1. Rate of brain atrophy in relapsing MS decreases during treatment with IFNbeta-1a.
- Author
-
Hardmeier M, Wagenpfeil S, Freitag P, Fisher E, Rudick RA, Kooijmans M, Clanet M, Radue EW, and Kappos L
- Subjects
- Adult, Atrophy, Cohort Studies, Disease Progression, Europe, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Interferon beta-1a, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting drug therapy, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Brain pathology, Immunologic Factors therapeutic use, Interferon-beta therapeutic use, Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting pathology
- Abstract
Objective: To determine the time course of brain atrophy during treatment with once-weekly IM interferon beta-1a (IFNbeta-1a)., Methods: The MRI cohort (n = 386) of the European IFNbeta-1a dose comparison study in relapsing multiple sclerosis (MS) was analyzed. In addition to baseline and three annual scans, a frequent subgroup (n = 138) had two scans before treatment initiation and scans at months 4, 5, 6, 10, and 11. Brain parenchymal fraction (BPF), a normalized measure of whole-brain atrophy, and volume of Gd-enhancing lesions (T1Gd) and T2 hyperintense lesions (T2LL) were evaluated., Results: BPF decrease was -0.686% (first year), -0.377% (second year), and -0.378% (third year). Analysis of the frequent subgroup showed that 68% of the first-year BPF decrease occurred during the first 4 months of treatment. This change was paralleled by a drop in T1Gd and T2LL. In the frequent subgroup, an annualized atrophy rate was determined by a regression slope for the pretreatment period and from month 4 of treatment onward. Annualized pretreatment rate (-1.06%) was significantly higher than the under-treatment rate (-0.33%)., Conclusions: In the first year of treatment with anti-inflammatory agents, atrophy measurements are possibly confounded by resolution of inflammatory edema or more remote effects of previous damage to the CNS. The atrophy rate reduction observed after treatment month 4 may reflect a beneficial but partial effect of interferon beta-1a and was sustained over the 3-year study period.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF