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1298Associations of DMT therapies with COVID-19 severity in multiple sclerosis

Authors :
Lotte Geyes
Nikola Lazovski
Ingrid van der Mei
Ricardo Alonso
Anna Glaser
Tomas Kalincik
Tina Parciak
Rumen Ivanov
Richard Nicholas
Arnfin Bergmann
Gilles Edan
Ashkan Pirmani
Hollie Schmidt
Amber Salter
Robert J. Fox
Steve Simpson-Yap
Johana Bauer
Jan Hillert
Liesbet Peeters
Giancarlo Comi
Amin Ardeshirdavani
Helmut Butzkueven
Alexander Fidao
Anibal Chertcoff
Alice Estavo Dias
Robert N. McBurney
Melinda Magyari
Lars Forsberg
Ana Zabalza
Georgina Arrambide
Alexander Stahmann
Rodden M. Middleton
Nupur Nag
Doralina Guimarães Brum
Nick Rijke
Guilherme Sciascia do Olival
Tim Spelman
Juan Ignacio Rojas
Edward De Brouwer
Clare Walton
Anneke van der Walt
Clément Gautrais
Maria Fernandes Mendes
Stefan Braune
Source :
International Journal of Epidemiology. 50
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2021.

Abstract

Background People with multiple sclerosis (MS) are a vulnerable group for severe COVID-19, particularly those taking immunosuppressive disease-modifying therapies (DMTs). We examined the characteristics of COVID-19 severity in an international sample of people with MS. Methods Data from 12 data-sources in 28 countries were aggregated (sources could include patients from 1-12 countries). Demographic (age, sex), clinical (MS phenotype, disability), and DMT (untreated, alemtuzumab, cladribine, dimethyl-fumarate, glatiramer-acetate, interferon, natalizumab, ocrelizumab, rituximab, siponimod, other) covariates were queried, alongside COVID-19 hospitalisation, admission to ICU, requiring artificial ventilation, and death. Characteristics of outcomes were assessed in patients with suspected/confirmed COVID-19 using multilevel mixed-effects logistic regression, adjusted for age, sex, MS phenotype, and EDSS. Results 657 (28.1%) with suspected and 1,683 (61.9%) with confirmed COVID-19 were analysed. Among suspected+confirmed/confirmed-only COVID-19, 20.9%/26.9% were hospitalised, 5.4%/7.2% were admitted to ICU, 4.1%/5.4% required artificial ventilation, and 3.2%/3.9% died. Older age, progressive MS-phenotype, and higher disability were associated with worse COVID-19 outcomes. Compared to dimethyl-fumarate, ocrelizumab and rituximab were associated with hospitalisation (aOR=1.56,95%CI=1.01-2.41; aOR=2.43,95%CI=1.48-4.02) and ICU admission (aOR=2.30,95%CI=0.98-5.39; aOR=3.93,95%CI=1.56-9.89), though only rituximab was associated with higher risk of artificial ventilation (aOR=4.00,95%CI=1.54-10.39). Importantly, associations persisted on restriction to confirmed COVID-19 cases. No associations were observed between DMTs and death. Conclusions Despite the cross-sectional design of this study, the internal and external consistency of these results with prior studies suggests their use may be a risk factor for more severe COVID-19. Key messages Anti-CD20 DMTs may be associated with worse COVID-19 severity amongst people with multiple sclerosis.

Details

ISSN :
14643685 and 03005771
Volume :
50
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Epidemiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ec6c0ecd24b8515b27b91736b9e19442