Integrative approach to MS care underused, expert says

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NEW ORLEANS – The integration of lifestyle, alternative, and conventional medicine into the care of patients with multiple sclerosis can be transformative for patients and clinicians alike, according to Allen C. Bowling, MD, PhD.

This approach not only emphasizes health and wellness of the whole person, it supports the clinician-patient relationship since neurologists serve as point persons for MS patients, Dr. Bowling said at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers. “It’s critical to not just think about MS the disease, but to think about the patient’s overall health, maintaining health,” he said. “That’s a big mind shift. I think sometimes people hear the term ‘integrative medicine’ and they start walking out of the room or think it’s getting ‘woo-woo,’ but there is a very evidence-based approach to integrative medicine. The core of it still is not familiar to a lot of physicians.”

Dr. Allen C. Bowling
Dr. Bowling, a neurologist at the Colorado Neurological Institute, Englewood, defined integrative medicine as combining lifestyle, unconventional, and conventional medicine to caring for patients. Lifestyle medicine consists of daily habits and practices such as a healthy diet and regular exercise that are incorporated into conventional medical care to prevent or treat disease. According to a recent National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, only 2.7% of U.S. adults met four criteria for adherence to a healthy lifestyle: being sufficiently active, eating a healthy diet, being a nonsmoker, and having a recommended body fat percentage (Mayo Clin Proc. 2016;91[4]:432-42). Unconventional medicine, also known as complementary and alternative medicine (CAM), consists of therapies such as acupuncture and chiropractic manipulation that are not generally taught in medical schools or provided in hospitals. In the general population, about 40% of people use some form of unconventional medicine, compared with 50%-70% of MS patients.

Harness ‘built-in’ resources

Dr. Bowling, author of “Optimal Health With Multiple Sclerosis: A Guide to Integrating Lifestyle, Alternative, and Conventional Medicine” (New York: Demos Medical Publishing, 2014) and developer of a website devoted to integrative care and MS (www.neurologycare.net), said that some of best treatment approaches may be those that use the “built-in” resources of the human body and do not require any medications, supplements, devices, or technology. “The most effective and long-lasting changes in lifestyle may be those that are small and consistent,” he said. For example, when he first started applying integrative care principles to his practice more than 16 years ago, some patients told him that MS was “one of the best things that happened to them, and that it was a gift in that it helped them clean up their lifestyle.” In the summer of 2001, one such patient came to see Dr. Bowling and said, “Since my last appointment I’ve lost 20 pounds, bought a bike. I exercise four times weekly. My wife and I have changed our diet. This is real; I’m on it.”

“I said. ‘Very impressive. How did that happen? What motivated you?’ ”

“He said, ‘You did.’ This was like a turning point in his life.”

As of May 2017, this patient has maintained his healthy lifestyle changes.

Dr. Bowling told meeting attendees that early in his neurology career he didn’t always consider other ways he could impact MS patients beyond helping them determine the best disease-modifying treatment and/or assisting them in managing symptoms. Thinking to counsel them in areas such as a balanced diet, exercise, and emotional wellness “was a mind shift for me, and made me realize how narrow my focus was,” he said. “It transformed me to go back to thinking more about general medicine. I’m a detail-oriented guy, but I don’t think that’s in the best interests of our patients. I think we need to combine very disease-specific advice with very general advice. We’re at a very important place with our patients where we can potentially have a very significant impact with our recommendations about MS as well as other medical conditions and health maintenance.”

Take baby steps

Dr. Bowling recommended that clinicians take baby steps to incorporate aspects of integrated care, including use of brief, strong supportive statements; focusing on only one issue per visit; referring patients to information resources; and sharing or transferring responsibility/accountability with other providers. Excessive focus on one therapy – including unusual and unproven CAM therapies – may detract from, or be used to avoid, other valuable approaches. For example, some of Dr. Bowling’s patients may come in very enchanted with a particular dietary supplement yet their own diet is unhealthy. “I don’t scold them, but I say, ‘I don’t think this supplement’s going to hurt you but there’s much more evidence that we should shift the focus of your motivation and drive to dietary approaches.’ ”

 

 

Use leverage to tackle emotional health

In the area of emotional health, Dr. Bowling said that an MS diagnosis often serves as a springboard to help young patients develop emotional literacy so that they don’t develop high levels of stress and anxiety. “What I find are people on the verge of entering into depression or anxiety and not really knowing how to address those emotional issues or even to do basic identification and processing of emotions, and getting attached to mind-body approaches, which I think have a clear benefit, but for many patients it does not lead to emotional literacy,” he said. “I emphasize ‘I can’t be with you 24/7. That’s your piece of the equation.’ You can also help patients identify things that give them joy, meaning, and fun in life. That’s a motivator for a lot of them – to keep doing what they find joyful, meaningful, and fun.” Dr. Bowling said that this kind of approach brings “plain old common sense” to the clinician-patient relationship. “I think we all have lots of leverage with our patients, but there’s no cookbook or algorithm here; you need to start where patients are,” he said. “Our younger patients in particular are not really listening to their primary care doctor too much. They’re paying very close attention to what we’re talking about: disease-modifying therapies and symptomatic management.”

In Dr. Bowling’s clinical experience, men often struggle with emotional health and emotional literacy issues. “I have seen amazing transformations of men in their early 20s with very low emotional literacy, and working with them, sometimes with psychodynamic psychotherapy and other methods, sometimes just talking with friends and family – really encouraging them before there’s serious anxiety or depression.” One patient told him that MS “forced me to do a year of psychotherapy and some intensive introspection for a few years. This helped me and also my family.” He recommended that clinicians tread carefully when advising men about tobacco and alcohol use, and when advising women about weight management. “Be prepared; it’s a little different every time you bring those potential issues up,” he said.

Dr. Bowling added that MS often affects how patients view the aging process itself. “It can be a crash course in how to understand the body and best use it before people technically get to the aging years,” he said. “There’s also more acceptance of disability in people who are older.” In the setting of patients who experience disease flare-ups, they may ask you if there’s anything they can do from a lifestyle standpoint to make them go away. “Be primed for these teaching moments and opportunities where there’s a seed of motivation,” he advised.


Approach treats, prevents clinician burnout

Dr. Bowling described the integrative approach to treating MS patients as “an ever-changing skill set. There’s all this talk about neurologist burnout, which is very real. If you practice this way, this is a great treatment and preventive approach for clinician burnout because your patients check you out to see if you ‘walk the walk’ on advice you give them. My success with my patients in some of these areas is less than 50%. But when there’s a real change, it’s for the life of that person. That’s the most rewarding part of my career at this point.”

Dr. Bowling disclosed that he has received research, consulting, advising, and speaking fees from Acorda, Biogen, EMD Serono, Genentech, Genzyme, Sanofi-Aventis, Teva, the American Academy of Neurology, the CMSC, the Mandell Center for Multiple Sclerosis, and the National MS Society.

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NEW ORLEANS – The integration of lifestyle, alternative, and conventional medicine into the care of patients with multiple sclerosis can be transformative for patients and clinicians alike, according to Allen C. Bowling, MD, PhD.

This approach not only emphasizes health and wellness of the whole person, it supports the clinician-patient relationship since neurologists serve as point persons for MS patients, Dr. Bowling said at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers. “It’s critical to not just think about MS the disease, but to think about the patient’s overall health, maintaining health,” he said. “That’s a big mind shift. I think sometimes people hear the term ‘integrative medicine’ and they start walking out of the room or think it’s getting ‘woo-woo,’ but there is a very evidence-based approach to integrative medicine. The core of it still is not familiar to a lot of physicians.”

Dr. Allen C. Bowling
Dr. Bowling, a neurologist at the Colorado Neurological Institute, Englewood, defined integrative medicine as combining lifestyle, unconventional, and conventional medicine to caring for patients. Lifestyle medicine consists of daily habits and practices such as a healthy diet and regular exercise that are incorporated into conventional medical care to prevent or treat disease. According to a recent National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, only 2.7% of U.S. adults met four criteria for adherence to a healthy lifestyle: being sufficiently active, eating a healthy diet, being a nonsmoker, and having a recommended body fat percentage (Mayo Clin Proc. 2016;91[4]:432-42). Unconventional medicine, also known as complementary and alternative medicine (CAM), consists of therapies such as acupuncture and chiropractic manipulation that are not generally taught in medical schools or provided in hospitals. In the general population, about 40% of people use some form of unconventional medicine, compared with 50%-70% of MS patients.

Harness ‘built-in’ resources

Dr. Bowling, author of “Optimal Health With Multiple Sclerosis: A Guide to Integrating Lifestyle, Alternative, and Conventional Medicine” (New York: Demos Medical Publishing, 2014) and developer of a website devoted to integrative care and MS (www.neurologycare.net), said that some of best treatment approaches may be those that use the “built-in” resources of the human body and do not require any medications, supplements, devices, or technology. “The most effective and long-lasting changes in lifestyle may be those that are small and consistent,” he said. For example, when he first started applying integrative care principles to his practice more than 16 years ago, some patients told him that MS was “one of the best things that happened to them, and that it was a gift in that it helped them clean up their lifestyle.” In the summer of 2001, one such patient came to see Dr. Bowling and said, “Since my last appointment I’ve lost 20 pounds, bought a bike. I exercise four times weekly. My wife and I have changed our diet. This is real; I’m on it.”

“I said. ‘Very impressive. How did that happen? What motivated you?’ ”

“He said, ‘You did.’ This was like a turning point in his life.”

As of May 2017, this patient has maintained his healthy lifestyle changes.

Dr. Bowling told meeting attendees that early in his neurology career he didn’t always consider other ways he could impact MS patients beyond helping them determine the best disease-modifying treatment and/or assisting them in managing symptoms. Thinking to counsel them in areas such as a balanced diet, exercise, and emotional wellness “was a mind shift for me, and made me realize how narrow my focus was,” he said. “It transformed me to go back to thinking more about general medicine. I’m a detail-oriented guy, but I don’t think that’s in the best interests of our patients. I think we need to combine very disease-specific advice with very general advice. We’re at a very important place with our patients where we can potentially have a very significant impact with our recommendations about MS as well as other medical conditions and health maintenance.”

Take baby steps

Dr. Bowling recommended that clinicians take baby steps to incorporate aspects of integrated care, including use of brief, strong supportive statements; focusing on only one issue per visit; referring patients to information resources; and sharing or transferring responsibility/accountability with other providers. Excessive focus on one therapy – including unusual and unproven CAM therapies – may detract from, or be used to avoid, other valuable approaches. For example, some of Dr. Bowling’s patients may come in very enchanted with a particular dietary supplement yet their own diet is unhealthy. “I don’t scold them, but I say, ‘I don’t think this supplement’s going to hurt you but there’s much more evidence that we should shift the focus of your motivation and drive to dietary approaches.’ ”

 

 

Use leverage to tackle emotional health

In the area of emotional health, Dr. Bowling said that an MS diagnosis often serves as a springboard to help young patients develop emotional literacy so that they don’t develop high levels of stress and anxiety. “What I find are people on the verge of entering into depression or anxiety and not really knowing how to address those emotional issues or even to do basic identification and processing of emotions, and getting attached to mind-body approaches, which I think have a clear benefit, but for many patients it does not lead to emotional literacy,” he said. “I emphasize ‘I can’t be with you 24/7. That’s your piece of the equation.’ You can also help patients identify things that give them joy, meaning, and fun in life. That’s a motivator for a lot of them – to keep doing what they find joyful, meaningful, and fun.” Dr. Bowling said that this kind of approach brings “plain old common sense” to the clinician-patient relationship. “I think we all have lots of leverage with our patients, but there’s no cookbook or algorithm here; you need to start where patients are,” he said. “Our younger patients in particular are not really listening to their primary care doctor too much. They’re paying very close attention to what we’re talking about: disease-modifying therapies and symptomatic management.”

In Dr. Bowling’s clinical experience, men often struggle with emotional health and emotional literacy issues. “I have seen amazing transformations of men in their early 20s with very low emotional literacy, and working with them, sometimes with psychodynamic psychotherapy and other methods, sometimes just talking with friends and family – really encouraging them before there’s serious anxiety or depression.” One patient told him that MS “forced me to do a year of psychotherapy and some intensive introspection for a few years. This helped me and also my family.” He recommended that clinicians tread carefully when advising men about tobacco and alcohol use, and when advising women about weight management. “Be prepared; it’s a little different every time you bring those potential issues up,” he said.

Dr. Bowling added that MS often affects how patients view the aging process itself. “It can be a crash course in how to understand the body and best use it before people technically get to the aging years,” he said. “There’s also more acceptance of disability in people who are older.” In the setting of patients who experience disease flare-ups, they may ask you if there’s anything they can do from a lifestyle standpoint to make them go away. “Be primed for these teaching moments and opportunities where there’s a seed of motivation,” he advised.


Approach treats, prevents clinician burnout

Dr. Bowling described the integrative approach to treating MS patients as “an ever-changing skill set. There’s all this talk about neurologist burnout, which is very real. If you practice this way, this is a great treatment and preventive approach for clinician burnout because your patients check you out to see if you ‘walk the walk’ on advice you give them. My success with my patients in some of these areas is less than 50%. But when there’s a real change, it’s for the life of that person. That’s the most rewarding part of my career at this point.”

Dr. Bowling disclosed that he has received research, consulting, advising, and speaking fees from Acorda, Biogen, EMD Serono, Genentech, Genzyme, Sanofi-Aventis, Teva, the American Academy of Neurology, the CMSC, the Mandell Center for Multiple Sclerosis, and the National MS Society.

 

NEW ORLEANS – The integration of lifestyle, alternative, and conventional medicine into the care of patients with multiple sclerosis can be transformative for patients and clinicians alike, according to Allen C. Bowling, MD, PhD.

This approach not only emphasizes health and wellness of the whole person, it supports the clinician-patient relationship since neurologists serve as point persons for MS patients, Dr. Bowling said at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers. “It’s critical to not just think about MS the disease, but to think about the patient’s overall health, maintaining health,” he said. “That’s a big mind shift. I think sometimes people hear the term ‘integrative medicine’ and they start walking out of the room or think it’s getting ‘woo-woo,’ but there is a very evidence-based approach to integrative medicine. The core of it still is not familiar to a lot of physicians.”

Dr. Allen C. Bowling
Dr. Bowling, a neurologist at the Colorado Neurological Institute, Englewood, defined integrative medicine as combining lifestyle, unconventional, and conventional medicine to caring for patients. Lifestyle medicine consists of daily habits and practices such as a healthy diet and regular exercise that are incorporated into conventional medical care to prevent or treat disease. According to a recent National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, only 2.7% of U.S. adults met four criteria for adherence to a healthy lifestyle: being sufficiently active, eating a healthy diet, being a nonsmoker, and having a recommended body fat percentage (Mayo Clin Proc. 2016;91[4]:432-42). Unconventional medicine, also known as complementary and alternative medicine (CAM), consists of therapies such as acupuncture and chiropractic manipulation that are not generally taught in medical schools or provided in hospitals. In the general population, about 40% of people use some form of unconventional medicine, compared with 50%-70% of MS patients.

Harness ‘built-in’ resources

Dr. Bowling, author of “Optimal Health With Multiple Sclerosis: A Guide to Integrating Lifestyle, Alternative, and Conventional Medicine” (New York: Demos Medical Publishing, 2014) and developer of a website devoted to integrative care and MS (www.neurologycare.net), said that some of best treatment approaches may be those that use the “built-in” resources of the human body and do not require any medications, supplements, devices, or technology. “The most effective and long-lasting changes in lifestyle may be those that are small and consistent,” he said. For example, when he first started applying integrative care principles to his practice more than 16 years ago, some patients told him that MS was “one of the best things that happened to them, and that it was a gift in that it helped them clean up their lifestyle.” In the summer of 2001, one such patient came to see Dr. Bowling and said, “Since my last appointment I’ve lost 20 pounds, bought a bike. I exercise four times weekly. My wife and I have changed our diet. This is real; I’m on it.”

