Article Type
Changed
Mon, 03/22/2021 - 14:08

Reports of herpes zoster virus (HZV) among patients being treated with disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) for multiple sclerosis (MS) are nearly five times higher among women versus men and commonly occur in people under the age of 40, a new study of adverse event reports on a variety of DMTs suggests.

Dr. Ahmed Z. Obeidat

DMTs are known to be associated with a potentially increased risk of opportunistic infections, including HZV. However, data are lacking on issues such as the relative frequency of HZV and the distribution of cases among age and gender groups, said senior author Ahmed Zayed Obeidat, MD, PhD, assistant professor at the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.

“In my practice, we noticed patients being treated with DMTs were developing shingles at much younger ages than would be typical, so we were interested in looking at the distribution of cases among people treated with DMTs,” he said.

For the study, which was presented at the virtual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers, Dr. Obeidat, first author Nicola Carlisle, MD, also of the Medical College of Wisconsin, and their colleagues turned to data from the Food and Drug Administration’s Adverse Event Reporting System.

They analyzed reports on adverse events involving HZV and varicella among patients with MS received between January 1999 and June 2019. The reports involved a range of MS DMTs, including interferon-beta, glatiramer acetate, natalizumab, fingolimod, teriflunomide, dimethyl fumarate, alemtuzumab, or ocrelizumab. Recently approved DMTs including cladribine and siponimod were excluded because of an insufficient number of reports.

Among 3,335 reports that were identified, they found highest mean annual report rates of HZV were for natalizumab, at 115.4, and lowest for glatiramer acetate, with just 5.3 reports. The mean annual report rates for HZV among the other DMTs were ocrelizumab, 88.3; dimethyl fumarate, 73.4; fingolimod, 72.9; interferon beta, 32.9; alemtuzumab, 21.7; and teriflunomide, 13.9.

Overall, the reports of HZV were 4.5 times more common among females, ranging from 2.1 times greater with alemtuzumab to 11.4 times greater for females with interferon-beta. The highest percentages of reports involved people in their 50s, with the exceptions of fingolimod, which had the highest rate of reports among patients in their 40s, and alemtuzumab, in which the highest percentage of reports involved patients in their 30s.

Meanwhile, as many as 25.7% of cases occurred in people under the age of 40 years, while 77.6% of total reports of HZV were in age groups between 31 years and 60 years.

“These rates are different than what is expected in the shingles population, which usually involves people over 60,” Dr. Obeidat said. He noted that, while MS is known to affect more women than men, the fivefold increase in HZV well exceeds the female-male ratio in MS, which is about 2.5:1.

Dr. Obeidat speculated that one factor explaining the higher reports of younger patients could be that fewer older patients are taking DMTs. “Many of our patients with MS may not be treated with DMTs when they are older or they may be on older DMTs that don’t have as much of a risk of opportunistic infections or activation, or some older patients may not be on medications anymore, so this may be why we are seeing this,” he said.

In commenting on the study, Joshua Katz, MD, codirector of the Elliot Lewis Center for Multiple Sclerosis Care, Wellesley, Mass., speculated that numerous factors could explain the higher rates of women developing HZV.

“One wonders, for instance, did pregnancy play a role, were some of the women on prior medications?”

The statistical difference is interesting, he said, “but it’s hard to see what the explanation could be.”

While DMTs typically can be effective in suppressing an MS flare even if a patient develops shingles, the risks of the shingles, itself, is a concern, Dr. Katz added. “Just about any infection that stimulates an inflammatory response has some risk of worsening symptoms with MS; however, the bigger risk is probably the shingles itself and getting postherpetic neuralgia,” he explained.

“Sometimes there can be independent neurological problems just from MS, and that’s probably a bigger risk than worsening the MS,” he said. Clinicians should therefore keep shingles on their radar before starting patients on DMTs, Dr. Katz added.

“For many of the medications that are immunosuppressive, you want to check patients’ baseline levels of antibodies for zoster and if they don’t have antibodies, then you do want to vaccinate them.”

He noted that the new HZV vaccine is not a live vaccine and has a high efficacy rate, “so we think we can safely administer it in most cases.

“A concern is whether some DMTs may render the vaccine less effective, and we are looking at studying that with ocrelizumab and maybe some other B-cell depleting treatments.”

