Tecfidera and Ampyra Show Potential for Quality of Life Improvement in Patients With MS
New disease-modifying drugs in multiple sclerosis (MS) show potential
for improving quality-of-life (QoL) of patients with multiple sclerosis.
The clinical benefits of dimethyl fumarate and PR-fampridine were
discussed at a Biogen Idec-sponsored satellite symposium at the 29th
Congress of the European Committee for Treatment and Research in
Multiple Sclerosis (ECTRIMS).
Dimethyl
fumarate is an enteric-coated microtablet which works to relieve
oxidative stress, thus preventing axonal loss in the early stages of MS.
This disease-modifying drug (DMD) was recently US Food and Drug
Administration-approved and his marketed under the name, Tecfidera. Its
efficacy was established in phase 2b and phase 3 studies. The primary
end point of the phase 2b study was a reduction in total number of Gd+
lesions on MRI scans performed at weeks 12 to 24. Results in this study
were favorable as they showed a 69% reduction. The DEFINE-CONFIRM phase 3
study, on the other hand, was a comparative study with conflicting
results. Results differed in assessments of annualized relapse rate at 2
years, proportion of patients relapsing at 2 years, 12-week confirmed
disability progression, and gd+ lesions at 2 years. However, an
integrated analysis of DEFINE and CONFIRM was conducted based on shared
baseline characteristics from both studies, resulting in a more accurate
estimate of DMF’s treatment effects. Results of this analysis were then
used in an extension study (ENDORSE) which showed no new or worsening
safety signals among patients with continued DMF exposure, and a similar
safety profile between patients in the phase 3 study, and those who
switched to DMF during ENDORSE.
New disease-modifying
drugs in multiple sclerosis (MS) show potential for improving
quality-of-life (QoL) of patients with multiple sclerosis. The clinical
benefits of dimethyl fumarate and PR-fampridine were discussed at a
Biogen Idec-sponsored satellite symposium at the 29th Congress of the
European Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis
(ECTRIMS). Dr Xavier Montalban, Chair of the Department of
Neurology-Neuroimmunology of the Vall d’Hebron University Hospital,
director of the Multiple Sclerosis Centre, provided a detailed analysis
of dimethyl fumarate (DMF), a twice-a-day tablet with evidence of
suppressing MS disease activity. Dr Thomas Berger, Department of
Neurology, University of Innsbruck (Austria), highlighted the
effectiveness of PR-fampridine, a prolonged-release tablet proven to
improve walking in adult patients with MS. READ MORE