“I said. ‘Very impressive. How did that happen? What motivated you?’ ”

“He said, ‘You did.’ This was like a turning point in his life.”

As of May 2017, this patient has maintained his healthy lifestyle changes.

Dr. Bowling told meeting attendees that early in his neurology career he didn’t always consider other ways he could impact MS patients beyond helping them determine the best disease-modifying treatment and/or assisting them in managing symptoms. Thinking to counsel them in areas such as a balanced diet, exercise, and emotional wellness “was a mind shift for me, and made me realize how narrow my focus was,” he said. “It transformed me to go back to thinking more about general medicine. I’m a detail-oriented guy, but I don’t think that’s in the best interests of our patients. I think we need to combine very disease-specific advice with very general advice. We’re at a very important place with our patients where we can potentially have a very significant impact with our recommendations about MS as well as other medical conditions and health maintenance.”

Take baby steps

Dr. Bowling recommended that clinicians take baby steps to incorporate aspects of integrated care, including use of brief, strong supportive statements; focusing on only one issue per visit; referring patients to information resources; and sharing or transferring responsibility/accountability with other providers. Excessive focus on one therapy – including unusual and unproven CAM therapies – may detract from, or be used to avoid, other valuable approaches. For example, some of Dr. Bowling’s patients may come in very enchanted with a particular dietary supplement yet their own diet is unhealthy. “I don’t scold them, but I say, ‘I don’t think this supplement’s going to hurt you but there’s much more evidence that we should shift the focus of your motivation and drive to dietary approaches.’ ”

 

 

Use leverage to tackle emotional health

In the area of emotional health, Dr. Bowling said that an MS diagnosis often serves as a springboard to help young patients develop emotional literacy so that they don’t develop high levels of stress and anxiety. “What I find are people on the verge of entering into depression or anxiety and not really knowing how to address those emotional issues or even to do basic identification and processing of emotions, and getting attached to mind-body approaches, which I think have a clear benefit, but for many patients it does not lead to emotional literacy,” he said. “I emphasize ‘I can’t be with you 24/7. That’s your piece of the equation.’ You can also help patients identify things that give them joy, meaning, and fun in life. That’s a motivator for a lot of them – to keep doing what they find joyful, meaningful, and fun.” Dr. Bowling said that this kind of approach brings “plain old common sense” to the clinician-patient relationship. “I think we all have lots of leverage with our patients, but there’s no cookbook or algorithm here; you need to start where patients are,” he said. “Our younger patients in particular are not really listening to their primary care doctor too much. They’re paying very close attention to what we’re talking about: disease-modifying therapies and symptomatic management.”

In Dr. Bowling’s clinical experience, men often struggle with emotional health and emotional literacy issues. “I have seen amazing transformations of men in their early 20s with very low emotional literacy, and working with them, sometimes with psychodynamic psychotherapy and other methods, sometimes just talking with friends and family – really encouraging them before there’s serious anxiety or depression.” One patient told him that MS “forced me to do a year of psychotherapy and some intensive introspection for a few years. This helped me and also my family.” He recommended that clinicians tread carefully when advising men about tobacco and alcohol use, and when advising women about weight management. “Be prepared; it’s a little different every time you bring those potential issues up,” he said.

Dr. Bowling added that MS often affects how patients view the aging process itself. “It can be a crash course in how to understand the body and best use it before people technically get to the aging years,” he said. “There’s also more acceptance of disability in people who are older.” In the setting of patients who experience disease flare-ups, they may ask you if there’s anything they can do from a lifestyle standpoint to make them go away. “Be primed for these teaching moments and opportunities where there’s a seed of motivation,” he advised.


Approach treats, prevents clinician burnout

Dr. Bowling described the integrative approach to treating MS patients as “an ever-changing skill set. There’s all this talk about neurologist burnout, which is very real. If you practice this way, this is a great treatment and preventive approach for clinician burnout because your patients check you out to see if you ‘walk the walk’ on advice you give them. My success with my patients in some of these areas is less than 50%. But when there’s a real change, it’s for the life of that person. That’s the most rewarding part of my career at this point.”

Dr. Bowling disclosed that he has received research, consulting, advising, and speaking fees from Acorda, Biogen, EMD Serono, Genentech, Genzyme, Sanofi-Aventis, Teva, the American Academy of Neurology, the CMSC, the Mandell Center for Multiple Sclerosis, and the National MS Society.

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Preliminary results promising from ublituximab phase II study for MS

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NEW ORLEANS – The investigative agent ublituximab was well tolerated and demonstrated rapid B-cell depletion in patients with relapsing multiple sclerosis, results from an ongoing phase II trial showed.

“Ublituximab is a novel, chimeric monoclonal antibody targeting a unique epitope on the CD20 antigen, and glycoengineered to enhance affinity for all variants of FcyRIlla receptors, thereby demonstrating greater antibody-dependent cellular toxicity activity than rituximab and ofatumumab,” Amy Lovett-Racke, PhD, said at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.

Dr. Amy Lovett-Racke
The drug is in multiple phase III trials for treatment of hematologic malignancies; but the purpose of the current randomized, placebo-controlled, multicenter phase II study is to test the safety and efficacy of ublituximab in patients with relapsing MS.

In a trial supported by TG Therapeutics, which is developing the agent, Dr. Lovett-Racke of the department of microbial infection and immunity at the Ohio State University Medical Center, Columbus, and her associates reported data from 24 patients who received ublituximab at doses markedly less than those used in ongoing phase III oncology studies, and at a range of infusion times, with a goal of rapid infusions.

The study ran for 48 weeks, and the primary endpoint was responders rate, defined as a percent of patients with at least a 95% reduction in peripheral CD19-positive B-cells within 2 weeks after the second infusion. All patients received the same total dose of 600 mg; only infusion times differed. (Ublituximab was administered on day 1, day 15, and week 24. Placebo IV infusion dose was administered on day 1 and day 15 only.)

The mean age of the study participants was 40 years, and the distribution of time from diagnosis was less than 5 years in 11 patients, 5-10 years in 7 patients, and greater than 10 years in 6 patients.

To date, ublituximab has been well tolerated, with only mild infusion reactions being observed, even with infusion times reduced to 1 hour. The researchers also found that ublituximab resulted in 99% B-cell depletion, meeting the study endpoint of greater than 95% depletion within 2 weeks of the second dose, which is comparable to ocrelizumab.

“Every patient has met the endpoint so far,” Dr. Lovett-Racke said. “Although there is a transient decrease in T cells after the initial dose of ublituximab, T-cell numbers are fairly stable over time. Memory B cells seem slightly more resistant to depletion, but are efficiently depleted in all patients. A comprehensive analysis of B- and T-cell profiles is being performed to understand how B-cell depletion influences T-cell profiles, and to characterize the B-cell repletion.”

TG Therapeutics funded the study. Dr. Lovett-Racke disclosed having received research grants from the National Institutes of Health, the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, and the Strategic Pharmaceutical Academic Research Consortium.

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NEW ORLEANS – The investigative agent ublituximab was well tolerated and demonstrated rapid B-cell depletion in patients with relapsing multiple sclerosis, results from an ongoing phase II trial showed.

“Ublituximab is a novel, chimeric monoclonal antibody targeting a unique epitope on the CD20 antigen, and glycoengineered to enhance affinity for all variants of FcyRIlla receptors, thereby demonstrating greater antibody-dependent cellular toxicity activity than rituximab and ofatumumab,” Amy Lovett-Racke, PhD, said at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.

Dr. Amy Lovett-Racke
The drug is in multiple phase III trials for treatment of hematologic malignancies; but the purpose of the current randomized, placebo-controlled, multicenter phase II study is to test the safety and efficacy of ublituximab in patients with relapsing MS.

In a trial supported by TG Therapeutics, which is developing the agent, Dr. Lovett-Racke of the department of microbial infection and immunity at the Ohio State University Medical Center, Columbus, and her associates reported data from 24 patients who received ublituximab at doses markedly less than those used in ongoing phase III oncology studies, and at a range of infusion times, with a goal of rapid infusions.

The study ran for 48 weeks, and the primary endpoint was responders rate, defined as a percent of patients with at least a 95% reduction in peripheral CD19-positive B-cells within 2 weeks after the second infusion. All patients received the same total dose of 600 mg; only infusion times differed. (Ublituximab was administered on day 1, day 15, and week 24. Placebo IV infusion dose was administered on day 1 and day 15 only.)

The mean age of the study participants was 40 years, and the distribution of time from diagnosis was less than 5 years in 11 patients, 5-10 years in 7 patients, and greater than 10 years in 6 patients.

To date, ublituximab has been well tolerated, with only mild infusion reactions being observed, even with infusion times reduced to 1 hour. The researchers also found that ublituximab resulted in 99% B-cell depletion, meeting the study endpoint of greater than 95% depletion within 2 weeks of the second dose, which is comparable to ocrelizumab.

“Every patient has met the endpoint so far,” Dr. Lovett-Racke said. “Although there is a transient decrease in T cells after the initial dose of ublituximab, T-cell numbers are fairly stable over time. Memory B cells seem slightly more resistant to depletion, but are efficiently depleted in all patients. A comprehensive analysis of B- and T-cell profiles is being performed to understand how B-cell depletion influences T-cell profiles, and to characterize the B-cell repletion.”

TG Therapeutics funded the study. Dr. Lovett-Racke disclosed having received research grants from the National Institutes of Health, the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, and the Strategic Pharmaceutical Academic Research Consortium.

 

NEW ORLEANS – The investigative agent ublituximab was well tolerated and demonstrated rapid B-cell depletion in patients with relapsing multiple sclerosis, results from an ongoing phase II trial showed.

“Ublituximab is a novel, chimeric monoclonal antibody targeting a unique epitope on the CD20 antigen, and glycoengineered to enhance affinity for all variants of FcyRIlla receptors, thereby demonstrating greater antibody-dependent cellular toxicity activity than rituximab and ofatumumab,” Amy Lovett-Racke, PhD, said at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.

Dr. Amy Lovett-Racke
The drug is in multiple phase III trials for treatment of hematologic malignancies; but the purpose of the current randomized, placebo-controlled, multicenter phase II study is to test the safety and efficacy of ublituximab in patients with relapsing MS.

In a trial supported by TG Therapeutics, which is developing the agent, Dr. Lovett-Racke of the department of microbial infection and immunity at the Ohio State University Medical Center, Columbus, and her associates reported data from 24 patients who received ublituximab at doses markedly less than those used in ongoing phase III oncology studies, and at a range of infusion times, with a goal of rapid infusions.

The study ran for 48 weeks, and the primary endpoint was responders rate, defined as a percent of patients with at least a 95% reduction in peripheral CD19-positive B-cells within 2 weeks after the second infusion. All patients received the same total dose of 600 mg; only infusion times differed. (Ublituximab was administered on day 1, day 15, and week 24. Placebo IV infusion dose was administered on day 1 and day 15 only.)

The mean age of the study participants was 40 years, and the distribution of time from diagnosis was less than 5 years in 11 patients, 5-10 years in 7 patients, and greater than 10 years in 6 patients.

To date, ublituximab has been well tolerated, with only mild infusion reactions being observed, even with infusion times reduced to 1 hour. The researchers also found that ublituximab resulted in 99% B-cell depletion, meeting the study endpoint of greater than 95% depletion within 2 weeks of the second dose, which is comparable to ocrelizumab.

“Every patient has met the endpoint so far,” Dr. Lovett-Racke said. “Although there is a transient decrease in T cells after the initial dose of ublituximab, T-cell numbers are fairly stable over time. Memory B cells seem slightly more resistant to depletion, but are efficiently depleted in all patients. A comprehensive analysis of B- and T-cell profiles is being performed to understand how B-cell depletion influences T-cell profiles, and to characterize the B-cell repletion.”

TG Therapeutics funded the study. Dr. Lovett-Racke disclosed having received research grants from the National Institutes of Health, the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, and the Strategic Pharmaceutical Academic Research Consortium.

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Key clinical point: To date, every multiple sclerosis patient treated with ublituximab has met the study endpoint.

Major finding: Use of ublituximab resulted in 99% B-cell depletion among patients with relapsing MS.

Data source: Preliminary results from a phase II placebo-controlled study of 24 MS patients who received ublituximab.

Disclosures: TG Therapeutics funded the study. Dr. Lovett-Racke disclosed having received research grants from the National Institutes of Health, the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, and the Strategic Pharmaceutical Academic Research Consortium.

Can Exercise Boost Cognitive Performance in Patients With MS?

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Treadmill walking may be more effective than stationary cycling at improving cognition.

NEW ORLEANS—A single bout of treadmill walking might affect cognitive processing to a greater degree than stationary cycling, particularly among those with multiple sclerosis (MS) who demonstrate low aerobic fitness, according to a report presented at the 31st Annual Meeting of the Consortium of MS Centers. "This [finding] highlights the importance of targeting those with low aerobic fitness in treadmill walking exercise training interventions for improving cognition in persons with MS, as improving aerobic fitness may be beneficial for reducing MS-related cognitive-motor interference," said Brian M. Sandroff, PhD, of the Kessler Foundation in West Orange, New Jersey, and colleagues.

Brian M. Sandroff, PhD

The mechanisms by which treadmill walking improves cognition in patients with MS are not well understood. Researchers have hypothesized that treadmill walking is essentially a complex cognitive task that requires more attentional resources than other modalities of aerobic exercise (eg, cycle ergometry), and that repeated exposure trains the person in cognitive-motor processing. If this hypothesis is true, then patients with MS should demonstrate worse cognitive performance during treadmill walking than during cycle ergometry, as more attentional resources would presumably be devoted to walking on a treadmill than to cycling on a stationary bicycle. Furthermore, it is unknown whether better aerobic fitness attenuates such cognitive-motor interference in patients with MS.  

Dr. Sandroff and colleagues conducted a pilot study to examine cognitive performance before and during acute bouts of treadmill walking, stationary cycling, and seated quiet rest in 12 fully ambulatory patients with MS with high or low aerobic fitness using a within-subjects, repeated-measures design.  

Participants underwent a baseline incremental exercise test to exhaustion for measurement of aerobic fitness (ie, VO2peak). Participants further completed three experimental conditions that consisted of 20 minutes of moderate- to vigorous-intensity treadmill walking exercise, moderate- to vigorous-intensity cycle ergometer exercise, and seated quiet rest in a randomized, counterbalanced order. Participants underwent the three-second Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test (PASAT) as a measure of cognitive performance prior to and during each condition.  

Overall, decreases in PASAT performance during treadmill walking were not larger than those during cycle ergometry, relative to quiet rest. However, decreases in PASAT performance were larger for those with lower aerobic fitness during treadmill walking than during cycle ergometry, compared with quiet rest.

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Treadmill walking may be more effective than stationary cycling at improving cognition.
Treadmill walking may be more effective than stationary cycling at improving cognition.

NEW ORLEANS—A single bout of treadmill walking might affect cognitive processing to a greater degree than stationary cycling, particularly among those with multiple sclerosis (MS) who demonstrate low aerobic fitness, according to a report presented at the 31st Annual Meeting of the Consortium of MS Centers. "This [finding] highlights the importance of targeting those with low aerobic fitness in treadmill walking exercise training interventions for improving cognition in persons with MS, as improving aerobic fitness may be beneficial for reducing MS-related cognitive-motor interference," said Brian M. Sandroff, PhD, of the Kessler Foundation in West Orange, New Jersey, and colleagues.

Brian M. Sandroff, PhD

The mechanisms by which treadmill walking improves cognition in patients with MS are not well understood. Researchers have hypothesized that treadmill walking is essentially a complex cognitive task that requires more attentional resources than other modalities of aerobic exercise (eg, cycle ergometry), and that repeated exposure trains the person in cognitive-motor processing. If this hypothesis is true, then patients with MS should demonstrate worse cognitive performance during treadmill walking than during cycle ergometry, as more attentional resources would presumably be devoted to walking on a treadmill than to cycling on a stationary bicycle. Furthermore, it is unknown whether better aerobic fitness attenuates such cognitive-motor interference in patients with MS.  

