posted on 2025-05-09, 21:57authored byDaniel Kreiter, Tomas Kalincik, Jeannette Lechner-ScottJeannette Lechner-Scott, Serkan Ozakbas, Ozakbas Gerlach, R. Turkoglu, A. Soysal, C. Boz, A. Al-Asmi, J. Alkhaboori, M. P. Amato, M. Onofrj, Raymond Hupperts, A. Lugaresi, S Besora, JL Sanchez-Menoyo, E Lapointe, F Grand’Maison, P Grammond, H Butzkueven, A Van der Walt, BV Taylor, PA McCombe, Francesco Patti, JY Garber, OG Skibina, KA Buzzard, NA John, C Shaw, MH Barnett, Daniele Spitaleri, Matteo Foschi, Andrea Surcinelli, Davide Maimone, Bassem Yamout, Samia J. Khoury
Background: Spinal cord lesions in multiple sclerosis (MS) have considerable impact on disability. High-efficacy disease-modifying treatments (hDMTs) are associated with greater reduction of relapses and new brain lesions compared to low-efficacy treatments (lDMTs). Knowledge on the impact of DMTs on cord lesion formation is limited as these outcome measures were not included in MS treatment trials. This study aims to investigate whether hDMTs reduce the formation of cord lesions more effectively than lDMTs. Methods: Patients with relapse-onset MS, a cord magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) within 6 months before/after initiation of their first DMT and ≥1 cord MRI at follow-up (interval > 6 months) were extracted from the MSBase registry (ACTRN12605000455662). Patients treated with hDMTs ≥90% or lDMTs ≥90% of follow-up duration were considered the hDMT and lDMT groups, respectively. Matching was performed using propensity scores. Cox proportional hazards models were used to estimate the hazards of new cord lesions, brain lesions and relapses. Results: Ninety-four and 783 satisfied hDMT and lDMT group criteria, respectively. Seventy-seven hDMT patients were matched to 184 lDMT patients. In the hDMT group there was no evidence of reduction of new cord lesions (hazard ratio [HR] 0.99 [95% CI 0.51, 1.92], p = 0.97), while there were fewer new brain lesions (HR 0.22 [95% CI 0.10, 0.49], p < 0.001) and fewer relapses (HR 0.45 [95% CI 0.28, 0.72], p = 0.004). Conclusion: A potential discrepancy exists in the effect of hDMTs over lDMTs in preventing spinal cord lesions versus brain lesions and relapses. While hDMTs provided a significant reduction for the latter when compared to lDMTs, there was no significant reduction in new spinal cord lesions.
History
Journal title
CNS Drugs
Volume
38
Pagination
921-930
Publisher
Adis International
Language
en, English
College/Research Centre
College of Health, Medicine and Wellbeing
School
School of Medicine and Public Health
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