Dr. Obeidat disclosed relationships with Alexion, Biogen, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Celgene, EMD Serono, Genentech, Sanofi and Novartis. Dr. Katz has been a speaker for Biogen, Genetech, Sanofi, and EMD Serono.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Meeting/Event
Issue
Neurology Reviews- 28(7)
Publications
Topics
Sections
Meeting/Event
Meeting/Event

Reports of herpes zoster virus (HZV) among patients being treated with disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) for multiple sclerosis (MS) are nearly five times higher among women versus men and commonly occur in people under the age of 40, a new study of adverse event reports on a variety of DMTs suggests.

Dr. Ahmed Z. Obeidat

DMTs are known to be associated with a potentially increased risk of opportunistic infections, including HZV. However, data are lacking on issues such as the relative frequency of HZV and the distribution of cases among age and gender groups, said senior author Ahmed Zayed Obeidat, MD, PhD, assistant professor at the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.

“In my practice, we noticed patients being treated with DMTs were developing shingles at much younger ages than would be typical, so we were interested in looking at the distribution of cases among people treated with DMTs,” he said.

For the study, which was presented at the virtual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers, Dr. Obeidat, first author Nicola Carlisle, MD, also of the Medical College of Wisconsin, and their colleagues turned to data from the Food and Drug Administration’s Adverse Event Reporting System.

They analyzed reports on adverse events involving HZV and varicella among patients with MS received between January 1999 and June 2019. The reports involved a range of MS DMTs, including interferon-beta, glatiramer acetate, natalizumab, fingolimod, teriflunomide, dimethyl fumarate, alemtuzumab, or ocrelizumab. Recently approved DMTs including cladribine and siponimod were excluded because of an insufficient number of reports.

Among 3,335 reports that were identified, they found highest mean annual report rates of HZV were for natalizumab, at 115.4, and lowest for glatiramer acetate, with just 5.3 reports. The mean annual report rates for HZV among the other DMTs were ocrelizumab, 88.3; dimethyl fumarate, 73.4; fingolimod, 72.9; interferon beta, 32.9; alemtuzumab, 21.7; and teriflunomide, 13.9.

Overall, the reports of HZV were 4.5 times more common among females, ranging from 2.1 times greater with alemtuzumab to 11.4 times greater for females with interferon-beta. The highest percentages of reports involved people in their 50s, with the exceptions of fingolimod, which had the highest rate of reports among patients in their 40s, and alemtuzumab, in which the highest percentage of reports involved patients in their 30s.

Meanwhile, as many as 25.7% of cases occurred in people under the age of 40 years, while 77.6% of total reports of HZV were in age groups between 31 years and 60 years.

“These rates are different than what is expected in the shingles population, which usually involves people over 60,” Dr. Obeidat said. He noted that, while MS is known to affect more women than men, the fivefold increase in HZV well exceeds the female-male ratio in MS, which is about 2.5:1.

Dr. Obeidat speculated that one factor explaining the higher reports of younger patients could be that fewer older patients are taking DMTs. “Many of our patients with MS may not be treated with DMTs when they are older or they may be on older DMTs that don’t have as much of a risk of opportunistic infections or activation, or some older patients may not be on medications anymore, so this may be why we are seeing this,” he said.

In commenting on the study, Joshua Katz, MD, codirector of the Elliot Lewis Center for Multiple Sclerosis Care, Wellesley, Mass., speculated that numerous factors could explain the higher rates of women developing HZV.

“One wonders, for instance, did pregnancy play a role, were some of the women on prior medications?”

The statistical difference is interesting, he said, “but it’s hard to see what the explanation could be.”

While DMTs typically can be effective in suppressing an MS flare even if a patient develops shingles, the risks of the shingles, itself, is a concern, Dr. Katz added. “Just about any infection that stimulates an inflammatory response has some risk of worsening symptoms with MS; however, the bigger risk is probably the shingles itself and getting postherpetic neuralgia,” he explained.

“Sometimes there can be independent neurological problems just from MS, and that’s probably a bigger risk than worsening the MS,” he said. Clinicians should therefore keep shingles on their radar before starting patients on DMTs, Dr. Katz added.

“For many of the medications that are immunosuppressive, you want to check patients’ baseline levels of antibodies for zoster and if they don’t have antibodies, then you do want to vaccinate them.”

He noted that the new HZV vaccine is not a live vaccine and has a high efficacy rate, “so we think we can safely administer it in most cases.

“A concern is whether some DMTs may render the vaccine less effective, and we are looking at studying that with ocrelizumab and maybe some other B-cell depleting treatments.”

Dr. Obeidat disclosed relationships with Alexion, Biogen, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Celgene, EMD Serono, Genentech, Sanofi and Novartis. Dr. Katz has been a speaker for Biogen, Genetech, Sanofi, and EMD Serono.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Reports of herpes zoster virus (HZV) among patients being treated with disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) for multiple sclerosis (MS) are nearly five times higher among women versus men and commonly occur in people under the age of 40, a new study of adverse event reports on a variety of DMTs suggests.