Dr. Sandroff and colleagues conducted a pilot study to examine cognitive performance before and during acute bouts of treadmill walking, stationary cycling, and seated quiet rest in 12 fully ambulatory patients with MS with high or low aerobic fitness using a within-subjects, repeated-measures design.  

Participants underwent a baseline incremental exercise test to exhaustion for measurement of aerobic fitness (ie, VO2peak). Participants further completed three experimental conditions that consisted of 20 minutes of moderate- to vigorous-intensity treadmill walking exercise, moderate- to vigorous-intensity cycle ergometer exercise, and seated quiet rest in a randomized, counterbalanced order. Participants underwent the three-second Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test (PASAT) as a measure of cognitive performance prior to and during each condition.  

Overall, decreases in PASAT performance during treadmill walking were not larger than those during cycle ergometry, relative to quiet rest. However, decreases in PASAT performance were larger for those with lower aerobic fitness during treadmill walking than during cycle ergometry, compared with quiet rest.

NEW ORLEANS—A single bout of treadmill walking might affect cognitive processing to a greater degree than stationary cycling, particularly among those with multiple sclerosis (MS) who demonstrate low aerobic fitness, according to a report presented at the 31st Annual Meeting of the Consortium of MS Centers. "This [finding] highlights the importance of targeting those with low aerobic fitness in treadmill walking exercise training interventions for improving cognition in persons with MS, as improving aerobic fitness may be beneficial for reducing MS-related cognitive-motor interference," said Brian M. Sandroff, PhD, of the Kessler Foundation in West Orange, New Jersey, and colleagues.

Brian M. Sandroff, PhD

The mechanisms by which treadmill walking improves cognition in patients with MS are not well understood. Researchers have hypothesized that treadmill walking is essentially a complex cognitive task that requires more attentional resources than other modalities of aerobic exercise (eg, cycle ergometry), and that repeated exposure trains the person in cognitive-motor processing. If this hypothesis is true, then patients with MS should demonstrate worse cognitive performance during treadmill walking than during cycle ergometry, as more attentional resources would presumably be devoted to walking on a treadmill than to cycling on a stationary bicycle. Furthermore, it is unknown whether better aerobic fitness attenuates such cognitive-motor interference in patients with MS.  

Dr. Sandroff and colleagues conducted a pilot study to examine cognitive performance before and during acute bouts of treadmill walking, stationary cycling, and seated quiet rest in 12 fully ambulatory patients with MS with high or low aerobic fitness using a within-subjects, repeated-measures design.  

Participants underwent a baseline incremental exercise test to exhaustion for measurement of aerobic fitness (ie, VO2peak). Participants further completed three experimental conditions that consisted of 20 minutes of moderate- to vigorous-intensity treadmill walking exercise, moderate- to vigorous-intensity cycle ergometer exercise, and seated quiet rest in a randomized, counterbalanced order. Participants underwent the three-second Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test (PASAT) as a measure of cognitive performance prior to and during each condition.  

Overall, decreases in PASAT performance during treadmill walking were not larger than those during cycle ergometry, relative to quiet rest. However, decreases in PASAT performance were larger for those with lower aerobic fitness during treadmill walking than during cycle ergometry, compared with quiet rest.

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When Should Neurologists Discontinue Disease-Modifying Treatments in Patients With MS?

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Safety monitoring after discontinuing DMT should include annual clinical assessments.

NEW ORLEANS—Discontinuation of disease-modifying treatments (DMTs) may be considered for patients with secondary progressive multiple sclerosis (SPMS) age 55 or older with ongoing progression and no clinical relapses or new MRI lesions consistent with MS in the previous five years, according to research presented at the 31st Annual Meeting of the Consortium of MS Centers. Data from the study also suggest that it is reasonable to consider discontinuing DMTs for patients in the same age range with stable relapsing remitting (RR) MS who have had no clinical relapses or new MRI lesions consistent with MS in the previous five years.

Although DMTs can reduce relapse rates and progression of disability early in the course of RRMS, it remains unknown whether these treatments maintain efficacy late in the course of RRMS, in SPMS, or in older patients. Considerations for discontinuing treatment include potential inefficacy of DMTs and adverse effects in this cohort, said the authors.  

Devyn Parsons, a medical student at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada, working with Anthony Traboulsee, MD, and colleagues, conducted a systematic search to examine literature relevant to the discontinuation of DMTs and to provide guidance about when DMTs may be discontinued. The investigators used the keywords multiple sclerosis, disease modifying treatments, treatment withdrawal, stopping medication, and medication withdrawal to search PubMed, Embase, and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. The search included articles up to June 2016 and was limited to English-language publications. 

The review yielded what Ms. Parsons described as a paucity of information. The investigators found evidence that disease activity in RRMS declined with increasing age and longer disease duration. Some observational studies suggested that older patients who continuously receive DMT and are free of disease activity for several years might be good candidates for discontinuation of DMTs. Since DMTs are associated with adverse events that may affect quality of life or pose serious safety risks, it is important to consider patient preference, said the authors. 

Safety monitoring following discontinuation of DMTs should include annual clinical assessment and annual brain MRIs for two to five years, with consideration of reinitiation of DMTs if evidence of new clinical relapse emerges or more than two new MRI lesions consistent with MS appear, said the researchers.

This study was supported by Sanofi Genzyme.

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Safety monitoring after discontinuing DMT should include annual clinical assessments.
Safety monitoring after discontinuing DMT should include annual clinical assessments.

NEW ORLEANS—Discontinuation of disease-modifying treatments (DMTs) may be considered for patients with secondary progressive multiple sclerosis (SPMS) age 55 or older with ongoing progression and no clinical relapses or new MRI lesions consistent with MS in the previous five years, according to research presented at the 31st Annual Meeting of the Consortium of MS Centers. Data from the study also suggest that it is reasonable to consider discontinuing DMTs for patients in the same age range with stable relapsing remitting (RR) MS who have had no clinical relapses or new MRI lesions consistent with MS in the previous five years.

Although DMTs can reduce relapse rates and progression of disability early in the course of RRMS, it remains unknown whether these treatments maintain efficacy late in the course of RRMS, in SPMS, or in older patients. Considerations for discontinuing treatment include potential inefficacy of DMTs and adverse effects in this cohort, said the authors.  

Devyn Parsons, a medical student at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada, working with Anthony Traboulsee, MD, and colleagues, conducted a systematic search to examine literature relevant to the discontinuation of DMTs and to provide guidance about when DMTs may be discontinued. The investigators used the keywords multiple sclerosis, disease modifying treatments, treatment withdrawal, stopping medication, and medication withdrawal to search PubMed, Embase, and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. The search included articles up to June 2016 and was limited to English-language publications. 

The review yielded what Ms. Parsons described as a paucity of information. The investigators found evidence that disease activity in RRMS declined with increasing age and longer disease duration. Some observational studies suggested that older patients who continuously receive DMT and are free of disease activity for several years might be good candidates for discontinuation of DMTs. Since DMTs are associated with adverse events that may affect quality of life or pose serious safety risks, it is important to consider patient preference, said the authors. 

Safety monitoring following discontinuation of DMTs should include annual clinical assessment and annual brain MRIs for two to five years, with consideration of reinitiation of DMTs if evidence of new clinical relapse emerges or more than two new MRI lesions consistent with MS appear, said the researchers.

This study was supported by Sanofi Genzyme.

NEW ORLEANS—Discontinuation of disease-modifying treatments (DMTs) may be considered for patients with secondary progressive multiple sclerosis (SPMS) age 55 or older with ongoing progression and no clinical relapses or new MRI lesions consistent with MS in the previous five years, according to research presented at the 31st Annual Meeting of the Consortium of MS Centers. Data from the study also suggest that it is reasonable to consider discontinuing DMTs for patients in the same age range with stable relapsing remitting (RR) MS who have had no clinical relapses or new MRI lesions consistent with MS in the previous five years.

Although DMTs can reduce relapse rates and progression of disability early in the course of RRMS, it remains unknown whether these treatments maintain efficacy late in the course of RRMS, in SPMS, or in older patients. Considerations for discontinuing treatment include potential inefficacy of DMTs and adverse effects in this cohort, said the authors.  

Devyn Parsons, a medical student at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada, working with Anthony Traboulsee, MD, and colleagues, conducted a systematic search to examine literature relevant to the discontinuation of DMTs and to provide guidance about when DMTs may be discontinued. The investigators used the keywords multiple sclerosis, disease modifying treatments, treatment withdrawal, stopping medication, and medication withdrawal to search PubMed, Embase, and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. The search included articles up to June 2016 and was limited to English-language publications. 

The review yielded what Ms. Parsons described as a paucity of information. The investigators found evidence that disease activity in RRMS declined with increasing age and longer disease duration. Some observational studies suggested that older patients who continuously receive DMT and are free of disease activity for several years might be good candidates for discontinuation of DMTs. Since DMTs are associated with adverse events that may affect quality of life or pose serious safety risks, it is important to consider patient preference, said the authors. 

Safety monitoring following discontinuation of DMTs should include annual clinical assessment and annual brain MRIs for two to five years, with consideration of reinitiation of DMTs if evidence of new clinical relapse emerges or more than two new MRI lesions consistent with MS appear, said the researchers.

This study was supported by Sanofi Genzyme.

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Pregnancy and MS: How do they affect each other?

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– Multiple sclerosis has little to no impact on the ability to conceive, on pregnancy, or on fetal status, according to Patricia K. Coyle, MD.

“That’s very reassuring,” Dr. Coyle said at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers. “We don’t see an increase in birth defects just because the mother has MS. There is no consistent increase in abortions, ectopic pregnancies, or assisted vaginal/cesarean deliveries.”

Dr. Coyle, director of the MS Comprehensive Care Center at Stony Brook (N.Y.) University Medical Center, said that the most dramatic changes for pregnant patients with MS occur in the final trimester and mainly involve rising levels of multiple hormones: estrogens, cortisol, progesterone, norepinephrine, and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D, which increase late in pregnancy, then rapidly drop off postpartum. This has led to the evaluation of sex hormone therapy for MS.

The impact of other pregnancy factors on MS disease activity remains unknown. One is microchimerism, a maternal-fetal exchange of cells and DNA. “These cells can last for a long time; you can find them in the blood, as well as in the [central nervous system],” Dr. Coyle said. “It’s been reported that fetal microchimerism may be increased in immune-mediated diseases like MS, but we really don’t have a lot of good data.”

Dr. Patricia Coyle
Also of unknown impact are exosomes, which are small lipid-bound vesicles that are increased in the sera during pregnancy. “They appear to be involved in modulating the immune system. They’ve been studied in [experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis], where they’ve been reported to have a potent effect. We don’t know if exosomes play a role in MS or not.”

Researchers also are studying the impact of changes in the gut microbiota that occur during pregnancy. “Could this be a potential target for MS therapy?” Dr. Coyle asked. “This is in its infancy.”
 

Counseling tips

She went on to share counseling tips for MS patients of childbearing age, including the fact that some studies report slightly smaller babies born to mothers with MS, while others have not found that association. “This is a question mark, but it doesn’t seem to be a major issue,” she said. One thing you can tell patients for certain is that MS is not inherited. “There are well over 230 genes linked to MS, so there’s a genetic enrichment that can make somebody vulnerable to MS, but there’s no gene that passes on MS,” Dr. Coyle said. “The risk is slightly higher for a first-degree relative, so when a parent has MS, the risk for the child is in the range of 2% to 2.5%, compared with the expected 0.13% in the general population. But there’s a slightly higher risk when you’re a sibling than when you’re a parent – 2.7% – which is speaking to environmental factors having an important impact on genes.”

Controversial data exist as to whether a maternal deficiency in vitamin D poses a risk of MS in the offspring. Dr. Coyle makes it a point to “normalize” vitamin D levels in pregnant MS patients, particularly in white patients. “You’d want to have them on prenatal vitamins and folic acid and tell them not to smoke, to limit their alcohol use, and advise them to have good sleep hygiene.”

Dr. Coyle, vice chair of clinical affairs at Stony Brook University Medical Center, said that up until the 1950s, physicians advised women with MS against having children. “They were told not to get pregnant or to have an abortion, because it was thought to make MS worse,” she said. “It turns out that was fiction. That was completely wrong. Pregnancy has no negative effect on long-term MS prognosis. It may have long-term benefits for relapsing MS, but there are not enough data to comment on its impact on progressive MS. Pregnancy makes it less likely that someone will develop a clinically isolated syndrome, but it may increase the radiologically isolated syndrome risk for clinical attack. That’s based on 7 pregnant patients out of a cohort of 60, so we need further data to explain that.”
 

Disease-modifying therapies

When it comes to washouts of disease-modifying therapies (DMTs), no one-size-fits-all approach exists. Interferon betas and glatiramer acetate have more than 1,000 pregnancy exposures that yield no evidence for teratogenicity or negative fetal impact. No washout is needed prior to pregnancy. “These agents can be used during pregnancy and breastfeeding,” she said.

The other DMTs paint a somewhat different picture. “There is insufficient pregnancy exposure to the three available oral DMTs to comment definitively on their safety, but there is no clear human teratogenicity to date,” Dr. Coyle said. The conventional washout for fingolimod is 8 weeks. In Dr. Coyle’s opinion, no washout is required with dimethyl fumarate. “The half-life is 40 minutes. There are no good signs of issues. For teriflunomide, it can hang around in individuals for 18-24 months. You should go through an accelerated elimination procedure with oral cholestyramine 8 mg three times a day for 11 days until blood level of the agent is less than 0.02 mcg/mL. Avoid all the orals with breastfeeding.”

Monoclonal antibodies – another form of DMTs – lack sufficient pregnancy exposures to merit comment on safety, but they should not be used during breastfeeding. Natalizumab is a humanized IgG4 antibody that crosses the placenta. “This has been used in several dozen pregnancies because the patients got so bad when they were taken off that it required reinstituting natalizumab even though they were pregnant,” Dr. Coyle said. “Human pregnancy exposures have been associated with transient hematologic issues in the newborn, including anemia, thrombocytopenia, and pancytopenia.” Data indicate that the rate of spontaneous abortion among pregnant women treated with natalizumab was 9%, the rate of major birth defects was 5.05%, and no malformation pattern was observed. The drug is detected in human breast milk and has a half-life of 11 days.

Alemtuzumab is a humanized IgG1 monoclonal antibody that crosses the placenta. The half-life elimination is about 14 days. In transgenic mice, giving alemtuzumab during organogenesis was found to be embryolethal. In human pregnancy, hypothyroidism is a concern. “The recommendation has been to wait 4 months after the last treatment before you try to become pregnant. Alemtuzumab is considered a two-cycle treatment. You don’t get the maximum benefit after the first cycle of 5 days. The complete treatment is the second cycle 3 days.”

Daclizumab, another humanized IgG1 monoclonal antibody, also crosses the placenta. Monkey exposure during gestation led to embryofetal death and decreased fetal growth, “but this was at greater than 30 times the human dose,” she said. “It was found to be excreted in monkey breast milk and the half-life is 21 days.” In humans, there have been 36 exposed women who had 38 pregnancies and 20 live births. The rate of spontaneous abortions/miscarriages was 11%, there were eight elective terminations, two ectopic pregnancies, and one congenital heart defect. “This is very limited data, but nothing that would raise the level of concern,” Dr. Coyle said.

Ocrelizumab, another humanized IgG1 monoclonal antibody, was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in March 2017. Prior studies of anti-CD20 antibodies in human pregnancy noted transient lymphocytopenia and peripheral B cell depletion in the newborns. In studies of pregnant monkeys that used 2 and 10 times human doses during organogenesis, it was associated with B cell depletion in spleen/lymph nodes, Dr. Coyle said. “During organogenesis and throughout the neonatal period, treatment could be associated with perinatal death, some associated with bacterial infection; glomerulonephropathy with inflammation; a decrease in circulating B cells, a decrease in testicular weight, and bone marrow lymphoid follicle formation.” Ocrelizumab is excreted in monkey breast milk and the prescription label suggests a 6-month delay in pregnancy. The drug’s half-life is 26 days.

