Azienda Ospedaliera-Universitaria S. Anna
Neurology Unit, Department of Neuroscience/Rehabilitation

Author Of 2 Presentations

Clinical Outcome Measures Poster Presentation

P0100 - Italian prospective multicentric observational real-life study of aggressive Relapsing Remitting Multiple Sclerosis treated with alemtuzumab (ID 1730)

Abstract

Background

Alemtuzumab(ALEM) is an anti-CD52 monoclonal antibody approved for the treatment of active Multiple Sclerosis(MS) which showed an overall high efficacy in clinical trials, also in the highly active subgroup of patients.

Objectives

The aim of this multicenter obervational study is to evaluate efficacy and safety of ALEM-treatment in a population of aggressive MS naïve-patients at year 2 and 3 after a complete cycle of treatment.

Methods

We conducted a multicenter prospective observational study in a cohort of ALEM-naïve MS patients. Clinical and neuroradiological parameters were collected from patients’ clinical records in 26 Italian MS Centers from October 2015 to May 2020.

Results

133 naïve patients were treated with ALEM: 60,2% females, mean age 31,4(± 8,9) years, mean disease duration 18,5(± 22,7) months, mean follow-up(FU) 34,2(± 12,1) months, median EDSS 3(0-6,5), ARR in the year preceding treatment 1,8 (± 0,9), mean number of brain T2/FLAIR-hyperintense lesions 29,8 (± 20,8) and mean number of Gd-enhancing lesions 3,4(± 5,1). Regarding ALEM efficacy, we report data obtained after the first complete cycle of treatment (2 ALEM-courses) because the occurrence of disease activity between the first and second course is not indicative of a therapeutic failure. 99 and 61 over 133 patients have at least 24 and 36 months FU respectively: 97% and 82% were relapse-free, ARR was 0,02 and 0,1, 92.9% and 82% were MRI activity-free and 97,7% and 91,8% progression-free with median EDSS of 2,0 and 1,5 (IQR 1 – 2,5) at year 2 and 3. The mean time to first relapse was 27,6(± 6,4) months 89,2% and 69,4% of patients reached NEDA-3 at year 2 and year 3 respectively. 5,3% of patients needed a third cycle of therapy. Overall 74,4% of patients had adverse events. Infusion-reaction and infections occurred respectively in 70,1% and 9,8% of patients; regarding secondary autoimmune disease the most frequent was thyroid dysfunction (15,8%).

Conclusions

In our very active MS-population after ALEM-treatment a strong reduction of both relapse rate and MRI activity was achieved. These results strengthen the assumption that aggressive naïve patient is an ideal candidate for immune system resetting, likely due to young age, short disease duration and low disability. Furthermore, absence of previous immunomodulating/immunosuppressant drugs altering the immune system could play a key role in determining effectiveness of this powerful drug. However, longer FU is needed to confirm our data and evaluate whether an early induction therapy could be worthy in this specific population, balancing benefit-risk ratio.

Collapse
Disease Modifying Therapies – Mechanism of Action Poster Presentation

P0314 - Dimethyl fumarate-induced lymphocyte count drop is related to clinical effectiveness in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (ID 853)

Speakers
Presentation Number
P0314
Presentation Topic
Disease Modifying Therapies – Mechanism of Action

Abstract

Background

Dimethyl fumarate (DMF) is an effective treatment for relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) patients. Besides a partially known mechanism of action involving both neuroprotective and antioxidant effects, it causes a mean lymphocyte count drop of approximately 30%, typically occurring within the first year of treatment. Several studies investigated the relationship between this reduction and DMF effectiveness, with heterogeneous methods, obtaining contradictory results.

Objectives

To investigate if absolute lymphocyte count (ALC) decrease during DMF treatment is associated with drug effectiveness on clinical and MRI disease activity in a real-life cohort of patients treated with DMF for at least 6 months. Secondary aims were to evaluate ALC variations over time and the impact of baseline demographic and clinical factors on DMF-induced lymphopenia.

Methods

Demographic, laboratory, clinical and MRI data were collected in this retrospective, observational multicentre study, conducted on RRMS patients attending nine MS centers of Emilia-Romagna region (Northern Italy). Multivariate Cox models were performed to evaluate the impact of six month-ALC drop on time to NEDA-3 (“no evidence of disease activity”) status loss and Kaplan-Meier curves were generated to display the results. Multivariate logistic regression was carried out to analyse possible predictors of lymphopenia.

Results

476 patients (312 females, age at DMF start 38.4 ± 9.97 years) were analysed during a mean follow-up time of 29 months (range 6-61 months). A greater lymphocyte decrease was associated with a longer NEDA-3 status (HR 0.87, p = 0.01), relapse-free (HR 0.85, p = 0.03) and MRI activity-free survival (HR 0.80, p < 0.0001). A higher risk of NEDA-3 status loss (p=0.008) was observed in tertile with lower ALC drop (< 11.5%), compared with other tertiles (11.5-40.5% and >40.5% ALC drop, respectively). A shorter activity-free survival was also influenced by younger age at DMF start (HR 0.98, p = 0.03). The nadir of mean ALC drop (-33.6%) and 35% of grade III lymphopenia cases occurred after 12 months of treatment. An older age at DMF start (OR 1.03, 95% CI 1.00-1.06, p = 0.009) and lower ALC at baseline (OR 1.69, 95% CI 1.34-2.14, p < 0.0001) predicted higher risk of lymphopenia.

Conclusions

A higher lymphocyte count drop at six months is related to better outcomes in DMF-treated patients. A careful ALC monitoring should be pursued up to 24 months of treatment.

Collapse