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Early Treatment Slowed Progression of MS


 

Major Finding: CDMS occurred in a significantly smaller percentage of patients who underwent early treatment with glatiramer acetate than in those who delayed treatment until 3 years later with the drug (33% vs. 50%).

Data Source: A 2-year extension of the 3-year double-blind, placebo-controlled PreCISe study of 198 patients

Disclosures: Teva Pharmaceutical Industries funded the trial. Dr. Comi reported that he has received honoraria for speaking activities and personal compensation for advisory board and consulting activities from Teva Pharmaceuticals and other MS drug manufacturers. Dr. Filippi also reported financial relationship with Teva and other MS drug manufacturers. Dr. Raman has received grants from the National Multiple Sclerosis Society and the National Institutes of Health.

Patients with clinically isolated syndrome who receive early treatment with glatiramer acetate have more than a 40% reduction in the risk of developing multiple sclerosis, compared with those whose treatment is delayed, according to findings from a prospectively planned 5-year follow-up of patient in the phase III PreCISe study.

After a 2-year extension phase of the 3-year double-blind, placebo-controlled study, 33% of 80 patients who had received early treatment with glatiramer acetate (GA) developed clinically definite multiple sclerosis (CDMS), compared with 50% of 118 patients who began treatment at the end of the initial 3-year double-blind phase. Each patient received 20 mg of GA daily by subcutaneous injection.

GA is marketed as Copaxone by Teva Pharmaceutical Industries. It is approved in 51 countries, including the United States, and is indicated for reducing the frequency of relapses in relapsing-remitting MS, including those who have experienced a first clinical episode and who have MS features on MRI.

In the Teva-sponsored study, disability progression, as measured by the Expanded Disability Status Scale, occurred in only 21% of patients over 5 years. No differences in progression were noted between the early and delayed treatment groups, according to the principal investigator, Dr. Giancarlo Comi, director of the department of neurology and Institute of Experimental Neurology at the University Vite Salute, San Raffaele, Italy.

“The long-term study results support the benefit of early GA treatment in delaying conversion to CDMS and in reducing MRI burden, including less accumulation of irreversible brain damage,” Dr. Comi said in an interview.

Patients in this 2-year extension phase were initially enrolled in the double-blind phase of PreCISe, and were randomized to receive active early treatment with GA or placebo. Findings from a planned interim analysis showed that treatment reduced the risk of CDMS by 44% versus placebo, and delayed disease progression by 722 days vs. 336 days. That phase was stopped after a mean exposure of 2.32 years, and patients were offered the opportunity to enter the open-label extension phase, during which all patients received treatment.

Early treatment reduced the risk of CDMS and delayed its onset compared with placebo in the randomized phase of the trial, but also was associated in the open-label extension with a delay of nearly 3 years in the time to conversion to CDMS compared with delayed treatment.

MRI findings from the PreCISe study, which were presented in a separate session at ECTRIMS, also confirmed the importance of early treatment, according to the principal investigator for that portion of the study, Dr. Massimo Filippi, director of the Neuroimaging Research Unit and professor of clinical neurology at the Scientific Institute and University Ospedale San Raffaele, Milan, and his colleagues.

Early initiation of treatment with GA reduced disease activity and slowed the accumulation of brain atrophy over 5 years as demonstrated by MRI. The early treatment group had significantly fewer new T2 lesions – an indicator of disease activity – and lower T2 lesion volume – a predictor of disease progression – than did the delayed treatment group, the investigators found.

Percent change in brain volume was also significantly lower over the entire study period in patients who received early treatment with GA (−0.99% vs. −1.27%), they said.

The drop-out rate in the 5 years of the PreCISe study was 33% among treated patients, which attests to the established long-term safety profile in patients with relapsing-remitting disease, Dr. Comi said.

“It is very difficult to compare Copaxone to other interferons studied in CIS due to the differences in the type of patients included in each study, but basically the results are comparable, although only Copaxone showed an effect on brain atrophy after 5 years,” Dr. Comi said. He added that the efficacy and safety results of this study establish the importance of early treatment with this drug in CIS patients presenting with positive brain MRI.

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