Dr. Coyle reported that she has served as a consultant for Accordant, Acorda, Bayer, Biogen, Celgene, Genentech/Roche, Genzyme/Sanofi, Novartis, Serono, and Teva. She has also received research support from Actelion, Alkermes, Genentech/Roche, MedDay, the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, and Novartis.

 

 

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– Multiple sclerosis has little to no impact on the ability to conceive, on pregnancy, or on fetal status, according to Patricia K. Coyle, MD.

“That’s very reassuring,” Dr. Coyle said at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers. “We don’t see an increase in birth defects just because the mother has MS. There is no consistent increase in abortions, ectopic pregnancies, or assisted vaginal/cesarean deliveries.”

Dr. Coyle, director of the MS Comprehensive Care Center at Stony Brook (N.Y.) University Medical Center, said that the most dramatic changes for pregnant patients with MS occur in the final trimester and mainly involve rising levels of multiple hormones: estrogens, cortisol, progesterone, norepinephrine, and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D, which increase late in pregnancy, then rapidly drop off postpartum. This has led to the evaluation of sex hormone therapy for MS.

The impact of other pregnancy factors on MS disease activity remains unknown. One is microchimerism, a maternal-fetal exchange of cells and DNA. “These cells can last for a long time; you can find them in the blood, as well as in the [central nervous system],” Dr. Coyle said. “It’s been reported that fetal microchimerism may be increased in immune-mediated diseases like MS, but we really don’t have a lot of good data.”

Dr. Patricia Coyle
Also of unknown impact are exosomes, which are small lipid-bound vesicles that are increased in the sera during pregnancy. “They appear to be involved in modulating the immune system. They’ve been studied in [experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis], where they’ve been reported to have a potent effect. We don’t know if exosomes play a role in MS or not.”

Researchers also are studying the impact of changes in the gut microbiota that occur during pregnancy. “Could this be a potential target for MS therapy?” Dr. Coyle asked. “This is in its infancy.”
 

Counseling tips

She went on to share counseling tips for MS patients of childbearing age, including the fact that some studies report slightly smaller babies born to mothers with MS, while others have not found that association. “This is a question mark, but it doesn’t seem to be a major issue,” she said. One thing you can tell patients for certain is that MS is not inherited. “There are well over 230 genes linked to MS, so there’s a genetic enrichment that can make somebody vulnerable to MS, but there’s no gene that passes on MS,” Dr. Coyle said. “The risk is slightly higher for a first-degree relative, so when a parent has MS, the risk for the child is in the range of 2% to 2.5%, compared with the expected 0.13% in the general population. But there’s a slightly higher risk when you’re a sibling than when you’re a parent – 2.7% – which is speaking to environmental factors having an important impact on genes.”

Controversial data exist as to whether a maternal deficiency in vitamin D poses a risk of MS in the offspring. Dr. Coyle makes it a point to “normalize” vitamin D levels in pregnant MS patients, particularly in white patients. “You’d want to have them on prenatal vitamins and folic acid and tell them not to smoke, to limit their alcohol use, and advise them to have good sleep hygiene.”

Dr. Coyle, vice chair of clinical affairs at Stony Brook University Medical Center, said that up until the 1950s, physicians advised women with MS against having children. “They were told not to get pregnant or to have an abortion, because it was thought to make MS worse,” she said. “It turns out that was fiction. That was completely wrong. Pregnancy has no negative effect on long-term MS prognosis. It may have long-term benefits for relapsing MS, but there are not enough data to comment on its impact on progressive MS. Pregnancy makes it less likely that someone will develop a clinically isolated syndrome, but it may increase the radiologically isolated syndrome risk for clinical attack. That’s based on 7 pregnant patients out of a cohort of 60, so we need further data to explain that.”
 

Disease-modifying therapies

When it comes to washouts of disease-modifying therapies (DMTs), no one-size-fits-all approach exists. Interferon betas and glatiramer acetate have more than 1,000 pregnancy exposures that yield no evidence for teratogenicity or negative fetal impact. No washout is needed prior to pregnancy. “These agents can be used during pregnancy and breastfeeding,” she said.

The other DMTs paint a somewhat different picture. “There is insufficient pregnancy exposure to the three available oral DMTs to comment definitively on their safety, but there is no clear human teratogenicity to date,” Dr. Coyle said. The conventional washout for fingolimod is 8 weeks. In Dr. Coyle’s opinion, no washout is required with dimethyl fumarate. “The half-life is 40 minutes. There are no good signs of issues. For teriflunomide, it can hang around in individuals for 18-24 months. You should go through an accelerated elimination procedure with oral cholestyramine 8 mg three times a day for 11 days until blood level of the agent is less than 0.02 mcg/mL. Avoid all the orals with breastfeeding.”

Monoclonal antibodies – another form of DMTs – lack sufficient pregnancy exposures to merit comment on safety, but they should not be used during breastfeeding. Natalizumab is a humanized IgG4 antibody that crosses the placenta. “This has been used in several dozen pregnancies because the patients got so bad when they were taken off that it required reinstituting natalizumab even though they were pregnant,” Dr. Coyle said. “Human pregnancy exposures have been associated with transient hematologic issues in the newborn, including anemia, thrombocytopenia, and pancytopenia.” Data indicate that the rate of spontaneous abortion among pregnant women treated with natalizumab was 9%, the rate of major birth defects was 5.05%, and no malformation pattern was observed. The drug is detected in human breast milk and has a half-life of 11 days.

Alemtuzumab is a humanized IgG1 monoclonal antibody that crosses the placenta. The half-life elimination is about 14 days. In transgenic mice, giving alemtuzumab during organogenesis was found to be embryolethal. In human pregnancy, hypothyroidism is a concern. “The recommendation has been to wait 4 months after the last treatment before you try to become pregnant. Alemtuzumab is considered a two-cycle treatment. You don’t get the maximum benefit after the first cycle of 5 days. The complete treatment is the second cycle 3 days.”

Daclizumab, another humanized IgG1 monoclonal antibody, also crosses the placenta. Monkey exposure during gestation led to embryofetal death and decreased fetal growth, “but this was at greater than 30 times the human dose,” she said. “It was found to be excreted in monkey breast milk and the half-life is 21 days.” In humans, there have been 36 exposed women who had 38 pregnancies and 20 live births. The rate of spontaneous abortions/miscarriages was 11%, there were eight elective terminations, two ectopic pregnancies, and one congenital heart defect. “This is very limited data, but nothing that would raise the level of concern,” Dr. Coyle said.

Ocrelizumab, another humanized IgG1 monoclonal antibody, was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in March 2017. Prior studies of anti-CD20 antibodies in human pregnancy noted transient lymphocytopenia and peripheral B cell depletion in the newborns. In studies of pregnant monkeys that used 2 and 10 times human doses during organogenesis, it was associated with B cell depletion in spleen/lymph nodes, Dr. Coyle said. “During organogenesis and throughout the neonatal period, treatment could be associated with perinatal death, some associated with bacterial infection; glomerulonephropathy with inflammation; a decrease in circulating B cells, a decrease in testicular weight, and bone marrow lymphoid follicle formation.” Ocrelizumab is excreted in monkey breast milk and the prescription label suggests a 6-month delay in pregnancy. The drug’s half-life is 26 days.

Dr. Coyle reported that she has served as a consultant for Accordant, Acorda, Bayer, Biogen, Celgene, Genentech/Roche, Genzyme/Sanofi, Novartis, Serono, and Teva. She has also received research support from Actelion, Alkermes, Genentech/Roche, MedDay, the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, and Novartis.

 

 

 

– Multiple sclerosis has little to no impact on the ability to conceive, on pregnancy, or on fetal status, according to Patricia K. Coyle, MD.

“That’s very reassuring,” Dr. Coyle said at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers. “We don’t see an increase in birth defects just because the mother has MS. There is no consistent increase in abortions, ectopic pregnancies, or assisted vaginal/cesarean deliveries.”

Dr. Coyle, director of the MS Comprehensive Care Center at Stony Brook (N.Y.) University Medical Center, said that the most dramatic changes for pregnant patients with MS occur in the final trimester and mainly involve rising levels of multiple hormones: estrogens, cortisol, progesterone, norepinephrine, and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D, which increase late in pregnancy, then rapidly drop off postpartum. This has led to the evaluation of sex hormone therapy for MS.

The impact of other pregnancy factors on MS disease activity remains unknown. One is microchimerism, a maternal-fetal exchange of cells and DNA. “These cells can last for a long time; you can find them in the blood, as well as in the [central nervous system],” Dr. Coyle said. “It’s been reported that fetal microchimerism may be increased in immune-mediated diseases like MS, but we really don’t have a lot of good data.”

Dr. Patricia Coyle
Also of unknown impact are exosomes, which are small lipid-bound vesicles that are increased in the sera during pregnancy. “They appear to be involved in modulating the immune system. They’ve been studied in [experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis], where they’ve been reported to have a potent effect. We don’t know if exosomes play a role in MS or not.”

Researchers also are studying the impact of changes in the gut microbiota that occur during pregnancy. “Could this be a potential target for MS therapy?” Dr. Coyle asked. “This is in its infancy.”
 

Counseling tips

She went on to share counseling tips for MS patients of childbearing age, including the fact that some studies report slightly smaller babies born to mothers with MS, while others have not found that association. “This is a question mark, but it doesn’t seem to be a major issue,” she said. One thing you can tell patients for certain is that MS is not inherited. “There are well over 230 genes linked to MS, so there’s a genetic enrichment that can make somebody vulnerable to MS, but there’s no gene that passes on MS,” Dr. Coyle said. “The risk is slightly higher for a first-degree relative, so when a parent has MS, the risk for the child is in the range of 2% to 2.5%, compared with the expected 0.13% in the general population. But there’s a slightly higher risk when you’re a sibling than when you’re a parent – 2.7% – which is speaking to environmental factors having an important impact on genes.”

Controversial data exist as to whether a maternal deficiency in vitamin D poses a risk of MS in the offspring. Dr. Coyle makes it a point to “normalize” vitamin D levels in pregnant MS patients, particularly in white patients. “You’d want to have them on prenatal vitamins and folic acid and tell them not to smoke, to limit their alcohol use, and advise them to have good sleep hygiene.”

Dr. Coyle, vice chair of clinical affairs at Stony Brook University Medical Center, said that up until the 1950s, physicians advised women with MS against having children. “They were told not to get pregnant or to have an abortion, because it was thought to make MS worse,” she said. “It turns out that was fiction. That was completely wrong. Pregnancy has no negative effect on long-term MS prognosis. It may have long-term benefits for relapsing MS, but there are not enough data to comment on its impact on progressive MS. Pregnancy makes it less likely that someone will develop a clinically isolated syndrome, but it may increase the radiologically isolated syndrome risk for clinical attack. That’s based on 7 pregnant patients out of a cohort of 60, so we need further data to explain that.”
 

Disease-modifying therapies

When it comes to washouts of disease-modifying therapies (DMTs), no one-size-fits-all approach exists. Interferon betas and glatiramer acetate have more than 1,000 pregnancy exposures that yield no evidence for teratogenicity or negative fetal impact. No washout is needed prior to pregnancy. “These agents can be used during pregnancy and breastfeeding,” she said.

The other DMTs paint a somewhat different picture. “There is insufficient pregnancy exposure to the three available oral DMTs to comment definitively on their safety, but there is no clear human teratogenicity to date,” Dr. Coyle said. The conventional washout for fingolimod is 8 weeks. In Dr. Coyle’s opinion, no washout is required with dimethyl fumarate. “The half-life is 40 minutes. There are no good signs of issues. For teriflunomide, it can hang around in individuals for 18-24 months. You should go through an accelerated elimination procedure with oral cholestyramine 8 mg three times a day for 11 days until blood level of the agent is less than 0.02 mcg/mL. Avoid all the orals with breastfeeding.”

Monoclonal antibodies – another form of DMTs – lack sufficient pregnancy exposures to merit comment on safety, but they should not be used during breastfeeding. Natalizumab is a humanized IgG4 antibody that crosses the placenta. “This has been used in several dozen pregnancies because the patients got so bad when they were taken off that it required reinstituting natalizumab even though they were pregnant,” Dr. Coyle said. “Human pregnancy exposures have been associated with transient hematologic issues in the newborn, including anemia, thrombocytopenia, and pancytopenia.” Data indicate that the rate of spontaneous abortion among pregnant women treated with natalizumab was 9%, the rate of major birth defects was 5.05%, and no malformation pattern was observed. The drug is detected in human breast milk and has a half-life of 11 days.

Alemtuzumab is a humanized IgG1 monoclonal antibody that crosses the placenta. The half-life elimination is about 14 days. In transgenic mice, giving alemtuzumab during organogenesis was found to be embryolethal. In human pregnancy, hypothyroidism is a concern. “The recommendation has been to wait 4 months after the last treatment before you try to become pregnant. Alemtuzumab is considered a two-cycle treatment. You don’t get the maximum benefit after the first cycle of 5 days. The complete treatment is the second cycle 3 days.”

Daclizumab, another humanized IgG1 monoclonal antibody, also crosses the placenta. Monkey exposure during gestation led to embryofetal death and decreased fetal growth, “but this was at greater than 30 times the human dose,” she said. “It was found to be excreted in monkey breast milk and the half-life is 21 days.” In humans, there have been 36 exposed women who had 38 pregnancies and 20 live births. The rate of spontaneous abortions/miscarriages was 11%, there were eight elective terminations, two ectopic pregnancies, and one congenital heart defect. “This is very limited data, but nothing that would raise the level of concern,” Dr. Coyle said.

Ocrelizumab, another humanized IgG1 monoclonal antibody, was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in March 2017. Prior studies of anti-CD20 antibodies in human pregnancy noted transient lymphocytopenia and peripheral B cell depletion in the newborns. In studies of pregnant monkeys that used 2 and 10 times human doses during organogenesis, it was associated with B cell depletion in spleen/lymph nodes, Dr. Coyle said. “During organogenesis and throughout the neonatal period, treatment could be associated with perinatal death, some associated with bacterial infection; glomerulonephropathy with inflammation; a decrease in circulating B cells, a decrease in testicular weight, and bone marrow lymphoid follicle formation.” Ocrelizumab is excreted in monkey breast milk and the prescription label suggests a 6-month delay in pregnancy. The drug’s half-life is 26 days.

Dr. Coyle reported that she has served as a consultant for Accordant, Acorda, Bayer, Biogen, Celgene, Genentech/Roche, Genzyme/Sanofi, Novartis, Serono, and Teva. She has also received research support from Actelion, Alkermes, Genentech/Roche, MedDay, the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, and Novartis.

 

 

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Study sheds light on pregnancy outcomes following ocrelizumab treatment

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Fri, 01/18/2019 - 16:50

 

– Data from the ocrelizumab clinical development program gives clinicians a first look at pregnancy outcomes after exposure to the drug, but the small size limits the ability to draw firm conclusions.

In the United States, prescribing information for ocrelizumab states that women of childbearing potential should use contraception while receiving ocrelizumab and for 6 months after the last infusion. At the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers, researchers led by Sibyl Wray, MD, set out to assess the pregnancy, fetal, neonatal and infant outcomes in patients who became pregnant during ocrelizumab trials in MS, rheumatoid arthritis (RA), and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) through Sept. 15, 2015.

Doug Brunk/Frontline Medical News
Dr. Sibyl Wray
“This is a little different from registry data because, in registries, it’s all MS patients,” Dr. Wray, a neurologist at Hope Neurology Multiple Sclerosis Center in Knoxville, Tenn., said in an interview. “This is a mix of people who were treated with ocrelizumab who had MS, RA, and lupus. In the RA population they were also treated with methotrexate, so that complicates things a little bit.”

