M. Terzi
Ondokuz Mayıs UniversityAuthor Of 2 Presentations
FC01.02 - Efficacy and safety of eculizumab in patients with neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder previously treated with rituximab: findings from PREVENT
Abstract
Background
In PREVENT, eculizumab was associated with a significant reduction in relapse risk versus placebo and was well tolerated. In total, 46 patients (26/96 in the eculizumab arm, 20/47 in the placebo arm) were previously treated with the monoclonal antibody rituximab.
Objectives
To describe the efficacy and safety of eculizumab in patients in the PREVENT trial (NCT01892345) who had previously received rituximab.
Methods
Adults with aquaporin-4 immunoglobulin G-positive neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder received eculizumab (maintenance dose, 1200 mg/2 weeks) or placebo with/without concomitant immunosuppressive treatment (except rituximab/mitoxantrone). A post hoc descriptive analysis was performed using data from patients with any prior rituximab treatment (within the previous year only for review of adverse events [AEs]) recorded more than 3 months before randomization.
Results
Baseline characteristics of the prior-rituximab subgroup were similar to those of the total PREVENT population; however, the subgroup included a lower proportion of Asian patients (10.9% vs 36.4% in total PREVENT) and greater representation from the Americas (58.7% vs 30.8%). In the subgroup, median times from last dose of rituximab to meningococcal vaccination and to first dose of study treatment were 31.7 and 38.7 weeks, respectively. Adjudicated relapses occurred in 1/26 patients (3.8%) and 7/20 patients (35.0%) in the eculizumab and placebo arms (hazard ratio: 0.093; 95% confidence interval: 0.011–0.755; p = 0.0055), respectively. Rates of AEs for eculizumab and placebo were 1025.8 and 1029.1 events/100 patient-years (100% of patients), respectively, and rates of serious AEs were 46.9 and 66.0 events/100 patient-years (38.9% and 47.1% of patients), respectively. Serious infections/infestations were recorded in 2/18 patients (11.1%) and 2/17 patients (11.8%) in the eculizumab and placebo arms, respectively.
Conclusions
In patients in PREVENT who had previously received rituximab, the risk of adjudicated relapse was significantly lower with eculizumab than with placebo. Rates of serious infections were similarly low with eculizumab and placebo.
PS12.04 - Pregnancy in a modern day multiple sclerosis cohort: Predictors of relapse during pregnancy
- W. Yeh
- P. Widyastuti
- A. Van Der Walt
- J. Stankovich
- M. Gresle
- E. Havrdova
- D. Horakova
- K. Vodehnalova
- S. Ozakbas
- S. Eichau
- P. Duquette
- T. Kalincik
- F. Patti
- C. Boz
- M. Terzi
- B. Yamout
- J. Lechner-Scott
- P. Sola
- O. Skibina
- M. Barnett
- M. Onofrj
- M. Sá
- P. McCombe
- P. Grammond
- R. Ampapa
- F. Grand'Maison
- R. Bergamaschi
- D. Spitaleri
- V. Van Pesch
- E. Cartechini
- S. Hodgkinson
- A. Soysal
- A. Saiz
- T. Uher
- D. Maimone
- R. Turkoglu
- R. Hupperts
- M. Amato
- F. Granella
- C. Oreja-Guevara
- A. Altintas
- R. Macdonell
- T. Castillo-Trivino
- H. Butzkueven
- R. Alroughani
- V. Jokubaitis
- T. Study Group
Abstract
Background
Historically, disease activity diminished during pregnancy in women with relapsing-remitting MS. Today, women with high disease activity are more likely to attempt pregnancy due to the disease control that new therapies offer. But disease activity during pregnancy in the modern day remains understudied.
Objectives
Describe disease activity in a modern pregnancy cohort, grouped by preconception disease-modifying therapy (DMT) class; determine the predictors of relapse during pregnancy.
Methods
Data were obtained from the MSBase Registry. Term/preterm pregnancies conceived from 2011-2019 were included. DMT were classed by low, moderate and high-efficacy. Annualized relapse rates (ARR) were calculated for each pregnancy trimester and 12 months either side. Predictors of relapse during pregnancy were determined using clustered logistic regression.
Results
We included 1640 pregnancies from 1452 women. DMT used in the year before conception were none (n=346), low (n=845), moderate (n=207) and high-efficacy (n=242). Most common DMT in each class was interferon-beta (n=597), fingolimod (n=147) and natalizumab (n=219) for low, moderate and high-efficacy respectively. Conception EDSS ≥2 was more common in higher efficacy DMT groups (high: 41.3%; moderate 28.5%; low 22.4%; none 20.2%). For low-efficacy and no DMT groups, ARR fell through pregnancy. ARR of the moderate-efficacy group increased in the 1st pregnancy trimester (0.55 [95% CI 0.36-0.80] vs 0.14 [95% CI 0.10-0.21] on low-efficacy), then decreased to a trough in the third. Conversely, ARR steadily increased throughout pregnancy for those on high-efficacy DMT (3rd trimester: 0.42 [95% CI 0.25-0.66] vs 0.12 [95% CI 0.07-0.19] on low-efficacy). Higher efficacy DMT groups were associated with higher ARR in the early postpartum period (high: 0.84 [95% CI 0.62-1.1]; moderate: 0.90 [95% CI 0.65-1.2]; low: 0.47 [95% CI 0.38-0.58]). Preconception use of high and moderate-efficacy DMT and higher preconception ARR were predictors of relapse in pregnancy. But, continuation of high-efficacy DMT into pregnancy was protective against relapse (odds ratio 0.80 [95% CI 0.68-0.94]). Age ≥35 years was associated with reduced odds of relapse.
Conclusions
Women with RRMS treated with moderate or high-efficacy DMT are at greater risk of relapse during pregnancy. Careful pregnancy management, and use of long-acting high-efficacy DMT preconception, or continuing natalizumab into pregnancy, may prevent relapse in pregnancy.