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385 result(s) for "Giovannoni, Gavin"
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Placebo-Controlled Phase 3 Study of Oral BG-12 for Relapsing Multiple Sclerosis
In this randomized trial involving patients with multiple sclerosis, BG-12 (dimethyl fumarate) reduced clinical relapses, disability progression, and MRI lesions. BG-12 treatment resulted in reduced lymphocyte counts and elevated liver aminotransferase levels. Oral BG-12 (dimethyl fumarate) is being investigated for the treatment of multiple sclerosis. Inflammation and oxidative stress are central pathologic factors in multiple sclerosis. 1 , 2 Immune cell activation and infiltration into the central nervous system are thought to result in widespread cellular damage, potentially owing to the dysregulated production and release of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species, such as hydrogen peroxide and peroxynitrite, and proinflammatory stimuli. 3 This combination of toxic factors ultimately results in demyelination and neurodegeneration, causing disease activity and progression of disability. BG-12 has been shown to have beneficial effects in preclinical models of neuroinflammation, neurodegeneration, and toxic . . .
Multiple sclerosis: risk factors, prodromes, and potential causal pathways
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a common, complex neurological disease. The precise aetiology of MS is not yet known, although epidemiological data indicate that both genetic and environmental factors are important. The evidence that the environment acts long before MS becomes clinically evident is well established and suggests the existence of a prodromal phase for the disease. The increasing incidence of MS emphasises the need for strategies to prevent this chronic disorder, and the possibility of a prodrome indicates a window of opportunity to potentially reverse early disease processes before clinical disease becomes evident. Studying a prodrome requires techniques other than clinical observation such as monitoring endophenotypes that result from associated risk factors. However, our current knowledge of causal pathways and endophenotypes in MS is limited. Identifying and studying individuals with a high risk of developing the disease provides a powerful opportunity to understand the MS causal cascade and is highly relevant to strategies that are aimed at preventing this debilitating disease.
Trial of Fingolimod versus Interferon Beta-1a in Pediatric Multiple Sclerosis
In 215 patients with a median age of 16 years, fingolimod was superior to interferon beta-1a in reducing relapses of multiple sclerosis and the accumulation of new lesions on MRI over a 2-year period. Seizures occurred in 5.6% of patients in the fingolimod group.
Epidemiology of Epstein-Barr virus infection and infectious mononucleosis in the United Kingdom
Background Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV) is a ubiquitous gamma-herpesvirus with which ~ 95% of the healthy population is infected. EBV infection has been implicated in a range of haematological malignancies and autoimmune diseases. Delayed primary EBV infection increases the risk of subsequent complications. Contemporaneous seroepidemiological data is needed to establish best approaches for successful vaccination strategies in the future. Methods We conducted a sero-epidemiological survey using serum samples from 2325 individuals between 0 and 25 years old to assess prevalence of detectable anti-EBV antibodies. Second, we conducted a retrospective review of Hospital Episode Statistics to examine changes in Infectious Mononucleosis (IM) incidence over time. We then conducted a large case-control study of 6306 prevalent IM cases and 1,009,971 unmatched controls extracted from an East London GP database to determine exposures associated with IM. Results 1982/2325 individuals (85.3%) were EBV seropositive. EBV seropositivity increased more rapidly in females than males during adolescence (age 10–15). Between 2002 and 2013, the incidence of IM (derived from hospital admissions data) increased. Exposures associated with an increased risk of IM were lower BMI, White ethnicity, and not smoking. Conclusions We report that overall EBV seroprevalence in the UK appears to have increased, and that a sharp increase in EBV seropositivity is seen in adolescent females, but not males. The incidence of IM requiring hospitalisation is increasing. Exposures associated with prevalent IM in a diverse population include white ethnicity, lower BMI, and never-smoking, and these exposures interact with each other. Lastly, we provide pilot evidence suggesting that antibody responses to vaccine and commonly encountered pathogens do not appear to be diminished among EBV-seronegative individuals. Our findings could help to inform vaccine study designs in efforts to prevent IM and late complications of EBV infection, such as Multiple Sclerosis.
