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Oral Agents for Multiple Sclerosis Prove Effective : Discontinuation rates were low, but adverse event rates ranged from 8% to 14%.


 

Fingolimod and cladribine, the first oral formulations for treating relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis, proved effective in three phase III clinical trials.

The two drugs have different mechanisms of action, but both target lymphocytes that are potentially autoaggressive against the CNS and both also are believed to promote neuroprotective and reparative processes. In separate multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trials, both oral medications reduced the rate of multiple sclerosis (MS) relapse, slowed the progression of disability, and decreased the number and severity of brain lesions on MRI.

In one of the studies, fingolimod outperformed interferon beta-1a injections, a widely used treatment for MS. “It is likely that the two oral therapies will be at least as effective as other currently available disease-modifying therapies,” Dr. William M. Carroll wrote in an editorial (N. Engl. J. Med. 2010 Jan. 20 [doi:10.1056/NEJMe0912019

Both fingolimod and cladribine had acceptable safety profiles with low rates of adverse events leading to discontinuation of the drugs. However, these rates still were twice as high with active therapy as with placebo (ranging from 8% to 14%), and were associated with patient death in at least two cases.

“Clinicians and patients will need to evaluate the risks and benefits of each of these drugs,” and long-term safety remains a concern because patients may need to take them their whole lives, according to Dr. Carroll of Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital, Perth, Australia.

In the first study, which was funded by Novartis Pharma, Dr. Ludwig Kappos of the University of Basel (Switzerland) and his associates compared two doses of daily fingolimod capsules (0.5 mg and 1.25 mg) with a matching placebo in 1,272 patients followed for 2 years at medical centers in 22 countries. The primary end point—the rate of relapse—was 54% lower with the lower dose of the drug and 60% lower with the higher dose, relative to placebo.

Fingolimod was equally effective in patients who had never been treated and those who had already received other treatments for MS. The time to first relapse was significantly longer with active treatment than with placebo, and more patients in the active-treatment group remained relapse free at 2-year follow-up.

Both doses of fingolimod also reduced the risk of disability progression and the time to progression. Scores on two measures of disability either remained stable or improved slightly with fingolimod, but worsened with placebo.

MRI scans showed significantly fewer brain lesions, as well as fewer new or enlarged lesions and a smaller overall volume of lesions, with fingolimod than with placebo. In addition, characteristic reductions in brain volume were 30% smaller with fingolimod, Dr. Kappos and his colleagues reported (N. Engl. J. Med. 2010 Jan. 20 [doi:10.1056/NEJMoa0907839

In the second study, which also was funded by Novartis Pharma, Dr. Jeffrey A. Cohen of the Cleveland Clinic's Mellen Center and his associates compared the same two doses of daily oral fingolimod with intramuscular injections of interferon beta-1a (Avonex). The investigators conducted follow-up for 1 year with 1,292 patients treated at 172 medical centers in 18 countries.

Compared with interferon beta-1a, the relapse rate was 38% lower with low-dose and 52% lower with high-dose fingolimod. The time to relapse, proportion of relapse-free patients, and proportion with multiple relapses also favored fingolimod.

Fingolimod-treated patients also experienced a similar rate of disability progression, time to disability progression, and MRI findings as those that were reported in the trial conducted by Dr. Kappos and his associates.

In these two studies, serious adverse events were more frequent with fingolimod than with the comparator, and they appeared to be more common at the higher dose of the drug. Adverse events tended to fall into the categories expected for any immunomodulatory agent: lymphocytopenia, CV effects, increased rates of infection, macular edema, liver-enzyme abnormalities, and neoplasms.

Fingolimod caused transient and often asymptomatic bradycardia and atrioventricular block, which likely reflects the drug's ability to bind to receptors in cardiac tissue. The long-term relevance of this effect is not yet known.

The drug also raised the rate of infection, including pneumonia. Several patients developed herpes infections, two of which were fatal, and reactivation of latent herpes remains a concern.

Both research groups emphasized that longer studies are needed to assess safety issues adequately.

In the third study, sponsored by Merck Serono, Dr. Gavin Giovannoni of Queen Mary University, London, and his associates compared two doses of oral cladribine with a matching placebo in 1,326 patients who were followed for 96 weeks at 155 centers in 32 countries.

The agents were given in two or four short courses for 48 weeks, then again in two short courses at weeks 48 and 52, for a total of 8-20 treatment days per year. This schedule allowed for an extended hematopoietic recovery period during the interval before the second round of treatment courses.

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