| Literature DB >> 8909421 |
D E Goodkin1, R A Rudick, S VanderBrug Medendorp, M M Daughtry, C Van Dyke.
Abstract
We monitored 56 patients with chronic progressive multiple sclerosis (MS) who participated in a clinical trial of weekly, low-dose oral methotrexate with annual gadolinium-enhanced MRIs of the brain (Gd + MRI). Not of these patients had clinical exacerbations during the 8 months preceding study entry. We also monitored 35 of the patients with serial Gd + MRIs every 6 weeks for 6 months. We observed a treatment effect, measured by absolute change in T2-weighted total lesion area (T2W-TLA), in the cohort that completed 6-week scans. We found change in T2W-TLA in this cohort to be significantly related to sustained change in performance on the nine-hold peg test but not to sustained change on the Expanded Disability Status Scale. Gadolinium enhancement of lesions on 6-week and annual scans was uncommon. Prestudy exacerbation frequency appears to be an important consideration in designing future clinical trials in patients with secondary and primary progressive MS.Entities:
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Year: 1996 PMID: 8909421 DOI: 10.1212/wnl.47.5.1153
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurology ISSN: 0028-3878 Impact factor: 9.910