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Disease Reactivation After Cessation of Disease-Modifying Therapy in Patients With Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis Publisher Pubmed



Roos I1 ; Malpas C1 ; Leray E2, 3 ; Casey R4, 5, 6, 7 ; Horakova D8 ; Havrdova EK8 ; Debouverie M9, 10 ; Patti F11, 12 ; De Seze J13 ; Izquierdo G14 ; Eichau S14 ; Edan G15 ; Prat A16 ; Girard M16 Show All Authors
Authors
  1. Roos I1
  2. Malpas C1
  3. Leray E2, 3
  4. Casey R4, 5, 6, 7
  5. Horakova D8
  6. Havrdova EK8
  7. Debouverie M9, 10
  8. Patti F11, 12
  9. De Seze J13
  10. Izquierdo G14
  11. Eichau S14
  12. Edan G15
  13. Prat A16
  14. Girard M16
  15. Ozakbas S17
  16. Grammond P18
  17. Zephir H19
  18. Ciron J20
  19. Maillart E21
  20. Moreau T22
  21. Amato MP23
  22. Labauge P24, 25
  23. Alroughani R26
  24. Buzzard K27, 28, 29
  25. Skibina O27, 28, 30
  26. Terzi M31
  27. Laplaud DA32, 33
  28. Berger E34
  29. Grandmaison F35
  30. Lebrunfrenay C36
  31. Cartechini E37
  32. Boz C38
  33. Lechnerscott J39, 40
  34. Clavelou P41
  35. Stankoff B42
  36. Prevost J43
  37. Kappos L44
  38. Pelletier J45
  39. Shaygannejad V46
  40. Yamout BI47
  41. Khoury SJ47
  42. Gerlach O48
  43. Spitaleri DLA49
  44. Van Pesch V50
  45. Gout O51
  46. Turkoglu R52
  47. Heinzlef O53
  48. Thouvenot E54, 55
  49. Mccombe PA56, 57
  50. Soysal A58
  51. Bourre B59
  52. Slee M60
  53. Castillotrivino T61
  54. Bakchine S62
  55. Ampapa R63
  56. Butler EG64
  57. Wahab A65
  58. Macdonell RA66
  59. Agueramorales E67
  60. Cabre P68
  61. Ben NH69
  62. Van Der Walt A70, 71
  63. Laureys G72
  64. Van Hijfte L72
  65. Ramotello CM73
  66. Maubeuge N74
  67. Hodgkinson S75
  68. Sanchezmenoyo JL76
  69. Barnett MH77
  70. Labeyrie C78
  71. Vucic S79
  72. Sidhom Y80
  73. Gouider R80
  74. Csepany T81
  75. Sotoca J82
  76. De Gans K83
  77. Alasmi A84
  78. Fragoso YD85
  79. Vukusic S86, 87, 88, 89
  80. Butzkueven H70, 71
  81. Kalincik T1

Source: Neurology Published:2022


Abstract

Background and ObjectivesTo evaluate the rate of return of disease activity after cessation of multiple sclerosis (MS) disease-modifying therapy.MethodsThis was a retrospective cohort study from 2 large observational MS registries: MSBase and OFSEP. Patients with relapsing-remitting MS who had ceased a disease-modifying therapy and were followed up for the subsequent 12 months were included in the analysis. The primary study outcome was annualized relapse rate in the 12 months after disease-modifying therapy discontinuation stratified by patients who did, and did not, commence a subsequent therapy. The secondary endpoint was the predictors of first relapse and disability accumulation after treatment discontinuation.ResultsA total of 14,213 patients, with 18,029 eligible treatment discontinuation epochs, were identified for 7 therapies. Annualized rates of relapse (ARRs) started to increase 2 months after natalizumab cessation (month 2-4 ARR 0.47, 95% CI 0.43-0.51). Commencement of a subsequent therapy within 2-4 months reduced the magnitude of disease reactivation (mean ARR difference: 0.15, 0.08-0.22). After discontinuation of fingolimod, rates of relapse increased overall (month 1-2 ARR: 0.80, 0.70-0.89) and stabilized faster in patients who started a new therapy within 1-2 months (mean ARR difference: 0.14, -0.01 to 0.29). The magnitude of disease reactivation for other therapies was low but reduced further by commencement of another treatment 1-10 months after treatment discontinuation. Predictors of relapse were a higher relapse rate in the year before cessation, female sex, younger age, and higher EDSS score. Commencement of a subsequent therapy reduced both the risk of relapse (HR 0.76, 95% CI 0.72-0.81) and disability accumulation (0.73, 0.65-0.80).DiscussionThe rate of disease reactivation after treatment cessation differs among MS treatments, with the peaks of relapse activity ranging from 1 to 10 months in untreated cohorts that discontinued different therapies. These results suggest that untreated intervals should be minimized after stopping antitrafficking therapies (natalizumab and fingolimod).Classification of EvidenceThis study provides Class III that disease reactivation occurs within months of discontinuation of MS disease-modifying therapies. The risk of disease activity is reduced by commencement of a subsequent therapy. © American Academy of Neurology.
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