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Nabiximols discontinuation rate in a large population of patients with multiple sclerosis: a 18-month multicentre study

Authors :
Damiano Paolicelli
Assunta Bianco
Simona Pontecorvo
Paola Valentino
Elisabetta Capello
Roberta Lanzillo
M. Danni
Alberto Gajofatto
Gianfranco Costantino
Claudio Solaro
Roberto Bruno Bossio
Daniele Spitaleri
Giacomo Lus
Simona Bonavita
Mauro Zaffaroni
Pasquale Annunziata
Edoardo Sessa
Roberto Bergamaschi
Claudio Gasperini
Letizia Castelli
Diego Centonze
Salvatore Cottone
Loredana Petrucci
Vincenzo Brescia Morra
Marco Rovaris
Mario Zappia
Paola Cavalla
Angelica Guareschi
Gabriella Spinicci
Isabella Righini
Francesco Patti
Giorgia Teresa Maniscalco
Manuela Matta
Federica Esposito
Clara Grazia Chisari
Chisari, Clara Grazia
Solaro, Claudio
Annunziata, Pasquale
Bergamaschi, Roberto
Bianco, Assunta
Bonavita, Simona
Brescia Morra, Vincenzo
Bruno Bossio, Roberto
Capello, Elisabetta
Castelli, Letizia
Cavalla, Paola
Costantino, Gianfranco
Centonze, Diego
Cottone, Salvatore
Danni, Maura Chiara
Esposito, Federica
Gajofatto, Alberto
Gasperini, Claudio
Guareschi, Angelica
Lanzillo, Roberta
Lus, Giacomo
Maniscalco, Giorgia Teresa
Matta, Manuela
Paolicelli, Damiano
Petrucci, Loredana
Pontecorvo, Simona
Righini, Isabella
Rovaris, Marco
Sessa, Edoardo
Spinicci, Gabriella
Spitaleri, Daniele
Valentino, Paola
Zaffaroni, Mauro
Zappia, Mario
Patti, Francesco
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

IntroductionDelta-δ-tetrahydrocannabinol and cannabidiol (THC:CBD) oromucosal spray is used as an add-on therapy option for moderate to severe multiple sclerosis (MS) spasticity resistant to other medications. Aims of this study were to provide real-life data on long-term clinical outcomes in a large population of Italian patients treated with THC:CBD and to evaluate predictors of THC:CBD therapy continuation.Materials and methodsThis prospective observational multicentre Italian study screened all patients with MS consecutively included in the Agenzia Italiana del Farmaco e-registry at the start of THC:CBD treatment (baseline), after 4 weeks (T1), 12±3 weeks (T2), 24±3 weeks (T3), 48±3 weeks (T4) and 72±3 weeks (T5) from baseline.ResultsA total of 1845 patients were recruited from 32 MS Italian centres. At T1, 1502 (81.4%) of patients reached a Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) improvement of ≥20%, with an NRS reduction of 26.9% at T1 and of 34.4% at T5. At T5, 725 patients (48.3% of 1502) discontinued treatment with highest discontinuation rate at T2 and T3. Daily number of puffs was generally stable through the observation period. The multivariate analysis showed that higher NRS scores at baseline (OR 2.28, 95% CI 1.15 to 6.36, pDiscussionTHC:CBD effects were sustained for 18 months with a relatively stable number of puffs per day. About 50% of patients abandoned THC:CBD therapy for loss of efficacy or adverse events.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....99c0984396a016f283708bfddc82f43f