https://doi.org/10.55788/aef6bd45
Cognitive impairment presents in 40â70% of MS patients, can start early in the disease course, and can have a profoundly negative effects on quality-of-life. Cognitive impairment, particularly CPS, also seems to be able to predict MS progression. In trials, CPS is often measured with the SDMT. Early baseline screening with the SMDT or a similar validated test is recommended for clinically stable patients. The phase 3 ASCLEPIOS I and II trials (NCT02792231, NCT02792218), using the SDMT, showed that ofatumumab significantly reduced inflammatory disease activity, relapses, and delayed disability worsening compared with teriflunomide in patients with relapsing MS. A subanalysis, presented by Prof. Ralph H.B. Benedict (University at Buffalo, NY, USA), assessed the effect in the overall populations of ofatumumab (n=946) versus teriflunomide (n=936) on SDMT performance. A â„4-point improvement (or a â„10% change) in SDMT score is considered to be clinically meaningful. A recent diagnosis was defined as diagnosed within the last 3 years.
Ofatumumab significantly improved SDMT scores from baseline to month 24 in the overall group; improvement was even more pronounced in the recently diagnosed subgroups (see Figure) [1]. More patients on ofatumumab had â„4-point sustained improvement on SDMT (25%) versus teriflunomide (19.6%) in the overall group; there was a similar pattern in the recently diagnosed group (26.9% and 20.2%, respectively). Ofatumumab increased the probability of time-to-first 6-month confirmed cognitive improvement in the overall population (HR 1.14; 95% CI 0.96â1.36), in the recently diagnosed subgroup (HR 1.19; 95% CI 0.93â1.52), and in the group without baseline cognitive impairment (HR 1.23; 95% CI 0.98â 1.56). The observed trends for greater benefits of ofatumumab in those without cognitive impairment at baseline and in the recently diagnoses population provides further support for initiating a high-efficacy therapy early in the disease course to preserve cognitive function.
Figure: Change from baseline in SDMT score of ofatumumab versus teriflunomide for overall and recently diagnosed patient populations [1]
SDMT, Symbol Digit Modalities Test; M, month.
At the same session, Prof. Francesco SaccĂ (University of Naples Federico II, Italy) presented cumulative data for up to 4 years that indicated that longer-term safety of ofatumumab is good, with no new safety risks identified [2]. Adverse events and serious adverse events remained consistent with observations in the phase 3 trials. The rate of serious infections remained stable, as did the mean levels of immunoglobulin. Most reported cases of COVID-19 were not serious (90.2%) and most patients (98.4%) recovered. The risk of malignancies was not increased over time.
- Benedict RHB, et al. Improvement in Cognitive Processing Speed with Ofatumumab in Patients with Relapsing Multiple Sclerosis. OPR-130, EAN 2022, 25â28 April, Vienna, Austria.
- SaccĂ F, et al. Longer-term Safety of Ofatumumab in Patients With Relapsing Multiple Sclerosis. OPR-134, EAN 2022, 25â28 April, Vienna, Austria.
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Table of Contents: EAN 2022
Featured articles
Letter from the Editor
Overarching Theme
Migraine
Targeting cortical activation by transcranial magnetic stimulation
Erenumab more than doubles plasma CGRP levels
Over a third of patients responds late to CGRP antibodies
Multiple Sclerosis
When to start, switch, and stop MS therapy: Real-world evidence counts
Updated EAN-ECTRIMS guideline on pharmacological MS treatment
Gut microbiota composition associated with disability worsening
Teriflunomide in children with MS: final results of TERIKIDS
Estimating brain age in MS: machine learning versus deep learning
Ofatumumab improves cognitive processing speed
Parkinsonâs Disease
Intestinal alterations in patients with Parkinsonâs disease
Gene variants impact survival in monogenic Parkinsonâs disease
Cerebrovascular Disease and Stroke
Most acute stroke patients have undiagnosed risk factors
Absence of Susceptibility Vessel Sign points to malignancy in stroke patients
Acute stroke management: from time window to tissue window?
Epilepsy
Seizure forecasting with non- and minimally-invasive devices
Real-world efficacy of cenobamate in focal-onset seizures
Possible new biomarker for early neuronal death in mesial temporal lobe epilepsy
COVID-19
COVID-19 elevates risk of neurodegenerative disorders
More headaches in adolescents during COVID-19 pandemic
AstraZeneca vaccination and risk of cerebral venous sinus thrombosis
Large impact of COVID-19 on dementia diagnosis and care
Miscellaneous
Tau autoimmunity associated with systemic disease
Long-term effects of avalglucosidase alfa in late-onset Pompe disease
European survey of patient satisfaction in the treatment of cancer-related neuropathic pain
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