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Real world experience with teriflunomide in multiple sclerosis: the TER-Italy study

Authors :
Pietro Annovazzi
Fioravante Capone
Sofia Zywicki
Paola Cavalla
Claudio Gasperini
Roberta Fantozzi
Elisabetta Ferraro
Doriana Landi
Sebastiano Bucello
Maria Maddalena Filippi
Roberto Bergamaschi
Vincenzo Dattola
Luigi M.E. Grimaldi
Girolama Alessandra Marfia
Luca Prosperini
Paolo Ragonese
Paolo Manganotti
Cristina Zuliani
Marco Pisa
Maria Chiara Buscarinu
Giovanna Borriello
A. Bianchi
Massimiliano Mirabella
Antonio Cortese
Marta Altieri
Rosella Cavarretta
Valentina Liliana Adriana Torri-Clerici
Giovanna De Luca
Valentina Tomassini
Massimiliano Di Filippo
Graziella Callari
Massimo Filippi
Giulia Mallucci
Valeria Barcella
Mauro Zaffaroni
Marco Capobianco
Paola Perini
Margherita Russo
Sabrina Realmuto
Marianna Lo Re
Bucello S.
Annovazzi P.
Ragonese P.
Altieri M.
Barcella V.
Bergamaschi R.
Bianchi A.
Borriello G.
Buscarinu M.C.
Callari G.
Capobianco M.
Capone F.
Cavalla P.
Cavarretta R.
Cortese A.
De Luca G.
Di Filippo M.
Dattola V.
Fantozzi R.
Ferraro E.
Filippi M.M.
Gasperini C.
Grimaldi L.M.E.
Landi D.
Re M.L.
Mallucci G.
Manganotti P.
Marfia G.A.
Mirabella M.
Perini P.
Pisa M.
Realmuto S.
Russo M.
Tomassini V.
Torri-Clerici V.L.A.
Zaffaroni M.
Zuliani C.
Zywicki S.
Filippi M.
Prosperini L.
Source :
Journal of neurology. 268(8)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Objective: To identify baseline factors associated with disease activity in patients with relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) under teriflunomide treatment. Methods: This was an independent, multi-centre, retrospective post-marketing study. We analysed data of 1,507 patients who started teriflunomide since October 2014 and were regularly followed in 28 Centres in Italy. We reported the proportions of patients who discontinued treatment (after excluding 32 lost to follow-up) and who experienced clinical disease activity, i.e., relapse(s) and/or confirmed disability worsening, as assessed by the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS). Decision tree-based analysis was performed to identify baseline factors associated with clinical disease activity during teriflunomide treatment. Results: At database lock (September 2020), approximately 29% of patients (430 out of 1,475) discontinued teriflunomide because of disease activity (~ 46%), adverse events (~ 37%), poor tolerability (~ 15%), pregnancy planning (~ 2%). Approximately 28% of patients experienced disease activity over a median follow-up of 2.75years: ~ 9% had relapses but not disability worsening; ~ 13% had isolated disability worsening; ~ 6% had both relapses and disability worsening. The most important baseline factor associated with disease activity(especially disability worsening) was an EDSS > 4.0 (p < 0.001). In patients with moderate disability level (EDSS 2.0–4.0), disease activity occurred more frequently in case of ≥ 1 pre-treatment relapses (p = 0.025). In patients with milder disability level (EDSS < 2.0), disease activity occurred more frequently after previous exposure to ≥ 2 disease-modifying treatments (p = 0.007). Conclusions: Our study suggests a place-in-therapy for teriflunomide in naïve patients with mild disability level or in those who switched their initial treatment for poor tolerability. Adverse events related with teriflunomide were consistent with literature data, without any new safety concern.

Details

ISSN :
14321459
Volume :
268
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b7d89c044dcb455ddc985739f8abb94e