The analysis included ocrelizumab-exposed women in primarily European-based clinical trials in patients with MS, RA, or SLE, in whom doses ranged from 20 mg to 2,000 mg. These included three randomized trials of its use in MS, totaling 1,876 patients with a mean age of 40 years; four trials of its use in RA, totaling 2,759 patients with a mean age of 53 years; and one trial of its use in SLE, totaling 381 patients with a mean age of 31 years. Between 2008 and Sept. 14, 2015, a total of 48 women who were enrolled in the trials reported pregnancies.

MS data

Of the 15 pregnancies in the MS trials, three involved the delivery of full term, healthy newborns. In one case, the last ocrelizumab infusion was given 28 months before conception. In the second case, an infusion was given 20 weeks before conception, and a further infusion was given 17 days after conception. In the third case, the last ocrelizumab infusion was given 26.5 weeks before conception.

One live term birth occurred with an abnormal finding. In this case, the last infusion of ocrelizumab was 23 weeks prior to the last menstrual period or about 6 months prior to conception. The embryo/fetus was not exposed to the drug in utero. The researchers also found that seven elective terminations occurred among MS patients and that four pregnancies were ongoing at the time of this report.

“We have to be cautious because we don’t have enough data yet to know, but it’s encouraging to see that, if you follow the guidelines, the patient population and the newborns seem to be healthy in these exposed individuals,” Dr. Wray said.

RA data

Data from the RA clinical trials revealed 22 pregnancies in 21 patients exposed to ocrelizumab. Of these, eight pregnancies resulted in healthy term babies; four resulted in live births with abnormal findings (structural malformation, growth abnormality) or preterm birth; and eight pregnancies in seven women resulted in spontaneous abortion (one patient experienced a spontaneous abortion on two occasions), missed abortion, or an embryonic pregnancy. One pregnancy was lost to follow-up and another resulted in elective termination.

SLE data

During the SLE trials, 11 pregnancies occurred in 10 patients. Three pregnancies in two women resulted in healthy term babies. Three other pregnancies resulted in live births with an abnormal finding (structural malformation, functional deficit, growth abnormality) and/or preterm birth. Two pregnancies resulted in spontaneous/missed abortion. One pregnancy resulted in fetal death at 7.5 months’ gestation secondary to fatal pulmonary embolism in the mother; one pregnancy resulted in elective termination; and one pregnancy resulted in a healthy baby born at an unknown gestational week.

Dr. Wray emphasized that the small numbers of patients studied make it difficult to draw conclusions about pregnancy outcomes following ocrelizumab in patients with MS and other autoimmune diseases. “We need to pay attention to the half-life of this drug, the time it takes to clear, and how to plan pregnancies around that,” she said. She noted that pregnancy outcomes in ongoing ocrelizumab studies and postmarketing experiences will continue to be collected and assessed.

The study was funded by Roche, Basel, Switzerland. Dr. Wray reported that she has received honoraria and/or research funding from Actelion, Alkermes, Biogen, Celgene, EMD Serono, Genentech/Roche, Genzyme/Sanofi, Novartis, and TG Therapeutics.

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– Data from the ocrelizumab clinical development program gives clinicians a first look at pregnancy outcomes after exposure to the drug, but the small size limits the ability to draw firm conclusions.

In the United States, prescribing information for ocrelizumab states that women of childbearing potential should use contraception while receiving ocrelizumab and for 6 months after the last infusion. At the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers, researchers led by Sibyl Wray, MD, set out to assess the pregnancy, fetal, neonatal and infant outcomes in patients who became pregnant during ocrelizumab trials in MS, rheumatoid arthritis (RA), and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) through Sept. 15, 2015.

Doug Brunk/Frontline Medical News
Dr. Sibyl Wray
“This is a little different from registry data because, in registries, it’s all MS patients,” Dr. Wray, a neurologist at Hope Neurology Multiple Sclerosis Center in Knoxville, Tenn., said in an interview. “This is a mix of people who were treated with ocrelizumab who had MS, RA, and lupus. In the RA population they were also treated with methotrexate, so that complicates things a little bit.”

The analysis included ocrelizumab-exposed women in primarily European-based clinical trials in patients with MS, RA, or SLE, in whom doses ranged from 20 mg to 2,000 mg. These included three randomized trials of its use in MS, totaling 1,876 patients with a mean age of 40 years; four trials of its use in RA, totaling 2,759 patients with a mean age of 53 years; and one trial of its use in SLE, totaling 381 patients with a mean age of 31 years. Between 2008 and Sept. 14, 2015, a total of 48 women who were enrolled in the trials reported pregnancies.

MS data

Of the 15 pregnancies in the MS trials, three involved the delivery of full term, healthy newborns. In one case, the last ocrelizumab infusion was given 28 months before conception. In the second case, an infusion was given 20 weeks before conception, and a further infusion was given 17 days after conception. In the third case, the last ocrelizumab infusion was given 26.5 weeks before conception.

One live term birth occurred with an abnormal finding. In this case, the last infusion of ocrelizumab was 23 weeks prior to the last menstrual period or about 6 months prior to conception. The embryo/fetus was not exposed to the drug in utero. The researchers also found that seven elective terminations occurred among MS patients and that four pregnancies were ongoing at the time of this report.

“We have to be cautious because we don’t have enough data yet to know, but it’s encouraging to see that, if you follow the guidelines, the patient population and the newborns seem to be healthy in these exposed individuals,” Dr. Wray said.

RA data

Data from the RA clinical trials revealed 22 pregnancies in 21 patients exposed to ocrelizumab. Of these, eight pregnancies resulted in healthy term babies; four resulted in live births with abnormal findings (structural malformation, growth abnormality) or preterm birth; and eight pregnancies in seven women resulted in spontaneous abortion (one patient experienced a spontaneous abortion on two occasions), missed abortion, or an embryonic pregnancy. One pregnancy was lost to follow-up and another resulted in elective termination.

SLE data

During the SLE trials, 11 pregnancies occurred in 10 patients. Three pregnancies in two women resulted in healthy term babies. Three other pregnancies resulted in live births with an abnormal finding (structural malformation, functional deficit, growth abnormality) and/or preterm birth. Two pregnancies resulted in spontaneous/missed abortion. One pregnancy resulted in fetal death at 7.5 months’ gestation secondary to fatal pulmonary embolism in the mother; one pregnancy resulted in elective termination; and one pregnancy resulted in a healthy baby born at an unknown gestational week.

Dr. Wray emphasized that the small numbers of patients studied make it difficult to draw conclusions about pregnancy outcomes following ocrelizumab in patients with MS and other autoimmune diseases. “We need to pay attention to the half-life of this drug, the time it takes to clear, and how to plan pregnancies around that,” she said. She noted that pregnancy outcomes in ongoing ocrelizumab studies and postmarketing experiences will continue to be collected and assessed.

The study was funded by Roche, Basel, Switzerland. Dr. Wray reported that she has received honoraria and/or research funding from Actelion, Alkermes, Biogen, Celgene, EMD Serono, Genentech/Roche, Genzyme/Sanofi, Novartis, and TG Therapeutics.

 

– Data from the ocrelizumab clinical development program gives clinicians a first look at pregnancy outcomes after exposure to the drug, but the small size limits the ability to draw firm conclusions.

In the United States, prescribing information for ocrelizumab states that women of childbearing potential should use contraception while receiving ocrelizumab and for 6 months after the last infusion. At the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers, researchers led by Sibyl Wray, MD, set out to assess the pregnancy, fetal, neonatal and infant outcomes in patients who became pregnant during ocrelizumab trials in MS, rheumatoid arthritis (RA), and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) through Sept. 15, 2015.

Doug Brunk/Frontline Medical News
Dr. Sibyl Wray
“This is a little different from registry data because, in registries, it’s all MS patients,” Dr. Wray, a neurologist at Hope Neurology Multiple Sclerosis Center in Knoxville, Tenn., said in an interview. “This is a mix of people who were treated with ocrelizumab who had MS, RA, and lupus. In the RA population they were also treated with methotrexate, so that complicates things a little bit.”

The analysis included ocrelizumab-exposed women in primarily European-based clinical trials in patients with MS, RA, or SLE, in whom doses ranged from 20 mg to 2,000 mg. These included three randomized trials of its use in MS, totaling 1,876 patients with a mean age of 40 years; four trials of its use in RA, totaling 2,759 patients with a mean age of 53 years; and one trial of its use in SLE, totaling 381 patients with a mean age of 31 years. Between 2008 and Sept. 14, 2015, a total of 48 women who were enrolled in the trials reported pregnancies.

MS data

Of the 15 pregnancies in the MS trials, three involved the delivery of full term, healthy newborns. In one case, the last ocrelizumab infusion was given 28 months before conception. In the second case, an infusion was given 20 weeks before conception, and a further infusion was given 17 days after conception. In the third case, the last ocrelizumab infusion was given 26.5 weeks before conception.

One live term birth occurred with an abnormal finding. In this case, the last infusion of ocrelizumab was 23 weeks prior to the last menstrual period or about 6 months prior to conception. The embryo/fetus was not exposed to the drug in utero. The researchers also found that seven elective terminations occurred among MS patients and that four pregnancies were ongoing at the time of this report.

“We have to be cautious because we don’t have enough data yet to know, but it’s encouraging to see that, if you follow the guidelines, the patient population and the newborns seem to be healthy in these exposed individuals,” Dr. Wray said.

RA data

Data from the RA clinical trials revealed 22 pregnancies in 21 patients exposed to ocrelizumab. Of these, eight pregnancies resulted in healthy term babies; four resulted in live births with abnormal findings (structural malformation, growth abnormality) or preterm birth; and eight pregnancies in seven women resulted in spontaneous abortion (one patient experienced a spontaneous abortion on two occasions), missed abortion, or an embryonic pregnancy. One pregnancy was lost to follow-up and another resulted in elective termination.

SLE data

During the SLE trials, 11 pregnancies occurred in 10 patients. Three pregnancies in two women resulted in healthy term babies. Three other pregnancies resulted in live births with an abnormal finding (structural malformation, functional deficit, growth abnormality) and/or preterm birth. Two pregnancies resulted in spontaneous/missed abortion. One pregnancy resulted in fetal death at 7.5 months’ gestation secondary to fatal pulmonary embolism in the mother; one pregnancy resulted in elective termination; and one pregnancy resulted in a healthy baby born at an unknown gestational week.

Dr. Wray emphasized that the small numbers of patients studied make it difficult to draw conclusions about pregnancy outcomes following ocrelizumab in patients with MS and other autoimmune diseases. “We need to pay attention to the half-life of this drug, the time it takes to clear, and how to plan pregnancies around that,” she said. She noted that pregnancy outcomes in ongoing ocrelizumab studies and postmarketing experiences will continue to be collected and assessed.

The study was funded by Roche, Basel, Switzerland. Dr. Wray reported that she has received honoraria and/or research funding from Actelion, Alkermes, Biogen, Celgene, EMD Serono, Genentech/Roche, Genzyme/Sanofi, Novartis, and TG Therapeutics.

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Key clinical point: Women of childbearing potential should use contraception while receiving ocrelizumab and for 6 months after.

Major finding: Of 15 pregnancies in the MS trials, three involved the delivery of three full term, healthy newborns; one live term birth occurred with an abnormal finding; seven elective terminations occurred; and four pregnancies were ongoing.

Data source: A review of 48 pregnancies among women enrolled in clinical trials for ocrelizumab in MS, rheumatoid arthritis, and systemic lupus erythematosus.

Disclosures: The study was funded by Roche, Basel, Switzerland. Dr. Wray reported that she has received honoraria and/or research funding from Actelion, Alkermes, Biogen, Celgene, EMD Serono, Genentech/Roche, Genzyme/Sanofi, Novartis, and TG Therapeutics.

What’s the evidence for stopping DMTs in MS patients?

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Mon, 01/07/2019 - 12:55

 

NEW ORLEANS – There appear to be four clinical situations “when it might be reasonable to open up conversations with patients about discontinuation of DMTs,” Devyn Parsons said at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.

While disease-modifying treatments (DMTs) are well established in their ability to decrease relapse rates and slow the progression of disability early in the course of relapsing-remitting MS, it remains unknown whether they maintain their efficacy late in the course of disease after many years of treatment or after progression to secondary progressive MS, said Ms. Parsons, a medical student at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver. Scientific evidence related to when disease-modifying treatments should be discontinued in patients with multiple sclerosis is generally poor, she said.

Devyn Parsons
Ms Parsons and her associates set out to review the literature relevant to the discontinuation of DMTs and to provide some initial clinical recommendations on the circumstances in which discontinuation of DMTs may be a reasonable choice. The researchers assembled four clinical situations in which a discussion with patients about discontinuation of DMTs would be a reasonable option. “These are not meant to be firm guidelines, but rather more of a jumping-off point for discussion regarding this issue,” Ms. Parsons said. They include:

• Patients with secondary progressive MS who have ongoing progression and no new brain or spinal MRI lesions during the prior 12-24 months.

• Patients with stable relapsing-remitting MS aged 65 or older who have had no new brain or spinal MRI lesions during the prior 12-24 months.

• Patients with stable relapsing-remitting MS aged 55-65 years with no new brain or spinal MRI lesions within the prior 5 years.

• Patients who are pregnant or trying to conceive, or breastfeeding.

“Upon discontinuation of DMTs patients should continue to undergo annual assessments and an annual brain MRI for at least 2-5 years,” Ms. Parsons said. “Reuse of DMTs should be considered if there’s any evidence of relapse or new MRI lesion.”

The investigators conducted a systematic review of medical literature from MEDLINE, EMBASE, and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews through June of 2016. They used the keywords “multiple sclerosis” and “disease-modifying treatments” and “treatment withdrawal” or “stopping medication” or “medication withdrawal.” Articles were reviewed in full and classified according to the American Academy of Neurology’s classification of evidence guidelines.

The review yielded what Ms. Parsons described as “a paucity of information” in the existing literature on MS course following discontinuation of DMTs. “There have been no randomized, controlled trials on the subject, and relatively few observational studies,” she said. “Of the observational studies that do exist, several have suggested a return to baseline disease activity following discontinuation of DMTs. In particular these studies examined natalizumab and interferon beta-1a discontinuation. At first glance these studies seem to suggest that discontinuation of DMTs is generally not appropriate, as there is likely to be a return to baseline disease activity. But it’s important to consider that many of these were retrospective, cross-sectional studies with small patient populations and aren’t the best quality data. Furthermore, these studies had relatively short follow-up periods, they didn’t include older patients, and they examined the discontinuation of DMTs after less than 2 years of continuous treatment. These results may not apply to older patients, and they might not apply to patients who have been continuously treated with DMTs for many years. At this point there is sufficient evidence in the literature to allow a randomized, controlled trial in a low-risk patient population of discontinuations of DMTs.”

Ms. Parsons discussed three observational studies from the review. One was a prospective study of 40 patients who discontinued DMTs after a minimum 5 years’ continuous use of a single DMT without new disease activity (Arquivos de Neuro-Psiquiatria 2013;71:516-20). At 46-month follow-up, the investigators found that 90% of patients remained free of clinical attack, and 85% had stable MRIs. “However, this was a really small trial, and the specific DMTs were not reported,” she said.

A larger, separate study evaluated 303 patients aged 40 and older who discontinued DMTs after a minimum of 3 years’ continuous use of a single DMT and who had no clinical relapse in the past 5 years (ECTRIMS Online Library. 2015 Oct 8. 116635). The majority of patients resumed DMT use because of an increase in disease activity following discontinuation. However, for every 10-year increase in patient age, there was a 25% decrease in the rate of resuming DMT. “This might suggest a greater feasibility of discontinuation of DMTs in older patients,” Ms. Parsons said.

The third observational study she discussed included 485 patients, mean age of 45 years, who discontinued DMTs after a minimum of 3 years of treatment with a single DMT and had no clinical relapses in the previous 5 years (J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2016 Oct;87[10]:1133-7). These were compared with 854 propensity score–matched individuals who continued DMT. The mean annualized relapse rates and time to first relapse were similar for those who discontinued DMTs and those who continued DMTs. However, survival time to confirmed disability progression was shorter among those who discontinued DMTs (adjusted hazard ratio of 1.47; P = .001). Younger age was found to be a significant predictor of relapse risk among the DMT discontinuation group, with a 25% reduction in relapse risk ratio for every 10-year increase in age.

