Disease-modifying therapy in multiple sclerosis Update and clinical implications

被引:60
|
作者
Goodin, Douglas S. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] UCSF, Multiple Sclerosis Clin, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA
[2] Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Neurol, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1212/WNL.0b013e31818f3d8b
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
As new therapies become available for the treatment of multiple sclerosis, the relative value of established and newer disease-modifying therapies must be considered. However, comparing the apparent efficacy of different agents across clinical trials is not easy and can be misleading when different therapies have been studied during different time periods. There has been a shift in current clinical trials toward enrolling patients with less advanced or less active disease compared with trials undertaken when no effective therapies were available. If early treatment is more effective than late treatment, this practice will produce a bias in favor of newer agents. Head-to-head trials offer the most reliable means of comparing therapies, but these trials are expensive and time consuming. Consequently, cross-trial comparisons are necessary, but a reliable means to make such comparisons is needed. One useful (but imperfect) approach is to compute the relative risk of therapy and the number-needed-to-treat, applying both measures to any cross-trial comparison. These measures capture different aspects of the trials ( relative and absolute differences) and, if they agree, this suggests that the cross-trial comparison may be valid. If the two methods disagree, no reliable conclusion about relative efficacy can be made. There are only two valid conclusions from the available head-to-head and cross-trial data. First, high-dose interferon-beta(IFN beta)-1a or IFN beta-1b subcutaneous has a greater impact than weekly IFN beta-1a IM on several clinical and MRI outcomes. Second, high-dose IFN beta-1a or IFN beta-1b subcutaneous has a similar clinical impact to glatiramer acetate, although IFN beta subcutaneous is superior on some MRI outcome measures. NEUROLOGY 2008; 71 (Suppl 3): S8-S13.
引用
收藏
页码:S8 / S13
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Update on disease-modifying therapies for multiple sclerosis
    Vargas, Diana L.
    Tyor, William R.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE MEDICINE, 2017, 65 (05) : 883 - 891
  • [2] Update on Disease-Modifying Treatments for Multiple Sclerosis
    Carrithers, Michael D.
    [J]. CLINICAL THERAPEUTICS, 2014, 36 (12) : 1938 - 1945
  • [3] Infections in patients with multiple sclerosis: Implications for disease-modifying therapy
    Celius, E. G.
    [J]. ACTA NEUROLOGICA SCANDINAVICA, 2017, 136 : 34 - 36
  • [4] Disease-modifying therapy for multiple sclerosis: Implications for gut microbiota
    Pilotto, Silvy
    Zoledziewska, Magdalena
    Fenu, Giuseppe
    Cocco, Eleonora
    Lorefice, Lorena
    [J]. MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS AND RELATED DISORDERS, 2023, 73
  • [5] Disease-modifying therapy for multiple sclerosis
    Holmoy, Trygve
    Myhr, Kjell-Morten
    Bo, Lars
    Nygaard, Gro Owren
    [J]. TIDSSKRIFT FOR DEN NORSKE LAEGEFORENING, 2021, 141 (08) : 723 - 726
  • [6] Disease-modifying therapy for multiple sclerosis
    Klineova, Sylvia
    Mitiku, Nesanet
    Miller, Aaron E.
    [J]. FUTURE NEUROLOGY, 2015, 10 (03) : 253 - 279
  • [7] An Update on the Use of Disease-Modifying Therapy in Pregnant Patients with Multiple Sclerosis
    Vaughn, Caila
    Bushra, Aisha
    Kolb, Channa
    Weinstock-Guttman, Bianca
    [J]. CNS DRUGS, 2018, 32 (02) : 161 - 178
  • [8] An Update on the Use of Disease-Modifying Therapy in Pregnant Patients with Multiple Sclerosis
    Caila Vaughn
    Aisha Bushra
    Channa Kolb
    Bianca Weinstock-Guttman
    [J]. CNS Drugs, 2018, 32 : 161 - 178
  • [9] The immunogenicity of disease-modifying therapies for multiple sclerosis: Clinical implications for neurologists
    Fox, Edward J.
    Vartanian, Timothy K.
    Zamvil, Scott S.
    [J]. NEUROLOGIST, 2007, 13 (06) : 355 - 362
  • [10] Multiple sclerosis disease-modifying therapy and pregnancy
    Miller, Aaron E.
    [J]. MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS JOURNAL, 2016, 22 (06) : 715 - 716