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Comparative effectiveness in multiple sclerosis: A methodological comparison

Authors :
Izanne Roos
Ibrahima Diouf
Sifat Sharmin
Dana Horakova
Eva Kubala Havrdova
Francesco Patti
Vahid Shaygannejad
Serkan Ozakbas
Guillermo Izquierdo
Sara Eichau
Marco Onofrj
Alessandra Lugaresi
Raed Alroughani
Alexandre Prat
Marc Girard
Pierre Duquette
Murat Terzi
Cavit Boz
Francois Grand’Maison
Patrizia Sola
Diana Ferraro
Pierre Grammond
Recai Turkoglu
Katherine Buzzard
Olga Skibina
Bassem Yamou
Ayse Altintas
Oliver Gerlach
Vincent van Pesch
Yolanda Blanco
Davide Maimone
Jeannette Lechner-Scott
Roberto Bergamaschi
Rana Karabudak
Chris McGuigan
Elisabetta Cartechini
Michael Barnett
Stella Hughes
Maria José Sa
Claudio Solaro
Cristina Ramo-Tello
Suzanne Hodgkinson
Daniele Spitaleri
Aysun Soysal
Thor Petersen
Franco Granella
Koen de Gans
Pamela McCombe
Radek Ampapa
Bart Van Wijmeersch
Anneke van der Walt
Helmut Butzkueven
Julie Prevost
Jose Luis Sanchez-Menoyo
Guy Laureys
Riadh Gouider
Tamara Castillo-Triviño
Orla Gray
Eduardo Aguera-Morales
Abdullah Al-Asmi
Cameron Shaw
Norma Deri
Talal Al-Harbi
Yara Fragoso
Tunde Csepany
Angel Perez Sempere
Irene Trevino-Frenk
Jan Schepel
Fraser Moore
Charles Malpas
Tomas Kalincik
UCL - SSS/IONS/CEMO - Pôle Cellulaire et moléculaire
Source :
Multiple Sclerosis., Vol. 29, no.3, p. 326-332 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2023.

Abstract

Background: In the absence of evidence from randomised controlled trials, observational data can be used to emulate clinical trials and guide clinical decisions. Observational studies are, however, susceptible to confounding and bias. Among the used techniques to reduce indication bias are propensity score matching and marginal structural models. Objective: To use the comparative effectiveness of fingolimod vs natalizumab to compare the results obtained with propensity score matching and marginal structural models. Methods: Patients with clinically isolated syndrome or relapsing remitting MS who were treated with either fingolimod or natalizumab were identified in the MSBase registry. Patients were propensity score matched, and inverse probability of treatment weighted at six monthly intervals, using the following variables: age, sex, disability, MS duration, MS course, prior relapses, and prior therapies. Studied outcomes were cumulative hazard of relapse, disability accumulation, and disability improvement. Results: 4608 patients (1659 natalizumab, 2949 fingolimod) fulfilled inclusion criteria, and were propensity score matched or repeatedly reweighed with marginal structural models. Natalizumab treatment was associated with a lower probability of relapse (PS matching: HR 0.67 [95% CI 0.62-0.80]; marginal structural model: 0.71 [0.62-0.80]), and higher probability of disability improvement (PS matching: 1.21 [1.02 -1.43]; marginal structural model 1.43 1.19 -1.72]). There was no evidence of a difference in the magnitude of effect between the two methods. Conclusions: The relative effectiveness of two therapies can be efficiently compared by either marginal structural models or propensity score matching when applied in clearly defined clinical contexts and in sufficiently powered cohorts.

Details

ISSN :
14770970 and 13524585
Volume :
29
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Multiple Sclerosis Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c811efad796f14a285bd504765bfa637