | Approval | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Second-generation fumarate | EVOLVE-MS-2 study (NCT03093324) [ | Randomized, blinded, 5-week, phase III | RRMS | 504 | DRF 462 mg DMF 240 mg | Less GI AEs in DRF-treated patients (DRF, 34.8%; DMF, 48.2%) | Reduced discontinuation in DRF-treated patients (DRF, 0.8% vs DMF, 4.8%) | Reduced GI side effects Lymphopenia | FDA: CIS, RRMS, active SPMS EMA: RRMS |
EVOLVE-MS-1 (NCT02634307) | Open-label, 96-week, phase III | RRMS | 696 | DRF 462 mg | AEs: 84.6% of patients; majority of AEs mild (31.2%) or moderate (46.8%) | Reduction in the mean number of Gd+ lesions of 77% from baseline ( ARR 0.16 | |||
S1P 1,5 receptor modulator | RADIANCE (NCT01628393) | Combined phase II/III | RMS | 1313 | OZA 1.0 mg OZA 0.5 mg IFN-beta-1a 30 µg weekly | ARR rate ratio 0.62 (OZA 1.0 mg vs IFN) 0.79 (OZA 0.5 mg vs IFN) | More treatment-emergent adverse events in IFN-beta-1a group (83.0%) compared with OZA 1.0 mg group (74.7%) or OZA 0.5 mg group (74.3%) | Less treatment discontinuation in OZA compared with IFN No difference of infections and SAEs | FDA: CIS, RRMS, active SPMS EMA: RRMS |
| SUNBEAM [ | Randomized, double-blind, double-dummy, active-controlled phase III | RMS | 1346 | OZA 1.0 mg OZA 0.5 mg IFN-beta-1a 30 µg weekly | ARR rate ratio 0.52 (OZA 1.0 mg vs IFN) 0.69 (OZA 0.5 mg vs IFN) | Less Gd+ lesions, less T2 lesions, less brain volume loss in OZA | |||
S1P 1,5 receptor modulator | BOLD [ (NCT00879658) | Phase II dose-response | RRMS | 188 | Siponimod 0.5 mg, 2 mg, 10 mg Placebo | Dose-dependent reduction in combined unique active lesions at 3 months compared with placebo (10 mg: 82% (70–90) | FDA: CIS, RRMS, active SPMS EMA: active SPMS | ||
EXPAND [ NCT01665144 | Event-driven, exposure-driven phase III | SPMS | 1651 | Siponimod Placebo | 21% reduced risk of 3-month confirmed disability progression | ARR 55% reduced compared with placebo Lower increase of T2 lesion load Reduced brain atrophy (between-group difference 0.15) | Infections, cardiac side effects, herpes zoster reactivation | ||
S1P 1 receptor modulator | NCT01006265 | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, dose-finding phase IIb | RRMS | 464 | Ponesimod 10, 20, 40 mg Placebo | Significant reduction in Gd+ lesions in all dosages (rate ratio 10 mg: 0.57; 20 mg: 0.17; 40 mg: 0.23) | ARR reduced by up to 52% with 40 mg vs placebo | FDA: CIS, RRMS, active SPMS EMA: active RMS | |
| OPTIMUM [ | Multicenter, double-blind, active-comparator, superiority randomized phase III | RRMS | 1133 | Ponesimod 20 mg Teriflunomide 14 mg | Relative reduction in ARR was 30.5 (0.202 vs 0.290; | Reduced fatigue 56% less combined unique active lesions per year Brain volume loss lower by 0.34% | Similar AEs and SAEs between groups Treatment discontinuation more often in ponesimod-treated patients | ||
Anti-CD20 B-cell depletion | OPERA I and II [ | Multicenter, randomized, double-blind, double-dummy, parallel-group phase III | RMS | 821 and 835 | Ocrelizumab 600 mg every 24 weeks IFN-beta-1a 44 μg three times weekly | ARR trial 1: 0.16 vs 0.29; 46% lower rate with ocrelizumab Trial 2: 0.16 vs 0.29; 47% lower rate | Lower disability progression (HR 0.60) At least 94% lower number of Gd+ lesions | Infusion-related reactions in 34.3% in ocrelizumab | FDA: RMS, PPMS EMA: RMS, PPMS |
| ORATORIO [ | Multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled, phase III | PPMS | 732 | Ocrelizumab 600 mg every 24 weeks Placebo | 24% reduced risk of confirmed disability progression at week 12 | Reduced worsening of T25FW by week 120 Reduced volume of T2 lesions | Infusion-related reactions, upper respiratory tract infections, oral herpes infections more frequent with ocrelizumab | ||
Anti-CD20 B-cell depletion | MIRROR [ | Phase II dose-efficacy | RRMS | 232 | Ofatumumab 3, 30, 60 mg Placebo | At least a 65% reduction in the cumulative number of new or contrast-enhancing lesions ( | Dose-dependent reduction in CD19+ B cells | Injection-site irritation (52% ofatumumab vs 15% placebo) | FDA: CIS, RRMS, active SPMS EMA: active RMS |
ASCLEPIOS I and II [ (NCT02792218; NCT02792231) | Multicenter, randomized, double-blind, double-dummy, active comparator, phase III | RMS | 1882 | Ofatumumab 20 mg Teriflunomide 14 mg | ARR trial 1: 0.11 ofatumumab, 0.22 teriflunomide ARR trial 2: 0.10 and 0.25 | Disability worsening reduced by 34% in ofatumumab group. Gd+ lesions reduced at least 94%, new or enlarging T2 lesions at least 85% | Injection-site reactions 20.2% of ofatumumab-treated patients compared with 15.0% of teriflunomide-treated patients |
AEs adverse events, ARR annualized relapse rate, CIS clinically isolated syndrome, DMF dimethyl fumarate, DRF diroximel fumarate, EMA European Medicines Agency, FDA US Food and Drug Administration, Gd+ gadolinium-enhancing, GI gastrointestinal, HR hazard ratio, IFN interferon, OZA ozanimod, PPMS primary progressive multiple sclerosis, RMS relapsing multiple sclerosis, RRMS relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis, S1P sphingosine-1-phosphate, SAEs serious adverse events, SPMS secondary-progressive multiple sclerosis, T25FW Timed 25 Foot Walk
| We critically reviewed (second-generation) multiple sclerosis therapeutics licensed since 2018 until 2022 and the outlook regarding new substance classes. |
| Differing modes of action, routes of application, and side-effect profiles allow a personalized treatment approach. |
| Substances to come include a new anti-CD20 therapeutic, ublituximab, and inhibitors of Bruton’s tyrosine kinase as a new class of medications acting both on B cells and myeloid cells. |