4.7 Review

Measuring Treatment Response in Progressive Multiple Sclerosis-Considerations for Adapting to an Era of Multiple Treatment Options

Journal

BIOMOLECULES
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biom11091342

Keywords

multiple sclerosis; treatment response; clinical trial; outcome measure; disability progression

Funding

  1. ECTRIMS Clinical Training Fellowship Programme

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Disability in multiple sclerosis primarily occurs in the progressive forms of the disease, and developing effective drugs to delay disability progression in progressive MS has proven challenging. While some disease-modifying treatments are approved for progressive multiple sclerosis, their effects are moderate and limited mainly to patients with signs of disease activity. The lack of sensitive outcome measures and questions about clinical relevance may explain the challenges faced in clinical trials for progressive multiple sclerosis.
Disability in multiple sclerosis accrues predominantly in the progressive forms of the disease. While disease-modifying treatment of relapsing MS has drastically evolved over the last quarter-century, the development of efficient drugs for preventing or at least delaying disability in progressive MS has proven more challenging. In that way, many drugs (especially disease-modifying treatments) have been researched in the aspect of delaying disability progression in patients with a progressive course of the disease. While there are some disease-modifying treatments approved for progressive multiple sclerosis, their effect is moderate and limited mostly to patients with clinical and/or radiological signs of disease activity. Several phase III trials have used different primary outcomes with different time frames to define disease progression and to evaluate the efficacy of a disease-modifying treatment. The lack of sufficiently sensitive outcome measures could be a possible explanation for the negative clinical trials in progressive multiple sclerosis. On the other hand, even with a potential outcome measure that would be sensitive enough to determine disease progression and, thus, the efficacy or failure of a disease-modifying treatment, the question of clinical relevance remains unanswered. In this systematic review, we analyzed outcome measures and definitions of disease progression in phase III clinical trials in primary and secondary progressive multiple sclerosis. We discuss advantages and disadvantages of clinical and paraclinical outcome measures aiming for practical ways of combining them to detect disability progression more sensitively both in future clinical trials and current clinical routine.

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