“DMTs cannot be said with certainty to be effective in older patients, given that patients over the age of 55 have rarely been included in clinical trials of these agents, Ms. Parsons said. Many patients with relapsing-remitting MS are continuously administered DMTs for many years. This long-term use of DMTs is not without cost. It is important to consider things like medication burden of the patient, the potential for adverse effects, as well as the possibility of unnecessary health care costs if these agents are no longer effective in some cases.”

Sanofi Genzyme supported the study. Ms. Parsons reported having no financial disclosures.

 

 

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NEW ORLEANS – There appear to be four clinical situations “when it might be reasonable to open up conversations with patients about discontinuation of DMTs,” Devyn Parsons said at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.

While disease-modifying treatments (DMTs) are well established in their ability to decrease relapse rates and slow the progression of disability early in the course of relapsing-remitting MS, it remains unknown whether they maintain their efficacy late in the course of disease after many years of treatment or after progression to secondary progressive MS, said Ms. Parsons, a medical student at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver. Scientific evidence related to when disease-modifying treatments should be discontinued in patients with multiple sclerosis is generally poor, she said.

Devyn Parsons
Ms Parsons and her associates set out to review the literature relevant to the discontinuation of DMTs and to provide some initial clinical recommendations on the circumstances in which discontinuation of DMTs may be a reasonable choice. The researchers assembled four clinical situations in which a discussion with patients about discontinuation of DMTs would be a reasonable option. “These are not meant to be firm guidelines, but rather more of a jumping-off point for discussion regarding this issue,” Ms. Parsons said. They include:

• Patients with secondary progressive MS who have ongoing progression and no new brain or spinal MRI lesions during the prior 12-24 months.

• Patients with stable relapsing-remitting MS aged 65 or older who have had no new brain or spinal MRI lesions during the prior 12-24 months.

• Patients with stable relapsing-remitting MS aged 55-65 years with no new brain or spinal MRI lesions within the prior 5 years.

• Patients who are pregnant or trying to conceive, or breastfeeding.

“Upon discontinuation of DMTs patients should continue to undergo annual assessments and an annual brain MRI for at least 2-5 years,” Ms. Parsons said. “Reuse of DMTs should be considered if there’s any evidence of relapse or new MRI lesion.”

The investigators conducted a systematic review of medical literature from MEDLINE, EMBASE, and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews through June of 2016. They used the keywords “multiple sclerosis” and “disease-modifying treatments” and “treatment withdrawal” or “stopping medication” or “medication withdrawal.” Articles were reviewed in full and classified according to the American Academy of Neurology’s classification of evidence guidelines.

The review yielded what Ms. Parsons described as “a paucity of information” in the existing literature on MS course following discontinuation of DMTs. “There have been no randomized, controlled trials on the subject, and relatively few observational studies,” she said. “Of the observational studies that do exist, several have suggested a return to baseline disease activity following discontinuation of DMTs. In particular these studies examined natalizumab and interferon beta-1a discontinuation. At first glance these studies seem to suggest that discontinuation of DMTs is generally not appropriate, as there is likely to be a return to baseline disease activity. But it’s important to consider that many of these were retrospective, cross-sectional studies with small patient populations and aren’t the best quality data. Furthermore, these studies had relatively short follow-up periods, they didn’t include older patients, and they examined the discontinuation of DMTs after less than 2 years of continuous treatment. These results may not apply to older patients, and they might not apply to patients who have been continuously treated with DMTs for many years. At this point there is sufficient evidence in the literature to allow a randomized, controlled trial in a low-risk patient population of discontinuations of DMTs.”

Ms. Parsons discussed three observational studies from the review. One was a prospective study of 40 patients who discontinued DMTs after a minimum 5 years’ continuous use of a single DMT without new disease activity (Arquivos de Neuro-Psiquiatria 2013;71:516-20). At 46-month follow-up, the investigators found that 90% of patients remained free of clinical attack, and 85% had stable MRIs. “However, this was a really small trial, and the specific DMTs were not reported,” she said.

A larger, separate study evaluated 303 patients aged 40 and older who discontinued DMTs after a minimum of 3 years’ continuous use of a single DMT and who had no clinical relapse in the past 5 years (ECTRIMS Online Library. 2015 Oct 8. 116635). The majority of patients resumed DMT use because of an increase in disease activity following discontinuation. However, for every 10-year increase in patient age, there was a 25% decrease in the rate of resuming DMT. “This might suggest a greater feasibility of discontinuation of DMTs in older patients,” Ms. Parsons said.

The third observational study she discussed included 485 patients, mean age of 45 years, who discontinued DMTs after a minimum of 3 years of treatment with a single DMT and had no clinical relapses in the previous 5 years (J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2016 Oct;87[10]:1133-7). These were compared with 854 propensity score–matched individuals who continued DMT. The mean annualized relapse rates and time to first relapse were similar for those who discontinued DMTs and those who continued DMTs. However, survival time to confirmed disability progression was shorter among those who discontinued DMTs (adjusted hazard ratio of 1.47; P = .001). Younger age was found to be a significant predictor of relapse risk among the DMT discontinuation group, with a 25% reduction in relapse risk ratio for every 10-year increase in age.

“DMTs cannot be said with certainty to be effective in older patients, given that patients over the age of 55 have rarely been included in clinical trials of these agents, Ms. Parsons said. Many patients with relapsing-remitting MS are continuously administered DMTs for many years. This long-term use of DMTs is not without cost. It is important to consider things like medication burden of the patient, the potential for adverse effects, as well as the possibility of unnecessary health care costs if these agents are no longer effective in some cases.”

Sanofi Genzyme supported the study. Ms. Parsons reported having no financial disclosures.

 

 

 

NEW ORLEANS – There appear to be four clinical situations “when it might be reasonable to open up conversations with patients about discontinuation of DMTs,” Devyn Parsons said at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.

While disease-modifying treatments (DMTs) are well established in their ability to decrease relapse rates and slow the progression of disability early in the course of relapsing-remitting MS, it remains unknown whether they maintain their efficacy late in the course of disease after many years of treatment or after progression to secondary progressive MS, said Ms. Parsons, a medical student at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver. Scientific evidence related to when disease-modifying treatments should be discontinued in patients with multiple sclerosis is generally poor, she said.

Devyn Parsons
Ms Parsons and her associates set out to review the literature relevant to the discontinuation of DMTs and to provide some initial clinical recommendations on the circumstances in which discontinuation of DMTs may be a reasonable choice. The researchers assembled four clinical situations in which a discussion with patients about discontinuation of DMTs would be a reasonable option. “These are not meant to be firm guidelines, but rather more of a jumping-off point for discussion regarding this issue,” Ms. Parsons said. They include:

• Patients with secondary progressive MS who have ongoing progression and no new brain or spinal MRI lesions during the prior 12-24 months.

• Patients with stable relapsing-remitting MS aged 65 or older who have had no new brain or spinal MRI lesions during the prior 12-24 months.

• Patients with stable relapsing-remitting MS aged 55-65 years with no new brain or spinal MRI lesions within the prior 5 years.

• Patients who are pregnant or trying to conceive, or breastfeeding.

“Upon discontinuation of DMTs patients should continue to undergo annual assessments and an annual brain MRI for at least 2-5 years,” Ms. Parsons said. “Reuse of DMTs should be considered if there’s any evidence of relapse or new MRI lesion.”

The investigators conducted a systematic review of medical literature from MEDLINE, EMBASE, and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews through June of 2016. They used the keywords “multiple sclerosis” and “disease-modifying treatments” and “treatment withdrawal” or “stopping medication” or “medication withdrawal.” Articles were reviewed in full and classified according to the American Academy of Neurology’s classification of evidence guidelines.

The review yielded what Ms. Parsons described as “a paucity of information” in the existing literature on MS course following discontinuation of DMTs. “There have been no randomized, controlled trials on the subject, and relatively few observational studies,” she said. “Of the observational studies that do exist, several have suggested a return to baseline disease activity following discontinuation of DMTs. In particular these studies examined natalizumab and interferon beta-1a discontinuation. At first glance these studies seem to suggest that discontinuation of DMTs is generally not appropriate, as there is likely to be a return to baseline disease activity. But it’s important to consider that many of these were retrospective, cross-sectional studies with small patient populations and aren’t the best quality data. Furthermore, these studies had relatively short follow-up periods, they didn’t include older patients, and they examined the discontinuation of DMTs after less than 2 years of continuous treatment. These results may not apply to older patients, and they might not apply to patients who have been continuously treated with DMTs for many years. At this point there is sufficient evidence in the literature to allow a randomized, controlled trial in a low-risk patient population of discontinuations of DMTs.”

Ms. Parsons discussed three observational studies from the review. One was a prospective study of 40 patients who discontinued DMTs after a minimum 5 years’ continuous use of a single DMT without new disease activity (Arquivos de Neuro-Psiquiatria 2013;71:516-20). At 46-month follow-up, the investigators found that 90% of patients remained free of clinical attack, and 85% had stable MRIs. “However, this was a really small trial, and the specific DMTs were not reported,” she said.

A larger, separate study evaluated 303 patients aged 40 and older who discontinued DMTs after a minimum of 3 years’ continuous use of a single DMT and who had no clinical relapse in the past 5 years (ECTRIMS Online Library. 2015 Oct 8. 116635). The majority of patients resumed DMT use because of an increase in disease activity following discontinuation. However, for every 10-year increase in patient age, there was a 25% decrease in the rate of resuming DMT. “This might suggest a greater feasibility of discontinuation of DMTs in older patients,” Ms. Parsons said.

The third observational study she discussed included 485 patients, mean age of 45 years, who discontinued DMTs after a minimum of 3 years of treatment with a single DMT and had no clinical relapses in the previous 5 years (J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2016 Oct;87[10]:1133-7). These were compared with 854 propensity score–matched individuals who continued DMT. The mean annualized relapse rates and time to first relapse were similar for those who discontinued DMTs and those who continued DMTs. However, survival time to confirmed disability progression was shorter among those who discontinued DMTs (adjusted hazard ratio of 1.47; P = .001). Younger age was found to be a significant predictor of relapse risk among the DMT discontinuation group, with a 25% reduction in relapse risk ratio for every 10-year increase in age.

“DMTs cannot be said with certainty to be effective in older patients, given that patients over the age of 55 have rarely been included in clinical trials of these agents, Ms. Parsons said. Many patients with relapsing-remitting MS are continuously administered DMTs for many years. This long-term use of DMTs is not without cost. It is important to consider things like medication burden of the patient, the potential for adverse effects, as well as the possibility of unnecessary health care costs if these agents are no longer effective in some cases.”

Sanofi Genzyme supported the study. Ms. Parsons reported having no financial disclosures.

 

 

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Key clinical point: There appear to be four clinical situations when it might be reasonable to discuss discontinuation of DMTs with patients.

Major finding: Meaningful clinical data on discontinuation of DMTs in patients with MS are limited.

Data source: A systematic review of the medical literature using the keywords “multiple sclerosis” and “disease-modifying treatments” and “treatment withdrawal” or “stopping medication” or “medication withdrawal.”

Disclosures: Sanofi Genzyme supported the study. Ms. Parsons reported having no financial disclosures.

DMD use during pregnancy low, study finds

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NEW ORLEANS – The proportion of women with multiple sclerosis with a live birth receiving disease-modifying drug therapy was low and declined during the prepregnancy and pregnancy periods, results from a large analysis of national claims data found.

“Multiple sclerosis is up to three times more common in women than in men, and the clinical onset is often during childbearing years,” researchers led by Maria K. Houtchens, MD, wrote in an abstract presented during the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers. “A better understanding of the ‘real world’ disease-modifying drug treatment patterns in women with MS and a pregnancy is essential in order to improve available clinical support, health care services, and quality of life for women with MS of childbearing age.”

Dr. Maria Houtchens
In an effort to evaluate disease-modifying drug (DMD) treatment before, during, and after pregnancy in women with MS and a live birth, the researchers retrospectively evaluated the IMS Health Real World Data Adjudicated Claims U.S. database from Jan. 1, 2006, to June 30, 2015. Women with MS were required to have at least one clinical encounter with a diagnosis of pregnancy or a pregnancy-related procedure from the index date of June 14, 2014. Clinical characteristics evaluated included overall comorbidity as measured by the Charlson Comorbidity Index and the individual rates of the most common comorbidities in MS. The researchers evaluated DMD treatment during the year prior to pregnancy at 3-month intervals, the three trimesters of pregnancy, 6 weeks post pregnancy, and 1 year post pregnancy.

Dr. Houtchens, a neurologist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, and her associates reported results from 2,518 women who were included in the final analysis. Their mean age was 30 years, and 99% had commercial health insurance.

Overall, the proportion of women with MS and a live birth receiving DMD treatment was low, ranging from 1.9% to 25.5%, and the rate of treatment declined during the prepregnancy and pregnancy periods.

During pregnancy, the proportion of women treated with a DMD decreased to 12.05% during the first trimester and to 1.90% during the second trimester, and then increased to 2.97% during the third trimester. At 9-12 months postpartum, the proportion of women treated with a DMD was 25.5%. Most patients were treated with self-injectable DMDs (from 1.7% to 19.6%), while the use of oral and infusion agents was low (0.1%-3.1% and 0%-0.2%, respectively).

The researchers also found that the proportion of women with DMD treatment before and after pregnancy increased significantly with the number of relapses experienced prepregnancy. A greater number of relapses before pregnancy led to more patients treated with DMDs.

They acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including its reliance on information from patients with health insurance administered by regional health plans. “Results may not be generalizable to patients who self-pay or patients without employer-sponsored commercial health insurance.”

The study was supported by EMD Serono. Dr. Houtchens reported that she has received funding support from EMD Serono and that she serves on the scientific advisory boards for Biogen, Novartis, Sanofi Genzyme, and Teva Neuroscience. She also has received research support from Sanofi Genzyme.

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NEW ORLEANS – The proportion of women with multiple sclerosis with a live birth receiving disease-modifying drug therapy was low and declined during the prepregnancy and pregnancy periods, results from a large analysis of national claims data found.

“Multiple sclerosis is up to three times more common in women than in men, and the clinical onset is often during childbearing years,” researchers led by Maria K. Houtchens, MD, wrote in an abstract presented during the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers. “A better understanding of the ‘real world’ disease-modifying drug treatment patterns in women with MS and a pregnancy is essential in order to improve available clinical support, health care services, and quality of life for women with MS of childbearing age.”

Dr. Maria Houtchens
In an effort to evaluate disease-modifying drug (DMD) treatment before, during, and after pregnancy in women with MS and a live birth, the researchers retrospectively evaluated the IMS Health Real World Data Adjudicated Claims U.S. database from Jan. 1, 2006, to June 30, 2015. Women with MS were required to have at least one clinical encounter with a diagnosis of pregnancy or a pregnancy-related procedure from the index date of June 14, 2014. Clinical characteristics evaluated included overall comorbidity as measured by the Charlson Comorbidity Index and the individual rates of the most common comorbidities in MS. The researchers evaluated DMD treatment during the year prior to pregnancy at 3-month intervals, the three trimesters of pregnancy, 6 weeks post pregnancy, and 1 year post pregnancy.

Dr. Houtchens, a neurologist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, and her associates reported results from 2,518 women who were included in the final analysis. Their mean age was 30 years, and 99% had commercial health insurance.

Overall, the proportion of women with MS and a live birth receiving DMD treatment was low, ranging from 1.9% to 25.5%, and the rate of treatment declined during the prepregnancy and pregnancy periods.

