The ACROSS study: Long-term efficacy of fingolimod in patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis.

T Derfuss,J Sastre-Garriga,X Montalban, M Rodegher, J Wuerfel,L Gaetano, D Tomic, A Azmon,C Wolf,L Kappos

Multiple sclerosis journal - experimental, translational and clinical(2020)

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摘要
BACKGROUND:In chronic diseases such as multiple sclerosis requiring lifelong treatment, studies on long-term outcomes are important. OBJECTIVE:To assess disability and magnetic resonance imaging-related outcomes in relapsing multiple sclerosis patients from a Phase 2 study of fingolimod 10 or more years after randomization and to compare outcomes in patients who had a higher fingolimod exposure versus those with a lower fingolimod exposure. METHODS:ACROSS was a cross-sectional follow-up study of patients originally enrolled in a Phase 2 fingolimod proof-of-concept study (NCT00333138). Disability and magnetic resonance imaging-related outcomes were assessed in patients grouped according to fingolimod treatment duration, based on an arbitrary cut-off: ≥8 years (high exposure) and <8 years (low exposure). RESULTS:Overall, 175/281 (62%) patients participated in ACROSS; 104 (59%) of these were classified "high exposure." At 10 years, patients in the high-exposure group had smaller increases in Expanded Disability Status Scale (+0.55 vs. +1.21), and lower frequencies of disability progression (34.7% vs. 56.1%), wheelchair use (4.8% vs. 16.9%), or transition to secondary progressive multiple sclerosis (9.6% vs. 22.5%) than those in the low-exposure group. The high-exposure patients also had less progression in most magnetic resonance imaging-related outcomes. CONCLUSION:After 10 years of fingolimod treatment, disability progression was lower in the high-exposure group than in the low-exposure group.
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