The efficacy of natalizumab in patients with relapsing multiple sclerosis: Subgroup analyses of AFFIRM and SENTINEL

Este artículo está incluido en 2 Revisiones sistemáticas Revisiones sistemáticas (2 referencias)

Este artículo es parte de los siguientes hilos de publicación
  • SENTINEL [Safety and Efficacy of Natalizumab in Combination With Avonex in the Treatment of Multiple Sclerosis] (6 documentos)
  • AFFIRM [Natalizumab Safety and Efficacy in Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis study] (11 documentos)
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The AFFIRM and SENTINEL studies showed that natalizumab was effective both as monotherapy and in combination with interferon beta (IFNβ)-1a in patients with relapsing multiple sclerosis (MS). Further analyses of AFFIRM and SENTINEL data were conducted to determine the efficacy of natalizumab in prespecified patient subgroups according to baseline characteristics: relapse history 1 year before randomization (1, 2, 3), Expanded Disability Status Scale score (3.5, > 3.5), number of T2 lesions (< 9, 9), presence of gadolinium-enhancing (Gd+) lesions (0, 1), age (< 40, 40) and gender (male, female). A post hoc analysis was conducted to determine the efficacy of natalizumab in patients with highly active disease (i. e., 2 relapses in the year before study entry and 1 Gd+ lesion at study entry). In both AFFIRM and SENTINEL studies natalizumab reduced the annualized relapse rates across all subgroups (except the small subgroups with < 9 baseline T2 lesions) over 2 years. In AFFIRM, natalizumab significantly reduced the risk of sustained disability progression in most subgroups. In SENTINEL, natalizumab significantly reduced the risk of sustained disability progression in the following subgroups: 9 T2 lesions at baseline, 1 Gd+ lesions at baseline, female patients and patients < 40 years of age. Natalizumab reduced the risk of disability progression by 64 % and relapse rate by 81 % in treatment- naive patients with highly active disease and by 58 % and 76 %, respectively, in patients with highly active disease despite IFNβ-1a treatment. These results indicate that natalizumab is effective in reducing disability progres- sion and relapses in patients with relapsing MS, particularly in patients with highly active disease. © 2009 Steinkopff-Verlag.
Epistemonikos ID: 4e916555d8b96631fba0fe9424351a6f81a84232
First added on: Oct 01, 2014