During pregnancy, the proportion of women treated with a DMD decreased to 12.05% during the first trimester and to 1.90% during the second trimester, and then increased to 2.97% during the third trimester. At 9-12 months postpartum, the proportion of women treated with a DMD was 25.5%. Most patients were treated with self-injectable DMDs (from 1.7% to 19.6%), while the use of oral and infusion agents was low (0.1%-3.1% and 0%-0.2%, respectively).

The researchers also found that the proportion of women with DMD treatment before and after pregnancy increased significantly with the number of relapses experienced prepregnancy. A greater number of relapses before pregnancy led to more patients treated with DMDs.

They acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including its reliance on information from patients with health insurance administered by regional health plans. “Results may not be generalizable to patients who self-pay or patients without employer-sponsored commercial health insurance.”

The study was supported by EMD Serono. Dr. Houtchens reported that she has received funding support from EMD Serono and that she serves on the scientific advisory boards for Biogen, Novartis, Sanofi Genzyme, and Teva Neuroscience. She also has received research support from Sanofi Genzyme.

 

NEW ORLEANS – The proportion of women with multiple sclerosis with a live birth receiving disease-modifying drug therapy was low and declined during the prepregnancy and pregnancy periods, results from a large analysis of national claims data found.

“Multiple sclerosis is up to three times more common in women than in men, and the clinical onset is often during childbearing years,” researchers led by Maria K. Houtchens, MD, wrote in an abstract presented during the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers. “A better understanding of the ‘real world’ disease-modifying drug treatment patterns in women with MS and a pregnancy is essential in order to improve available clinical support, health care services, and quality of life for women with MS of childbearing age.”

Dr. Maria Houtchens
In an effort to evaluate disease-modifying drug (DMD) treatment before, during, and after pregnancy in women with MS and a live birth, the researchers retrospectively evaluated the IMS Health Real World Data Adjudicated Claims U.S. database from Jan. 1, 2006, to June 30, 2015. Women with MS were required to have at least one clinical encounter with a diagnosis of pregnancy or a pregnancy-related procedure from the index date of June 14, 2014. Clinical characteristics evaluated included overall comorbidity as measured by the Charlson Comorbidity Index and the individual rates of the most common comorbidities in MS. The researchers evaluated DMD treatment during the year prior to pregnancy at 3-month intervals, the three trimesters of pregnancy, 6 weeks post pregnancy, and 1 year post pregnancy.

Dr. Houtchens, a neurologist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, and her associates reported results from 2,518 women who were included in the final analysis. Their mean age was 30 years, and 99% had commercial health insurance.

Overall, the proportion of women with MS and a live birth receiving DMD treatment was low, ranging from 1.9% to 25.5%, and the rate of treatment declined during the prepregnancy and pregnancy periods.

During pregnancy, the proportion of women treated with a DMD decreased to 12.05% during the first trimester and to 1.90% during the second trimester, and then increased to 2.97% during the third trimester. At 9-12 months postpartum, the proportion of women treated with a DMD was 25.5%. Most patients were treated with self-injectable DMDs (from 1.7% to 19.6%), while the use of oral and infusion agents was low (0.1%-3.1% and 0%-0.2%, respectively).

The researchers also found that the proportion of women with DMD treatment before and after pregnancy increased significantly with the number of relapses experienced prepregnancy. A greater number of relapses before pregnancy led to more patients treated with DMDs.

They acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including its reliance on information from patients with health insurance administered by regional health plans. “Results may not be generalizable to patients who self-pay or patients without employer-sponsored commercial health insurance.”

The study was supported by EMD Serono. Dr. Houtchens reported that she has received funding support from EMD Serono and that she serves on the scientific advisory boards for Biogen, Novartis, Sanofi Genzyme, and Teva Neuroscience. She also has received research support from Sanofi Genzyme.

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Key clinical point: Disease-modifying drug treatment decreased before and during pregnancy, and increased steadily postpartum.

Major finding: Overall, the proportion of women with multiple sclerosis and a live birth receiving DMD treatment was low, ranging from 1.9% to 25.5%.

Data source: A retrospective analysis of claims data from 2,518 women with MS.

Disclosures: The study was supported by EMD Serono. Dr. Houtchens reported that she has received funding support from EMD Serono and that she serves on the scientific advisory boards for Biogen, Novartis, Sanofi Genzyme, and Teva Neuroscience. She also has received research support from Sanofi Genzyme.

Revisions coming to McDonald Criteria for MS

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Fri, 01/18/2019 - 16:49

 

NEW ORLEANS – Changes are coming to the current McDonald Criteria for diagnosing multiple sclerosis, primarily because of advances in the understanding of MS since the criteria were last updated in 2010.

Such advances include the availability of new data regarding the relationship between MS and other spectrum disorders and data concerning the performance of the 2010 McDonald Criteria in several patient populations, according to Jeffrey A. Cohen, MD, who cochaired the effort known as the International Panel on Diagnosis of Multiple Sclerosis. “There also were new data concerning the utility of cerebrospinal fluid evaluation and increasing recognition that the role of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) examination perhaps needs increased emphasis,” Dr. Cohen said at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers. “It’s been somewhat de-emphasized in previous versions of the criteria. Then, there was identification of subsets of patients that were felt to have a high likelihood of MS but in whom the diagnosis could not be made by the current criteria – patients who fell through the cracks. There was also increasing recognition of the frequency and important consequences of misdiagnosis.”

Dr. Jeffrey A. Cohen
The International Panel on Diagnosis of Multiple Sclerosis was organized under the auspices of the International Advisory Committee on Clinical Trials in MS, and it was funded by the National MS Society and the European Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ECTRIMS). Dr. Cohen, director of the Mellen Center for MS at the Cleveland Clinic, cochaired the panel along with Alan J. Thompson, MD. The duo led panel meetings that convened in Philadelphia in November 2016 and in Berlin in May 2017. While Dr. Cohen was unable to provide details about proposed revisions to the 2010 McDonald criteria, he shared some general points that panelists agreed on. The revised criteria currently are being prepared for publication.

The panel emphasized that evidence supporting the McDonald criteria is predominately based on patients with a typical clinically isolated syndrome (CIS) at onset. It also acknowledged the difficulty of confirming a diagnosis of MS, the importance of addressing alternative diagnoses and absence of atypical features and red flags, and the rigor necessary for interpreting clinical, imaging, and laboratory studies. “Misdiagnosis is common,” Dr. Cohen told meeting attendees. “In some series, upwards of 50%-60% of patients referred to a specialized MS center turn out to have some other diagnosis. Our panel had discussions related to the tradeoff between sensitivity of the criteria and trying to make the diagnosis earlier and in a broader range of patients but counterbalancing that against the risk of a misdiagnosis. Our conclusion was that, although some of that might be created by the criteria, it’s mostly a problem of misapplying the criteria. One needs to remember that to make the diagnosis of MS does not merely require demonstrating that the patient has a disease process that involves potentially multiple places in the CNS and as recurrent events over time, but one has to apply the diagnostic data with rigor.”

Another emphasis expected to be included in updated McDonald criteria is the use of CSF and spinal cord imaging, as well as the notion that a history, examination, and synthesis of a patient’s overall clinical picture “needs to be made by a clinician with MS-related expertise,” Dr. Cohen said. “One cannot merely use the criteria as a checklist.”

The panelists also discussed modifying the term “possible MS,” which is already in the McDonald criteria, to include patients with CIS who do not (yet) fulfill the diagnostic criteria for MS; radiologically isolated syndrome (RIS); solitary sclerosis; and patients with clinical manifestations, imaging, and other features that are compatible with MS but not typical for those who may or may not be determined to have MS or in the future.

Dr. Cohen noted that additional data concerning the applicability of the McDonald criteria to Asian and Latin populations have been published since 2010 but are modest. “There is no indication the McDonald criteria cannot be used in these populations,” he said. “Care is needed to address alternative diagnoses, particularly neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMOSD) in both and also infectious diseases in Latin America.” Several studies also support the applicability of the McDonald criteria in children, with certain caveats. “One needs to be careful in diagnosing MS in people younger than 11 years of age,” Dr. Cohen said. “If the initial event is [acute disseminated encephalomyelitis], they also need to have a typical clinically isolated syndrome.”

Panelists also agreed that the McDonald criteria apply to older patients, with caveats that a new diagnosis of MS is rarely considered in older adults. “They are more likely to have a progressive course, either progressive from onset or following previous unrecognized relapses,” Dr. Cohen said. “There needs to be careful consideration of alternative diagnoses and, particularly, comorbidities. This represents an example of a diagnostic scenario for which CSF examination is advised.”

Panel members found that the recognized range of potential clinical manifestations of NMOSD is becoming wider and is still being defined. “Emerging data suggests a substantial proportion of AQP-4 seronegative patients with NMOSD features (about 20%) have anti–myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibodies,” he said. “Although some features of MS and NMOSD overlap, they are now understood to be distinct disorders.”

Other points under consideration for the 2017 revision of the McDonald Criteria included incorporating the revised phenotype categories (relapse-remitting, secondary progressive, primary progressive, and progressive relapsing), expanding the role of CSF to allow diagnosis of MS with CIS plus DIS plus oligoclonal bands, determining whether to accept 2016 Revised Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Multiple Sclerosis MRI criteria in aggregate or in part, and incorporating optic nerve involvement.

Dr. Cohen disclosed that he has received compensation as a consultant for Adamas, Celgene, Merck, Mallinckrodt, and Novartis.

 

 

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NEW ORLEANS – Changes are coming to the current McDonald Criteria for diagnosing multiple sclerosis, primarily because of advances in the understanding of MS since the criteria were last updated in 2010.

Such advances include the availability of new data regarding the relationship between MS and other spectrum disorders and data concerning the performance of the 2010 McDonald Criteria in several patient populations, according to Jeffrey A. Cohen, MD, who cochaired the effort known as the International Panel on Diagnosis of Multiple Sclerosis. “There also were new data concerning the utility of cerebrospinal fluid evaluation and increasing recognition that the role of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) examination perhaps needs increased emphasis,” Dr. Cohen said at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers. “It’s been somewhat de-emphasized in previous versions of the criteria. Then, there was identification of subsets of patients that were felt to have a high likelihood of MS but in whom the diagnosis could not be made by the current criteria – patients who fell through the cracks. There was also increasing recognition of the frequency and important consequences of misdiagnosis.”

Dr. Jeffrey A. Cohen
The International Panel on Diagnosis of Multiple Sclerosis was organized under the auspices of the International Advisory Committee on Clinical Trials in MS, and it was funded by the National MS Society and the European Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ECTRIMS). Dr. Cohen, director of the Mellen Center for MS at the Cleveland Clinic, cochaired the panel along with Alan J. Thompson, MD. The duo led panel meetings that convened in Philadelphia in November 2016 and in Berlin in May 2017. While Dr. Cohen was unable to provide details about proposed revisions to the 2010 McDonald criteria, he shared some general points that panelists agreed on. The revised criteria currently are being prepared for publication.

The panel emphasized that evidence supporting the McDonald criteria is predominately based on patients with a typical clinically isolated syndrome (CIS) at onset. It also acknowledged the difficulty of confirming a diagnosis of MS, the importance of addressing alternative diagnoses and absence of atypical features and red flags, and the rigor necessary for interpreting clinical, imaging, and laboratory studies. “Misdiagnosis is common,” Dr. Cohen told meeting attendees. “In some series, upwards of 50%-60% of patients referred to a specialized MS center turn out to have some other diagnosis. Our panel had discussions related to the tradeoff between sensitivity of the criteria and trying to make the diagnosis earlier and in a broader range of patients but counterbalancing that against the risk of a misdiagnosis. Our conclusion was that, although some of that might be created by the criteria, it’s mostly a problem of misapplying the criteria. One needs to remember that to make the diagnosis of MS does not merely require demonstrating that the patient has a disease process that involves potentially multiple places in the CNS and as recurrent events over time, but one has to apply the diagnostic data with rigor.”

Another emphasis expected to be included in updated McDonald criteria is the use of CSF and spinal cord imaging, as well as the notion that a history, examination, and synthesis of a patient’s overall clinical picture “needs to be made by a clinician with MS-related expertise,” Dr. Cohen said. “One cannot merely use the criteria as a checklist.”

The panelists also discussed modifying the term “possible MS,” which is already in the McDonald criteria, to include patients with CIS who do not (yet) fulfill the diagnostic criteria for MS; radiologically isolated syndrome (RIS); solitary sclerosis; and patients with clinical manifestations, imaging, and other features that are compatible with MS but not typical for those who may or may not be determined to have MS or in the future.

Dr. Cohen noted that additional data concerning the applicability of the McDonald criteria to Asian and Latin populations have been published since 2010 but are modest. “There is no indication the McDonald criteria cannot be used in these populations,” he said. “Care is needed to address alternative diagnoses, particularly neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMOSD) in both and also infectious diseases in Latin America.” Several studies also support the applicability of the McDonald criteria in children, with certain caveats. “One needs to be careful in diagnosing MS in people younger than 11 years of age,” Dr. Cohen said. “If the initial event is [acute disseminated encephalomyelitis], they also need to have a typical clinically isolated syndrome.”

Panelists also agreed that the McDonald criteria apply to older patients, with caveats that a new diagnosis of MS is rarely considered in older adults. “They are more likely to have a progressive course, either progressive from onset or following previous unrecognized relapses,” Dr. Cohen said. “There needs to be careful consideration of alternative diagnoses and, particularly, comorbidities. This represents an example of a diagnostic scenario for which CSF examination is advised.”

Panel members found that the recognized range of potential clinical manifestations of NMOSD is becoming wider and is still being defined. “Emerging data suggests a substantial proportion of AQP-4 seronegative patients with NMOSD features (about 20%) have anti–myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibodies,” he said. “Although some features of MS and NMOSD overlap, they are now understood to be distinct disorders.”

Other points under consideration for the 2017 revision of the McDonald Criteria included incorporating the revised phenotype categories (relapse-remitting, secondary progressive, primary progressive, and progressive relapsing), expanding the role of CSF to allow diagnosis of MS with CIS plus DIS plus oligoclonal bands, determining whether to accept 2016 Revised Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Multiple Sclerosis MRI criteria in aggregate or in part, and incorporating optic nerve involvement.

Dr. Cohen disclosed that he has received compensation as a consultant for Adamas, Celgene, Merck, Mallinckrodt, and Novartis.

 

 

 

NEW ORLEANS – Changes are coming to the current McDonald Criteria for diagnosing multiple sclerosis, primarily because of advances in the understanding of MS since the criteria were last updated in 2010.

Such advances include the availability of new data regarding the relationship between MS and other spectrum disorders and data concerning the performance of the 2010 McDonald Criteria in several patient populations, according to Jeffrey A. Cohen, MD, who cochaired the effort known as the International Panel on Diagnosis of Multiple Sclerosis. “There also were new data concerning the utility of cerebrospinal fluid evaluation and increasing recognition that the role of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) examination perhaps needs increased emphasis,” Dr. Cohen said at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers. “It’s been somewhat de-emphasized in previous versions of the criteria. Then, there was identification of subsets of patients that were felt to have a high likelihood of MS but in whom the diagnosis could not be made by the current criteria – patients who fell through the cracks. There was also increasing recognition of the frequency and important consequences of misdiagnosis.”

Dr. Jeffrey A. Cohen
The International Panel on Diagnosis of Multiple Sclerosis was organized under the auspices of the International Advisory Committee on Clinical Trials in MS, and it was funded by the National MS Society and the European Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ECTRIMS). Dr. Cohen, director of the Mellen Center for MS at the Cleveland Clinic, cochaired the panel along with Alan J. Thompson, MD. The duo led panel meetings that convened in Philadelphia in November 2016 and in Berlin in May 2017. While Dr. Cohen was unable to provide details about proposed revisions to the 2010 McDonald criteria, he shared some general points that panelists agreed on. The revised criteria currently are being prepared for publication.

