Multiple sclerosis drug interferon beta may not slow disability progression

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Treatment of multiple sclerosis with interferon beta not linked with less progression of disability. The researchers revealed that there is a lack of well-controlled longitudinal studies investigating the effect of interferon beta on disability progression.

Disability and Multiple sclerosis

A key feature of MS is clinical progression of the disease over time manifested by the accumulation of disability. Interferon beta drugs are the most widely prescribed disease-modifying drugs approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of relapsing-onset MS, the most common MS disease course.

Interferon beta and RRMS

Afsaneh Shirani, M.D., of the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada, and colleagues conducted a study to investigate the association between interferon beta exposure and disability progression in relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS).

The study included prospectively collected data (1985-2008) from British Columbia. Patients with relapsing-remitting MS treated with interferon beta (n = 868) were compared with untreated contemporary (n = 829) and historical (prior to the approval of interferon beta) (n = 959) groups.

EDSS and Multiple sclerosis

The primary outcome measured was time from interferon beta treatment eligibility (baseline) to a confirmed and sustained score of 6 (requiring a cane to walk 100 meters; confirmed at >150 days with no measurable improvement) on the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) (range, 0-10, with higher scores indicating higher disability).

Follow-up time (first to last EDSS measurement) differed between groups, being considerably longer for the historical untreated cohort (median [midpoint], 10.8 years), who by definition entered the study much earlier than the contemporary cohorts. The median follow-up times for the contemporary cohorts were 5.1 years for the treated group and 4.0 years for the untreated group.

The observed outcome rates for reaching a sustained EDSS score of 6 were 10.8 percent in the treated group; 5.3 percent in the contemporary untreated group; and 23.1 percent in the historical untreated group.

“After adjustment for potential baseline confounders (sex, age, disease duration, and EDSS score), exposure to interferon beta was not associated with a statistically significant difference in the hazard of reaching an EDSS score of 6 when either the contemporary control cohort or the historical control cohort were considered,” the researchers write. Further adjustment for co-existing illnesses and socioeconomic status, where possible, did not change interpretations.

No evidence that interferon beta slows progression

“In conclusion, we did not find evidence that administration of interferon beta was associated with a reduction in disability progression in patients with relapsing-remitting MS. The ultimate goal of treatment for MS is to prevent or delay long-term disability. Our findings bring into question the routine use of interferon beta drugs to achieve this goal in MS. It is, however, possible that a subgroup of patients benefit from interferon beta treatment and that this association would not be discernable in our comprehensive ‘real-world’ study. Further work is needed to identify these potential patients; perhaps through pharmacogenomic or biomarker studies, paving the way for a tailored, personalized medicine approach. Our findings also encourage the investigation of novel therapeutics for MS.”

Source: Journal of the American Medical Association, USA


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