Dr. Ahmed Z. Obeidat

DMTs are known to be associated with a potentially increased risk of opportunistic infections, including HZV. However, data are lacking on issues such as the relative frequency of HZV and the distribution of cases among age and gender groups, said senior author Ahmed Zayed Obeidat, MD, PhD, assistant professor at the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.

“In my practice, we noticed patients being treated with DMTs were developing shingles at much younger ages than would be typical, so we were interested in looking at the distribution of cases among people treated with DMTs,” he said.

For the study, which was presented at the virtual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers, Dr. Obeidat, first author Nicola Carlisle, MD, also of the Medical College of Wisconsin, and their colleagues turned to data from the Food and Drug Administration’s Adverse Event Reporting System.

They analyzed reports on adverse events involving HZV and varicella among patients with MS received between January 1999 and June 2019. The reports involved a range of MS DMTs, including interferon-beta, glatiramer acetate, natalizumab, fingolimod, teriflunomide, dimethyl fumarate, alemtuzumab, or ocrelizumab. Recently approved DMTs including cladribine and siponimod were excluded because of an insufficient number of reports.

Among 3,335 reports that were identified, they found highest mean annual report rates of HZV were for natalizumab, at 115.4, and lowest for glatiramer acetate, with just 5.3 reports. The mean annual report rates for HZV among the other DMTs were ocrelizumab, 88.3; dimethyl fumarate, 73.4; fingolimod, 72.9; interferon beta, 32.9; alemtuzumab, 21.7; and teriflunomide, 13.9.

Overall, the reports of HZV were 4.5 times more common among females, ranging from 2.1 times greater with alemtuzumab to 11.4 times greater for females with interferon-beta. The highest percentages of reports involved people in their 50s, with the exceptions of fingolimod, which had the highest rate of reports among patients in their 40s, and alemtuzumab, in which the highest percentage of reports involved patients in their 30s.

Meanwhile, as many as 25.7% of cases occurred in people under the age of 40 years, while 77.6% of total reports of HZV were in age groups between 31 years and 60 years.

“These rates are different than what is expected in the shingles population, which usually involves people over 60,” Dr. Obeidat said. He noted that, while MS is known to affect more women than men, the fivefold increase in HZV well exceeds the female-male ratio in MS, which is about 2.5:1.

Dr. Obeidat speculated that one factor explaining the higher reports of younger patients could be that fewer older patients are taking DMTs. “Many of our patients with MS may not be treated with DMTs when they are older or they may be on older DMTs that don’t have as much of a risk of opportunistic infections or activation, or some older patients may not be on medications anymore, so this may be why we are seeing this,” he said.

In commenting on the study, Joshua Katz, MD, codirector of the Elliot Lewis Center for Multiple Sclerosis Care, Wellesley, Mass., speculated that numerous factors could explain the higher rates of women developing HZV.

“One wonders, for instance, did pregnancy play a role, were some of the women on prior medications?”

The statistical difference is interesting, he said, “but it’s hard to see what the explanation could be.”

While DMTs typically can be effective in suppressing an MS flare even if a patient develops shingles, the risks of the shingles, itself, is a concern, Dr. Katz added. “Just about any infection that stimulates an inflammatory response has some risk of worsening symptoms with MS; however, the bigger risk is probably the shingles itself and getting postherpetic neuralgia,” he explained.

“Sometimes there can be independent neurological problems just from MS, and that’s probably a bigger risk than worsening the MS,” he said. Clinicians should therefore keep shingles on their radar before starting patients on DMTs, Dr. Katz added.

“For many of the medications that are immunosuppressive, you want to check patients’ baseline levels of antibodies for zoster and if they don’t have antibodies, then you do want to vaccinate them.”

He noted that the new HZV vaccine is not a live vaccine and has a high efficacy rate, “so we think we can safely administer it in most cases.

“A concern is whether some DMTs may render the vaccine less effective, and we are looking at studying that with ocrelizumab and maybe some other B-cell depleting treatments.”

Dr. Obeidat disclosed relationships with Alexion, Biogen, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Celgene, EMD Serono, Genentech, Sanofi and Novartis. Dr. Katz has been a speaker for Biogen, Genetech, Sanofi, and EMD Serono.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Issue
Neurology Reviews- 28(7)
Issue
Neurology Reviews- 28(7)
Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Citation Override
Publish date: June 5, 2020
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article