The panel emphasized that evidence supporting the McDonald criteria is predominately based on patients with a typical clinically isolated syndrome (CIS) at onset. It also acknowledged the difficulty of confirming a diagnosis of MS, the importance of addressing alternative diagnoses and absence of atypical features and red flags, and the rigor necessary for interpreting clinical, imaging, and laboratory studies. “Misdiagnosis is common,” Dr. Cohen told meeting attendees. “In some series, upwards of 50%-60% of patients referred to a specialized MS center turn out to have some other diagnosis. Our panel had discussions related to the tradeoff between sensitivity of the criteria and trying to make the diagnosis earlier and in a broader range of patients but counterbalancing that against the risk of a misdiagnosis. Our conclusion was that, although some of that might be created by the criteria, it’s mostly a problem of misapplying the criteria. One needs to remember that to make the diagnosis of MS does not merely require demonstrating that the patient has a disease process that involves potentially multiple places in the CNS and as recurrent events over time, but one has to apply the diagnostic data with rigor.”

Another emphasis expected to be included in updated McDonald criteria is the use of CSF and spinal cord imaging, as well as the notion that a history, examination, and synthesis of a patient’s overall clinical picture “needs to be made by a clinician with MS-related expertise,” Dr. Cohen said. “One cannot merely use the criteria as a checklist.”

The panelists also discussed modifying the term “possible MS,” which is already in the McDonald criteria, to include patients with CIS who do not (yet) fulfill the diagnostic criteria for MS; radiologically isolated syndrome (RIS); solitary sclerosis; and patients with clinical manifestations, imaging, and other features that are compatible with MS but not typical for those who may or may not be determined to have MS or in the future.

Dr. Cohen noted that additional data concerning the applicability of the McDonald criteria to Asian and Latin populations have been published since 2010 but are modest. “There is no indication the McDonald criteria cannot be used in these populations,” he said. “Care is needed to address alternative diagnoses, particularly neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMOSD) in both and also infectious diseases in Latin America.” Several studies also support the applicability of the McDonald criteria in children, with certain caveats. “One needs to be careful in diagnosing MS in people younger than 11 years of age,” Dr. Cohen said. “If the initial event is [acute disseminated encephalomyelitis], they also need to have a typical clinically isolated syndrome.”

Panelists also agreed that the McDonald criteria apply to older patients, with caveats that a new diagnosis of MS is rarely considered in older adults. “They are more likely to have a progressive course, either progressive from onset or following previous unrecognized relapses,” Dr. Cohen said. “There needs to be careful consideration of alternative diagnoses and, particularly, comorbidities. This represents an example of a diagnostic scenario for which CSF examination is advised.”

Panel members found that the recognized range of potential clinical manifestations of NMOSD is becoming wider and is still being defined. “Emerging data suggests a substantial proportion of AQP-4 seronegative patients with NMOSD features (about 20%) have anti–myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibodies,” he said. “Although some features of MS and NMOSD overlap, they are now understood to be distinct disorders.”

Other points under consideration for the 2017 revision of the McDonald Criteria included incorporating the revised phenotype categories (relapse-remitting, secondary progressive, primary progressive, and progressive relapsing), expanding the role of CSF to allow diagnosis of MS with CIS plus DIS plus oligoclonal bands, determining whether to accept 2016 Revised Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Multiple Sclerosis MRI criteria in aggregate or in part, and incorporating optic nerve involvement.

Dr. Cohen disclosed that he has received compensation as a consultant for Adamas, Celgene, Merck, Mallinckrodt, and Novartis.

 

 

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Disease-Modifying Drug Treatment Before, During, and After Pregnancy in Women With MS

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Rates of MS drug treatment pre-pregnancy, during pregnancy, and post-pregnancy were calculated using a national claims database.

Maria K. Houtchens, MD
NEW ORLEANS—In a population of women with multiple sclerosis (MS) and a live birth, the rate of disease-modifying drug treatment decreased before and during pregnancy and increased steadily post partum, according to a report presented at the 31st Annual Meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers. In a separate analysis by the same researchers, they reported that less than one-third of women with MS and a live birth initiated a disease-modifying treatment within one year after delivery. “The rate of disease-modifying drug initiation increased with the number of relapses the patient experienced prior to pregnancy,” said Maria K. Houtchens, MD, on behalf of her research collaborators. Dr. Houtchens is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Neurology at Harvard Medical School and Director of the Women’s Health Program at the Partners Multiple Sclerosis Center at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.

Treatment Before, During, and After Pregnancy

To evaluate treatment patterns before, during, and after pregnancy in women with MS and a live birth, Dr. Houtchens and colleagues used a US administrative claims database to conduct a retrospective analysis of women ages 18 to 65 with MS, a claim indicative of a live birth, and one-year continuous eligibility before and after pregnancy in the IMS Health Real World Data Adjudicated Claims US database from January 1, 2006, to June 30, 2015. Disease-modifying drug treatment was evaluated during the year prior to pregnancy (at three-month intervals), the three trimesters of pregnancy, puerperium (six weeks post-pregnancy), and one year post pregnancy (seven to 12 weeks post pregnancy and three to six, six to nine, and nine to 12 months post pregnancy). The researchers evaluated the proportion of women exposed to disease-modifying drug treatment during the 12 time periods. Results were also stratified by the number of relapses women experienced in the year prior to pregnancy.

Of 190,475 women with MS, 2,158 met eligibility criteria. Mean age was 30.26. Most women had commercial health insurance (98%) and were from the Midwest (32%), South (30%), or Northeast (29%) regions of the US.

The proportion of women with MS and a live birth treated with any disease-modifying drug was 20.48% at nine to 12 months pre-pregnancy, 21.46% at six to nine months pre-pregnancy, 20.62% at three to six months pre-pregnancy, and 17.75% at three months pre-pregnancy. During pregnancy, the proportion of women treated with a disease-modifying drug decreased to 12.05% during the first trimester and 1.90% during the second trimester, and then increased slightly to 2.97% during the third trimester. The proportion of women treated with disease-modifying drugs increased to 8.34% during puerperium, 12.93% during seven to 12 weeks post partum, 21.97% during three to six months post partum, 24.47% during six to nine months post partum, and 25.49% during nine to 12 months post partum. The majority of women (81.9%) had received disease-modifying drug treatment by six to nine months post partum. The proportion of women with disease-modifying drug treatment before and after pregnancy increased numerically with the number of relapses experienced before pregnancy.

Treatment After a Live Birth

In a separate analysis using the same cohort, Dr. Houtchens and colleagues looked closer at the time to initiation of disease-modifying drug treatment after a live birth in women with MS. Of the 2,094 women included in this analysis, the proportion with a live birth initiating a disease-modifying drug treatment within one year was 28.46%, and the proportion with no disease-modifying treatment within one year was 71.54%.

For those initiating a disease-modifying treatment within one year, mean time from live birth to first treatment was 118.98 days, and median time to first treatment was 93.50 days. A total of 16.11% received a disease-modifying drug less than 30 days after live birth, approximately half initiated a treatment within 90 days (47.82%), and three-quarters initiated a disease-modifying drug within six months (75.5%). The proportion of patients initiating treatment within one year after live birth increased with higher numbers of pre-pregnancy relapses (zero relapses, n = 441, 24.53%; one relapse, n = 108, 50.94%; two relapses, n = 33, 54.10%; three or more relapses, n = 14, 60.87%). The mean number of days until disease-modifying drug initiation for those receiving treatment within one year who had zero pre-pregnancy relapses was 123.57 (median, 99); one relapse, 107.95 (median, 80); two relapses, 120.76 (median, 98); and three or more relapses, 55.57 (median, 49.5). Patients who received disease-modifying drug treatment one year pre-pregnancy were more likely to receive treatment within one year after delivery, compared with patients without exposure to treatment in the year before pregnancy (72.58% vs 12.44%).

This study was supported by EMD Serono.

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Rates of MS drug treatment pre-pregnancy, during pregnancy, and post-pregnancy were calculated using a national claims database.
Rates of MS drug treatment pre-pregnancy, during pregnancy, and post-pregnancy were calculated using a national claims database.

Maria K. Houtchens, MD
NEW ORLEANS—In a population of women with multiple sclerosis (MS) and a live birth, the rate of disease-modifying drug treatment decreased before and during pregnancy and increased steadily post partum, according to a report presented at the 31st Annual Meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers. In a separate analysis by the same researchers, they reported that less than one-third of women with MS and a live birth initiated a disease-modifying treatment within one year after delivery. “The rate of disease-modifying drug initiation increased with the number of relapses the patient experienced prior to pregnancy,” said Maria K. Houtchens, MD, on behalf of her research collaborators. Dr. Houtchens is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Neurology at Harvard Medical School and Director of the Women’s Health Program at the Partners Multiple Sclerosis Center at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.

Treatment Before, During, and After Pregnancy

To evaluate treatment patterns before, during, and after pregnancy in women with MS and a live birth, Dr. Houtchens and colleagues used a US administrative claims database to conduct a retrospective analysis of women ages 18 to 65 with MS, a claim indicative of a live birth, and one-year continuous eligibility before and after pregnancy in the IMS Health Real World Data Adjudicated Claims US database from January 1, 2006, to June 30, 2015. Disease-modifying drug treatment was evaluated during the year prior to pregnancy (at three-month intervals), the three trimesters of pregnancy, puerperium (six weeks post-pregnancy), and one year post pregnancy (seven to 12 weeks post pregnancy and three to six, six to nine, and nine to 12 months post pregnancy). The researchers evaluated the proportion of women exposed to disease-modifying drug treatment during the 12 time periods. Results were also stratified by the number of relapses women experienced in the year prior to pregnancy.

Of 190,475 women with MS, 2,158 met eligibility criteria. Mean age was 30.26. Most women had commercial health insurance (98%) and were from the Midwest (32%), South (30%), or Northeast (29%) regions of the US.

The proportion of women with MS and a live birth treated with any disease-modifying drug was 20.48% at nine to 12 months pre-pregnancy, 21.46% at six to nine months pre-pregnancy, 20.62% at three to six months pre-pregnancy, and 17.75% at three months pre-pregnancy. During pregnancy, the proportion of women treated with a disease-modifying drug decreased to 12.05% during the first trimester and 1.90% during the second trimester, and then increased slightly to 2.97% during the third trimester. The proportion of women treated with disease-modifying drugs increased to 8.34% during puerperium, 12.93% during seven to 12 weeks post partum, 21.97% during three to six months post partum, 24.47% during six to nine months post partum, and 25.49% during nine to 12 months post partum. The majority of women (81.9%) had received disease-modifying drug treatment by six to nine months post partum. The proportion of women with disease-modifying drug treatment before and after pregnancy increased numerically with the number of relapses experienced before pregnancy.

Treatment After a Live Birth

In a separate analysis using the same cohort, Dr. Houtchens and colleagues looked closer at the time to initiation of disease-modifying drug treatment after a live birth in women with MS. Of the 2,094 women included in this analysis, the proportion with a live birth initiating a disease-modifying drug treatment within one year was 28.46%, and the proportion with no disease-modifying treatment within one year was 71.54%.

For those initiating a disease-modifying treatment within one year, mean time from live birth to first treatment was 118.98 days, and median time to first treatment was 93.50 days. A total of 16.11% received a disease-modifying drug less than 30 days after live birth, approximately half initiated a treatment within 90 days (47.82%), and three-quarters initiated a disease-modifying drug within six months (75.5%). The proportion of patients initiating treatment within one year after live birth increased with higher numbers of pre-pregnancy relapses (zero relapses, n = 441, 24.53%; one relapse, n = 108, 50.94%; two relapses, n = 33, 54.10%; three or more relapses, n = 14, 60.87%). The mean number of days until disease-modifying drug initiation for those receiving treatment within one year who had zero pre-pregnancy relapses was 123.57 (median, 99); one relapse, 107.95 (median, 80); two relapses, 120.76 (median, 98); and three or more relapses, 55.57 (median, 49.5). Patients who received disease-modifying drug treatment one year pre-pregnancy were more likely to receive treatment within one year after delivery, compared with patients without exposure to treatment in the year before pregnancy (72.58% vs 12.44%).

This study was supported by EMD Serono.

Maria K. Houtchens, MD
NEW ORLEANS—In a population of women with multiple sclerosis (MS) and a live birth, the rate of disease-modifying drug treatment decreased before and during pregnancy and increased steadily post partum, according to a report presented at the 31st Annual Meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers. In a separate analysis by the same researchers, they reported that less than one-third of women with MS and a live birth initiated a disease-modifying treatment within one year after delivery. “The rate of disease-modifying drug initiation increased with the number of relapses the patient experienced prior to pregnancy,” said Maria K. Houtchens, MD, on behalf of her research collaborators. Dr. Houtchens is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Neurology at Harvard Medical School and Director of the Women’s Health Program at the Partners Multiple Sclerosis Center at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.

Treatment Before, During, and After Pregnancy

To evaluate treatment patterns before, during, and after pregnancy in women with MS and a live birth, Dr. Houtchens and colleagues used a US administrative claims database to conduct a retrospective analysis of women ages 18 to 65 with MS, a claim indicative of a live birth, and one-year continuous eligibility before and after pregnancy in the IMS Health Real World Data Adjudicated Claims US database from January 1, 2006, to June 30, 2015. Disease-modifying drug treatment was evaluated during the year prior to pregnancy (at three-month intervals), the three trimesters of pregnancy, puerperium (six weeks post-pregnancy), and one year post pregnancy (seven to 12 weeks post pregnancy and three to six, six to nine, and nine to 12 months post pregnancy). The researchers evaluated the proportion of women exposed to disease-modifying drug treatment during the 12 time periods. Results were also stratified by the number of relapses women experienced in the year prior to pregnancy.

Of 190,475 women with MS, 2,158 met eligibility criteria. Mean age was 30.26. Most women had commercial health insurance (98%) and were from the Midwest (32%), South (30%), or Northeast (29%) regions of the US.

The proportion of women with MS and a live birth treated with any disease-modifying drug was 20.48% at nine to 12 months pre-pregnancy, 21.46% at six to nine months pre-pregnancy, 20.62% at three to six months pre-pregnancy, and 17.75% at three months pre-pregnancy. During pregnancy, the proportion of women treated with a disease-modifying drug decreased to 12.05% during the first trimester and 1.90% during the second trimester, and then increased slightly to 2.97% during the third trimester. The proportion of women treated with disease-modifying drugs increased to 8.34% during puerperium, 12.93% during seven to 12 weeks post partum, 21.97% during three to six months post partum, 24.47% during six to nine months post partum, and 25.49% during nine to 12 months post partum. The majority of women (81.9%) had received disease-modifying drug treatment by six to nine months post partum. The proportion of women with disease-modifying drug treatment before and after pregnancy increased numerically with the number of relapses experienced before pregnancy.

Treatment After a Live Birth

In a separate analysis using the same cohort, Dr. Houtchens and colleagues looked closer at the time to initiation of disease-modifying drug treatment after a live birth in women with MS. Of the 2,094 women included in this analysis, the proportion with a live birth initiating a disease-modifying drug treatment within one year was 28.46%, and the proportion with no disease-modifying treatment within one year was 71.54%.

For those initiating a disease-modifying treatment within one year, mean time from live birth to first treatment was 118.98 days, and median time to first treatment was 93.50 days. A total of 16.11% received a disease-modifying drug less than 30 days after live birth, approximately half initiated a treatment within 90 days (47.82%), and three-quarters initiated a disease-modifying drug within six months (75.5%). The proportion of patients initiating treatment within one year after live birth increased with higher numbers of pre-pregnancy relapses (zero relapses, n = 441, 24.53%; one relapse, n = 108, 50.94%; two relapses, n = 33, 54.10%; three or more relapses, n = 14, 60.87%). The mean number of days until disease-modifying drug initiation for those receiving treatment within one year who had zero pre-pregnancy relapses was 123.57 (median, 99); one relapse, 107.95 (median, 80); two relapses, 120.76 (median, 98); and three or more relapses, 55.57 (median, 49.5). Patients who received disease-modifying drug treatment one year pre-pregnancy were more likely to receive treatment within one year after delivery, compared with patients without exposure to treatment in the year before pregnancy (72.58% vs 12.44%).

This study was supported by EMD Serono.

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