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Disease-modifying drugs can reduce disability progression in relapsing multiple sclerosis

Authors :
Rocco Totaro
Umberto Aguglia
Pietro Iaffaldano
Ciro Florio
Giuseppe Salemi
Giacomo Lus
Giovanna De Luca
Maurizia Gatto
Emilio Portaccio
Francesco Ottavio Logullo
Marta Simone
Angelo Ghezzi
Eleonora Cocco
Carlo Pozzilli
Simonetta Galgani
Matilde Inglese
Francesco Patti
Enrico Millefiorini
Giuseppe Lucisano
Giancarlo Di Battista
Roberto Bergamaschi
Maria Trojano
Franco Granella
Maria Pia Amato
Patrizia Sola
M. Vianello
Laura Tudisco
Roberto Fratangelo
Lorenzo Razzolini
Giancarlo Comi
Mattia Fonderico
Elio Prestipino
Angelo Bellinvia
Luisa Pastò
Mauro Zaffaroni
Marco Salvetti
Vincenzo Brescia Morra
Amato, Maria Pia
Fonderico, Mattia
Portaccio, Emilio
Pastò, Luisa
Razzolini, Lorenzo
Prestipino, Elio
Bellinvia, Angelo
Tudisco, Laura
Fratangelo, Roberto
Comi, Giancarlo
Patti, Francesco
De Luca, Giovanna
Brescia Morra, Vincenzo
Cocco, Eleonora
Pozzilli, Carlo
Sola, Patrizia
Bergamaschi, Roberto
Salemi, Giuseppe
Inglese, Matilde
Millefiorini, Enrico
Galgani, Simonetta
Zaffaroni, Mauro
Ghezzi, Angelo
Salvetti, Marco
Lus, Giacomo
Florio, Ciro
Totaro, Rocco
Granella, Franco
Vianello, Marika
Gatto, Maurizia
Di Battista, Giancarlo
Aguglia, Umberto
Logullo, Francesco Ottavio
Simone, Marta
Lucisano, Giuseppe
Iaffaldano, Pietro
Trojano, Maria
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2020.

Abstract

An ever-expanding number of disease-modifying drugs for multiple sclerosis have become available in recent years, after demonstrating efficacy in clinical trials. In the real-world setting, however, disease-modifying drugs are prescribed in patient populations that differ from those included in pivotal studies, where extreme age patients are usually excluded or under-represented. In this multicentre, observational, retrospective Italian cohort study, we evaluated treatment exposure in three cohorts of patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis defined by age at onset: paediatric-onset (≤18 years), adult-onset (18–49 years) and late-onset multiple sclerosis (≥50 years). We included patients with a relapsing-remitting phenotype, ≥5 years follow-up, ≥3 Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) evaluations and a first neurological evaluation within 3 years from the first demyelinating event. Multivariate Cox regression models (adjusted hazard ratio with 95% confidence intervals) were used to assess the risk of reaching a first 12-month confirmed disability worsening and the risk of reaching a sustained EDSS of 4.0. The effect of disease-modifying drugs was assessed as quartiles of time exposure. We found that disease-modifying drugs reduced the risk of 12-month confirmed disability worsening, with a progressive risk reduction in different quartiles of exposure in paediatric-onset and adult-onset patients [adjusted hazard ratios in non-exposed versus exposed >62% of the follow-up time: 8.0 (3.5–17.9) for paediatric-onset and 6.3 (4.9–8.0) for adult-onset, P

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3b2494d7bc9e498f31daa4a55c44a26f