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Erschienen in: Journal of Neurology 9/2011

01.09.2011 | Original Communication

De-escalation from natalizumab in multiple sclerosis: recurrence of disease activity despite switching to glatiramer acetate

verfasst von: Joachim Havla, Lisa Ann Gerdes, Ingrid Meinl, Markus Krumbholz, Hans Faber, Frank Weber, Hannah Luise Pellkofer, Reinhard Hohlfeld, Tania Kümpfel

Erschienen in: Journal of Neurology | Ausgabe 9/2011

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Abstract

Natalizumab (NAT) is an effective therapy for relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis (MS), but is associated with an increased risk of progressive multifocal leucoencephalopathy after 2 years therapy. Thus, NAT treated patients often decide to stop NAT therapy after 2 years. Reports on recurrence of disease activity after NAT discontinuation are controversial. We studied disease activity in 13 MS patients who stopped NAT therapy and either remained without disease modifying therapy (no DMT, n = 6), or switched to glatiramer acetate (GLAT, n = 7). Annual relapse rate (ARR), expanded disability status scale (EDSS), and number of patients with contrast-enhancing-lesions (Gd+) on MRI before, during and within 1 year after NAT were determined. We observed recurrence of disease activity in both groups (5/7 GLAT treated patients and 6/6 patients without DMT) within 12 months after cessation of NAT (mean time to first relapse was 5.5 months for all patients). One of the GLAT treated patients and three patients without DMT had severe relapses with sustained EDSS worsening. No differences in ARR, EDSS and MRI parameters were seen between both groups. Patients with relapses after NAT therapy, however, tended to show higher disease activity (EDSS, ARR) before initiation of NAT therapy compared to patients without relapses. Duration of NAT treatment was not associated with higher disease activity after NAT discontinuation. In this observation the majority of patients showed reappearance of disease activity after discontinuation of NAT regardless of whether they switched to GLAT or remained without DMT. Further treatment strategies are warranted for patients who discontinue NAT therapy.
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Metadaten
Titel
De-escalation from natalizumab in multiple sclerosis: recurrence of disease activity despite switching to glatiramer acetate
verfasst von
Joachim Havla
Lisa Ann Gerdes
Ingrid Meinl
Markus Krumbholz
Hans Faber
Frank Weber
Hannah Luise Pellkofer
Reinhard Hohlfeld
Tania Kümpfel
Publikationsdatum
01.09.2011
Verlag
Springer-Verlag
Erschienen in
Journal of Neurology / Ausgabe 9/2011
Print ISSN: 0340-5354
Elektronische ISSN: 1432-1459
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00415-011-5996-y

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