How patients with multiple sclerosis acquire disability

Author:

Lublin Fred D1ORCID,Häring Dieter A2ORCID,Ganjgahi Habib3ORCID,Ocampo Alex2ORCID,Hatami Farhad3ORCID,Čuklina Jelena2ORCID,Aarden Piet2ORCID,Dahlke Frank2ORCID,Arnold Douglas L4ORCID,Wiendl Heinz5ORCID,Chitnis Tanuja6ORCID,Nichols Thomas E3ORCID,Kieseier Bernd C2,Bermel Robert A7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The Corinne Goldsmith Dickinson Center for Multiple Sclerosis, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai , New York, NY , USA

2. Novartis Pharma AG , Basel , Switzerland

3. Big Data Institute, Li Ka Shing Centre for Health Information and Discovery, Nuffield Department of Population Health, University of Oxford , Oxford , UK

4. McConnell Brain Imaging Centre, Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital, McGill University , Montréal, QC , Canada

5. Department of Neurology with Institute of Translational Neurology, University Hospital Münster , Münster , Germany

6. Department of Neurology, Brigham and Women’s Hospital , Boston, MA , USA

7. Department of Neurology, Mellen Center for Multiple Sclerosis, Cleveland Clinic , Cleveland, OH , USA

Abstract

AbstractPatients with multiple sclerosis acquire disability either through relapse-associated worsening (RAW) or progression independent of relapse activity (PIRA). This study addresses the relative contribution of relapses to disability worsening over the course of the disease, how early progression begins and the extent to which multiple sclerosis therapies delay disability accumulation.Using the Novartis-Oxford multiple sclerosis (NO.MS) data pool spanning all multiple sclerosis phenotypes and paediatric multiple sclerosis, we evaluated ∼200 000 Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) transitions from >27 000 patients with ≤15 years follow-up. We analysed three datasets: (i) A full analysis dataset containing all observational and randomized controlled clinical trials in which disability and relapses were assessed (n = 27 328); (ii) all phase 3 clinical trials (n = 8346); and (iii) all placebo-controlled phase 3 clinical trials (n = 4970). We determined the relative importance of RAW and PIRA, investigated the role of relapses on all-cause disability worsening using Andersen-Gill models and observed the impact of the mechanism of worsening and disease-modifying therapies on the time to reach milestone disability levels using time continuous Markov models.PIRA started early in the disease process, occurred in all phenotypes and became the principal driver of disability accumulation in the progressive phase of the disease. Relapses significantly increased the hazard of all-cause disability worsening events; following a year in which relapses occurred (versus a year without relapses), the hazard increased by 31–48% (all P < 0.001). Pre-existing disability and older age were the principal risk factors for incomplete relapse recovery. For placebo-treated patients with minimal disability (EDSS 1), it took 8.95 years until increased limitation in walking ability (EDSS 4) and 18.48 years to require walking assistance (EDSS 6). Treating patients with disease-modifying therapies delayed these times significantly by 3.51 years (95% confidence limit: 3.19, 3.96) and 3.09 years (2.60, 3.72), respectively. In patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis, those who worsened exclusively due to RAW events took a similar length of time to reach milestone EDSS values compared with those with PIRA events; the fastest transitions were observed in patients with PIRA and superimposed relapses.Our data confirm that relapses contribute to the accumulation of disability, primarily early in multiple sclerosis. PIRA begins in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis and becomes the dominant driver of disability accumulation as the disease evolves. Pre-existing disability and older age are the principal risk factors for further disability accumulation. The use of disease-modifying therapies delays disability accrual by years, with the potential to gain time being highest in the earliest stages of multiple sclerosis.

Funder

Novartis Pharma AG

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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