Cladribine: mechanisms and mysteries in multiple sclerosis
ObjectivesThe aims of this manuscript were to review the evidence for the efficacy and safety of cladribine in multiple sclerosis (MS) and to review the molecular and cellular mechanisms by which cladribine acts as a disease-modifying therapy in MS.MethodsThis is a narrative review of the available clinical and preclinical data on the use of cladribine in MS.ResultsClinical trial data argue strongly that cladribine is a safe and effective therapy for relapsing MS and that it may also be beneficial in progressive MS. The pharmacology of cladribine explains how it is selectively toxic towards lymphocytes. Immunophenotyping studies show that cladribine depletes lymphocyte populations in vivo with a predilection for B cells. In vitro studies demonstrate that cladribine also exerts immunomodulatory influences over innate and adaptive immunity.ConclusionsCladribine is a safe and effective form of induction therapy for relapsing MS. Its mechanism of benefit is not fully understood but the most striking action is selective, long-lasting, depletion of B lymphocytes with a particular predilection for memory B cells. The in vivo relevance of its other immunomodulatory actions is unknown. The hypothesis that cladribine’s action of benefit is to deplete memory B cells is important: if correct, it implies that selective targeting of this cell population and sparing of other lymphocytes could modify disease activity without predisposing to immunosuppression-related complications.
Effects of cladribine tablets on lymphocyte subsets in patients with multiple sclerosis: an extended analysis of surface markers
Background: Cladribine tablets 3.5 mg/kg cumulative over 2 years (CT3.5) had significant clinical/imaging effects in patients with clinically isolated syndrome (CIS; ORACLE-MS) or relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS; CLARITY and CLARITY Extension). This analysis compared the effect of cladribine tablets on the dynamics of immune cell reduction and reconstitution in ORACLE-MS, CLARITY, and CLARITY Extension during the first year of treatment (i.e. the first course of CT1.75) in patients randomized to CT3.5. Methods: Lymphocyte subtypes were analyzed using multiparameter flow cytometry. Changes in cell counts and relative proportions of lymphocytes were evaluated at weeks 5, 13, 24, and 48. Results: Across studies, consistent and comparable selective kinetics of immune cell populations occurred following the first treatment year with CT. A rapid reduction in CD16+/CD56+ cells (week 5 nadir), a more marked reduction in CD19+ B cells (week 13 nadir), and a less-pronounced effect on CD4+ (week 13 nadir) and CD8+ T cells (week 24 nadir) was shown. There was little effect on neutrophils or monocytes. Lymphocyte recovery began after treatment with CT3.5. Regarding relative proportions of naïve and memory T-cell subtypes in ORACLE-MS, the proportion of naïve-like naturally occurring T-regulatory cells (nTregs) decreased, and the proportion of memory-like nTregs increased, relative to total CD4+ T cells. Conclusions: CT3.5 has comparable effects on the immune systems of patients with CIS or RRMS. The pronounced reduction and recovery dynamics of CD19+ B cells and relative changes in the proportion of some immune cell subtypes may underlie the clinical effects of CT3.5.
Cladribine to Treat Relapsing Forms of Multiple Sclerosis
Cladribine is a purine nucleoside analogue that selectively depletes peripheral lymphocytes without a major impact on cells of the innate immune system. An oral formulation of cladribine has been developed to be given as short courses over two annual cycles. Oral cladribine results in the peripheral depletion of lymphocytes that is gradual, occurring over several weeks, and is not associated with a cell lysis syndrome, has a greater impact on B cells than T cells, and is followed by gradual reconstitution of the peripheral lymphocyte counts over several months. Oral cladribine is effective in relapsing forms of multiple sclerosis. As a selective immune reconstitution therapy (SIRT), cladribine acts as a short-term immunosuppressant, relative to other maintenance immunosuppressive therapies that result in long-term immunosuppression. The main safety signal that has emerge relates primarily to herpes zoster infection, which was more common in patients with higher grades of lymphopenia, in particular grade 3 and 4 lymphopenia. Data from the oral cladribine extension trial and safety register, and reanalysis of the pivotal phase III trial has indicated that oral cladribine is unlikely to be associated with an increased short- to intermediate-term risk of malignancy.
