Background Natalizumab is a highly efficacious treatment for relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS). Objective To assess the real-world long-term safety of natalizumab in RRMS. Methods This multicenter, 5-year prospective observational study, included adults with RRMS newly initiated on natalizumab as per the approved product label in the routine care in Greece. Safety was evaluated by collecting serious adverse events (SAEs) following study enrollment. Results Between 19-Apr-2012 and 18-Dec-2014, 304 eligible patients (median age at natalizumab initiation: 38.0 years; median disease duration: 6.2 years) were enrolled by 20 hospital-based neurologists. Over a median treatment duration period of 58.7 months, 50.7% of the patients discontinued natalizumab, mainly due to anti-JCV antibody detection (59.1%). The adverse event treatment discontinuation rate was 5.2%. The SAE incidence rate during the safety data collection period (median: 48.7 months) was 4.6%. The most common SAEs were infections (1.0%), including 2 cases (0.7%) of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML), and no other opportunistic infections. PML diagnoses occurred 6.2-6.7 years after natalizumab initiation, and approximately 2 years after first detection of anti-JCV antibody for both patients. The incidence rate of malignancies was 0.7%. Conclusion In real-world settings in Greece, natalizumab displayed an acceptable safety profile, with no new safety signals emerging.
Background and Objectives For chronic diseases like multiple sclerosis (MS), real-world evidence on long-term treatment outcomes is essential. The study aimed to provide long-term data on the safety and effectiveness of natalizumab in patients with relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS) treated in a routine care setting in Greece. Methods TOPICS Greece was a multicenter, single-country, prospective 5-year observational study. Results Between 19-Apr-2012 and 18-Dec-2014, 304 eligible adults [females: 63.2%; median age at natalizumab initiation: 38.0 years; median disease duration: 6.2 years; median Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) score at baseline: 3.5] were enrolled in the study by 20 hospital-based neurologists. The 1-year annualized relapse rate (ARR) before treatment initiation was 1.859, while the ARR during the first year of treatment was 0.131, representing a significant 93% reduction (p < 0.001). The ARR over the median treatment period of 59.4 months was 0.109. Patients with ≤1 relapse in the prenatalizumab year (46.1%) and those having received ≤1 prior disease-modifying therapy (57.9%) displayed significantly lower on-natalizumab ARR. The 1-, 2-, 3-, 4-and 5-year cumulative probabilities of EDSS progression were 3.2, 6.2, 9.7, 13.4, and 17.4%, respectively; the respective probabilities of EDSS disability improvement were 18.3, 25.1, 27.4, 28.0, and 30.1%. Over a median safety data collection period of 48.7 months, 4.6% of the patients experienced ≥ 1 serious adverse event, with infections (reported in 1.0%) being the most common. Conclusion In real-world settings in Greece, natalizumab displayed beneficial long-term effects on disease activity and disability progression consistent with previous studies with no new serious safety signals emerging.
Background/Aims: The onset of multiple sclerosis (MS) in Greece has not been systematically studied. We sought to provide data on the onset of MS in Greece with detailed information regarding initial symptoms, and to confirm the prognostic significance of demographic and clinical factors at onset. Methods: We studied 1,034 consecutive patients with MS and independently assessed 265 patients ‘seen at onset’. We used the MS severity score and survival analysis (time to reach an Expanded Disability Status Scale score of 4.0) to evaluate the prognostic significance of factors at onset. Results: Female-to-male ratio was 1.9:1 and mean age at onset was 30.7 ± 9.9 years. MS was primary progressive in 9.6%. Initial symptoms were optic neuritis in 20.1%, brainstem dysfunction in 14.7%, dysfunction of long tracts in 49.3%, cerebral dysfunction in 1% and a combination of symptoms in 14.9%. In ‘seen at onset’ patients, detailed data on initial symptoms are presented. Female gender, earlier age at onset, ‘bout onset’ and onset with optic neuritis were associated with less severe disease and longer time to disability. Conclusion: The onset of MS in Greece is similar to Western populations. Initial symptoms are within the expected spectrum. Prognostic significance of factors at onset is as previously identified.
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