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Observational Study
. 2021 Nov;35(11):1217-1232.
doi: 10.1007/s40263-021-00860-7. Epub 2021 Sep 18.

Natalizumab Versus Fingolimod in Patients with Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis: A Subgroup Analysis From Three International Cohorts

Sifat Sharmin #  1 Mathilde Lefort #  2   3 Johanna Balslev Andersen #  4 Emmanuelle Leray  2   3 Dana Horakova  5 Eva Kubala Havrdova  5 Raed Alroughani  6 Guillermo Izquierdo  7 Serkan Ozakbas  8 Francesco Patti  9   10 Marco Onofrj  11 Alessandra Lugaresi  12   13 Murat Terzi  14 Pierre Grammond  15 Francois Grand'Maison  16 Bassem Yamout  17 Alexandre Prat  18 Marc Girard  18 Pierre Duquette  18 Cavit Boz  19 Maria Trojano  20 Pamela McCombe  21   22 Mark Slee  23 Jeannette Lechner-Scott  24   25 Recai Turkoglu  26 Patrizia Sola  27 Diana Ferraro  27 Franco Granella  28   29 Julie Prevost  30 Davide Maimone  31 Olga Skibina  32   33 Katherine Buzzard  33   34 Anneke Van der Walt  33   34 Bart Van Wijmeersch  35 Tunde Csepany  36 Daniele Spitaleri  37 Steve Vucic  38 Romain Casey  39   40   41   42 Marc Debouverie  43   44 Gilles Edan  45 Jonathan Ciron  46 Aurélie Ruet  47   48   49 Jérôme De Sèze  50 Elisabeth Maillart  51   52 Hélène Zephir  53 Pierre Labauge  54   55 Gilles Defer  56 Christine Lebrun-Frénay  57 Thibault Moreau  58 Eric Berger  59 Pierre Clavelou  60   61 Jean Pelletier  62 Bruno Stankoff  63   64 Olivier Gout  65 Eric Thouvenot  66   67 Olivier Heinzlef  68 Abullatif Al-Khedr  69 Bertrand Bourre  70 Olivier Casez  71 Philippe Cabre  72 Alexis Montcuquet  73 Abir Wahab  74 Jean-Philippe Camdessanché  75 Aude Maurousset  76 Ivania Patry  77 Karolina Hankiewicz  78 Corinne Pottier  79 Nicolas Maubeuge  80 Céline Labeyrie  81 Chantal Nifle  82 David Laplaud  83   84 Niels Koch-Henriksen  85 Finn Thorup Sellebjerg  86 Per Soelberg Soerensen  86 Claudia Christina Pfleger  87 Peter Vestergaard Rasmussen  88 Michael Broksgaard Jensen  89 Jette Lautrup Frederiksen  90   91 Stephan Bramow  92 Henrik Kahr Mathiesen  93 Karen Ingrid Schreiber  86 Melinda Magyari #  4   86 Sandra Vukusic #  40   94   95 Helmut Butzkueven #  33   34   96 Tomas Kalincik #  97   98 Danish Multiple Sclerosis Registry, OFSEP and the MSBase investigators
Affiliations
Observational Study

Natalizumab Versus Fingolimod in Patients with Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis: A Subgroup Analysis From Three International Cohorts

Sifat Sharmin et al. CNS Drugs. 2021 Nov.

Abstract

Introduction: Natalizumab has proved to be more effective than fingolimod in reducing disease activity in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS). Whether this association is universal for all patient groups remains to be determined.

Objective: The aim of this study was to compare the relative effectiveness of natalizumab and fingolimod in RRMS subgroups defined by the baseline demographic and clinical characteristics of interest.

Methods: Patients with RRMS who were given natalizumab or fingolimod were identified in a merged cohort from three international registries. Efficacy outcomes were compared across subgroups based on patients' sex, age, disease duration, Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) score, and disease and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) activity 12 months prior to treatment initiation. Study endpoints were number of relapses (analyzed with weighted negative binomial generalized linear model) and 6-month confirmed disability worsening and improvement events (weighted Cox proportional hazards model), recorded during study therapy. Each patient was weighted using inverse probability of treatment weighting based on propensity score.

Results: A total of 5148 patients (natalizumab 1989; fingolimod 3159) were included, with a mean ± standard deviation age at baseline of 38 ± 10 years, and the majority (72%) were women. The median on-treatment follow-up was 25 (quartiles 15-41) months. Natalizumab was associated with fewer relapses than fingolimod (incidence rate ratio [IRR]; 95% confidence interval [CI]) in women (0.76; 0.65-0.88); in those aged ≤ 38 years (0.64; 0.54-0.76); in those with disease duration ≤ 7 years (0.63; 0.53-0.76); in those with EDSS score < 4 (0.75; 0.64-0.88), < 6 (0.80; 0.70-0.91), and ≥ 6 (0.52; 0.31-0.86); and in patients with pre-baseline relapses (0.74; 0.64-0.86). A higher probability of confirmed disability improvement on natalizumab versus fingolimod (hazard ratio [HR]; 95% CI) was observed among women (1.36; 1.10-1.66); those aged > 38 years (1.34; 1.04-1.73); those with disease duration > 7 years (1.33; 1.01-1.74); those with EDSS score < 6 (1.21; 1.01-1.46) and ≥ 6 (1.93; 1.11-3.34); and patients with no new MRI lesion (1.73; 1.19-2.51).

Conclusions: Overall, in women, younger patients, those with shorter disease durations, and patients with pre-treatment relapses, natalizumab was associated with a lower frequency of multiple sclerosis relapses than fingolimod. It was also associated with an increased chance of recovery from disability among most patients, particularly women and those with no recent MRI activity.

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References

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