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No evidence of disease activity (NEDA) analysis by epochs in patients with relapsing multiple sclerosis treated with ocrelizumab vs interferon beta-1a

Authors :
Eva Havrdova
Jian Han
Iain Bennett
Shibeshih Belachew
Giancarlo Comi
Douglas L. Arnold
Gavin Giovannoni
Ludwig Kappos
Anthony Traboulsee
Fred D. Lublin
Stephen L. Hauser
Regine Buffels
Laura Julian
Krzysztof Selmaj
Julie Napieralski
Hans-Peter Hartung
Amit Bar-Or
Hideki Garren
Source :
Multiple Sclerosis Journal-Experimental, Translational and Clinical, Multiple sclerosis journal-experimental, translational and clinical, vol 4, iss 1
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2018.

Abstract

Background No evidence of disease activity (NEDA; defined as no 12-week confirmed disability progression, no protocol-defined relapses, no new/enlarging T2 lesions and no T1 gadolinium-enhancing lesions) using a fixed-study entry baseline is commonly used as a treatment outcome in multiple sclerosis (MS). Objective The objective of this paper is to assess the effect of ocrelizumab on NEDA using re-baselining analysis, and the predictive value of NEDA status. Methods NEDA was assessed in a modified intent-to-treat population ( n = 1520) from the pooled OPERA I and OPERA II studies over various epochs in patients with relapsing MS receiving ocrelizumab (600 mg) or interferon beta-1a (IFN β‐1a; 44 μg). Results NEDA was increased with ocrelizumab vs IFN β-1a over 96 weeks by 75% ( p Conclusion Superior efficacy with ocrelizumab compared with IFN β-1a was consistently seen in maintaining NEDA status in all epochs evaluated. By contrast with IFN β-1a, the majority of patients with disease activity early in the study subsequently attained NEDA status with ocrelizumab.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20552173
Volume :
4
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Multiple Sclerosis Journal - Experimental, Translational and Clinical
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c4163fe9bce180cbe3804634231e6af7