Smouldering multiple sclerosis: the ‘real MS’
Using a philosophical approach or deductive reasoning, we challenge the dominant clinico-radiological worldview that defines multiple sclerosis (MS) as a focal inflammatory disease of the central nervous system (CNS). We provide a range of evidence to argue that the ‘real MS’ is in fact driven primarily by a smouldering pathological disease process. In natural history studies and clinical trials, relapses and focal activity revealed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in MS patients on placebo or on disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) were found to be poor predictors of long-term disease evolution and were dissociated from disability outcomes. In addition, the progressive accumulation of disability in MS can occur independently of relapse activity from early in the disease course. This scenario is underpinned by a more diffuse smouldering pathological process that may affect the entire CNS. Many putative pathological drivers of smouldering MS can be potentially modified by specific therapeutic strategies, an approach that may have major implications for the management of MS patients. We hypothesise that therapeutically targeting a state of ‘no evident inflammatory disease activity’ (NEIDA) cannot sufficiently prevent disability accumulation in MS, meaning that treatment should also focus on other brain and spinal cord pathological processes contributing to the slow loss of neurological function. This should also be complemented with a holistic approach to the management of other systemic disease processes that have been shown to worsen MS outcomes.
Comorbidity and modifiable risk factors in multiple sclerosis
Multi-system comorbidities are common in patients with multiple sclerosis (PwMS) and significantly influence the disease’s presentation and progression. A comorbidity is defined as an illness other than the specific disease of interest (in this case, MS). Generally, chronic or recurrent conditions are included, while transient conditions such as infection or concussion are excluded. Certain modifiable metabolic diseases in PwMS, such as hypertension, diabetes, dyslipidemia, and modifiable health factors such as smoking, alcohol, and obesity, are also considered part of MS comorbidity in this review, since these are risk factors not only for poor outcomes in MS but also for other vascular comorbidities in PwMS. Cohort studies and clinical trials have reported that comorbidity could have multiple adverse effects on MS. The purpose of this review is to summarize studies investigating modifiable risk factors of comorbidity of MS, as well as multiple body system comorbidities in MS, focusing on the influence these comorbidities have on MS outcomes. We aim to emphasize that the management of MS involves not only disease-modifying therapy, but also requires controlling and preventing modifiable risk factors for comorbidities and appropriate treatment of comorbidities, as these interventions may be equally crucial in improving the prognosis of MS.
Daclizumab high-yield process in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (SELECT): a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial
Daclizumab, a humanised monoclonal antibody, modulates interleukin-2 signalling by blocking the α subunit (CD25) of the interleukin-2 receptor. We assessed whether daclizumab high-yield process (HYP) would be effective when given as monotherapy for a 1 year treatment period in patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis. We did a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial at 76 centres in the Czech Republic, Germany, Hungary, India, Poland, Russia, Ukraine, Turkey, and the UK between Feb 15, 2008, and May 14, 2010. Patients aged 18–55 years with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis were randomly assigned (1:1:1), via a central interactive voice response system, to subcutaneous injections of daclizumab HYP 150 mg or 300 mg, or placebo, every 4 weeks for 52 weeks. Patients and study personnel were masked to treatment assignment, except for the site pharmacist who prepared the study drug for injection, but had no interaction with the patient. The primary endpoint was annualised relapse rate. Analysis was by intention to treat. The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00390221. 204 patients were assigned to receive placebo, 208 to daclizumab HYP 150 mg, and 209 to daclizumab HYP 300 mg, of whom 188 (92%), 192 (92%), and 197 (94%), respectively, completed follow-up to week 52. The annualised relapse rate was lower for patients given daclizumab HYP 150 mg (0·21, 95% CI 0·16–0·29; 54% reduction, 95% CI 33–68%; p<0·0001) or 300 mg (0·23, 0·17–0·31, 50% reduction, 28–65%; p=0·00015) than for those given placebo (0·46, 0·37–0·57). More patients were relapse free in the daclizumab HYP 150 mg (81%) and 300 mg (80%) groups than in the placebo group (64%; p<0·0001 in the 150 mg group and p=0·0003 in the 300 mg group). 12 (6%) patients in the placebo group, 15 (7%) of those in the daclizumab 150 mg group, and 19 (9%) in the 300 mg group had serious adverse events excluding multiple sclerosis relapse. One patient given daclizumab HYP 150 mg who was recovering from a serious rash died because of local complication of a psoas abscess. Subcutaneous daclizumab HYP administered every 4 weeks led to clinically important effects on multiple sclerosis disease activity during 1 year of treatment. Our findings support the potential for daclizumab HYP to offer an additional treatment option for relapsing-remitting disease. Biogen Idec and AbbVie Biotherapeutics Inc.