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The effectiveness of natalizumab vs fingolimod-A comparison of international registry studies.

Authors :
Andersen JB
Sharmin S
Lefort M
Koch-Henriksen N
Sellebjerg F
Sørensen PS
Hilt Christensen CC
Rasmussen PV
Jensen MB
Frederiksen JL
Bramow S
Mathiesen HK
Schreiber KI
Horakova D
Havrdova EK
Alroughani R
Izquierdo G
Eichau S
Ozakbas S
Patti F
Onofrj M
Lugaresi A
Terzi M
Grammond P
Grand Maison F
Yamout B
Prat A
Girard M
Duquette P
Boz C
Trojano M
McCombe P
Slee M
Lechner-Scott J
Turkoglu R
Sola P
Ferraro D
Granella F
Shaygannejad V
Prevost J
Skibina O
Solaro C
Karabudak R
Wijmeersch BV
Csepany T
Spitaleri D
Vucic S
Casey R
Debouverie M
Edan G
Ciron J
Ruet A
Sèze JD
Maillart E
Zephir H
Labauge P
Defer G
Lebrun C
Moreau T
Berger E
Clavelou P
Pelletier J
Stankoff B
Gout O
Thouvenot E
Heinzlef O
Al-Khedr A
Bourre B
Casez O
Cabre P
Montcuquet A
Wahab A
Camdessanché JP
Marousset A
Patry I
Hankiewicz K
Pottier C
Maubeuge N
Labeyrie C
Nifle C
Leray E
Laplaud DA
Butzkueven H
Kalincik T
Vukusic S
Magyari M
Source :
Multiple sclerosis and related disorders [Mult Scler Relat Disord] 2021 Aug; Vol. 53, pp. 103012. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 May 08.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background: Natalizumab and fingolimod were the first preparations recommended for disease breakthrough in priorly treated relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis. Of three published head-to-head studies two showed that natalizumab is the more effective to prevent relapses and EDSS worsening.<br />Methods: By re-analyzing original published results from MSBase, France, and Denmark using uniform methodologies, we aimed at identifying the effects of differences in methodology, in the MS-populations, and at re-evaluating the differences in effectiveness between the two drugs. We gained access to copies of the individual amended databases and pooled all data. We used uniform inclusion/exclusion criteria and statistical methods with Inverse Probability Treatment Weighting.<br />Results: The pooled analyses comprised 968 natalizumab- and 1479 fingolimod treated patients. The on-treatment natalizumab/fingolimod relapse rate ratio was 0.77 (p=0.004). The hazard ratio (HR) for a first relapse was 0.82 (p=0.030), and the HR for sustained EDSS improvement was 1.4 (p=0.009). There were modest differences between each of the original published studies and the replication study, but the conclusions of the three original studies remained unchanged: in two of them natalizumab was more effective, but in the third there was no difference between natalizumab and fingolimod.<br />Conclusion: The results were largely invariant to the epidemiological and statistical methods but differed between the MS populations. Generally, the advantage of natalizumab was confirmed.<br /> (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2211-0356
Volume :
53
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Multiple sclerosis and related disorders
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34116480
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.msard.2021.103012