Author:
Prosperini Luca,Lucchini Matteo,Haggiag Shalom,Bellantonio Paolo,Bianco Assunta,Buscarinu Maria Chiara,Buttari Fabio,Centonze Diego,Cortese Antonio,De Giglio Laura,Fantozzi Roberta,Ferraro Elisabetta,Fornasiero Arianna,Francia Ada,Galgani Simonetta,Gasperini Claudio,Marfia Girolama Alessandra,Millefiorini Enrico,Nociti Viviana,Pontecorvo Simona,Pozzilli Carlo,Ruggieri Serena,Salvetti Marco,Sgarlata Eleonora,Mirabella Massimiliano
Abstract
ObjectiveTo directly compare fingolimod (FNG) and dimethyl fumarate (DMF) on no evident disease activity (NEDA) status in patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) from 7 multiple sclerosis outpatient clinics in Central Italy.MethodsWe analyzed data of patients with RRMS who started an oral agent, namely DMF or FNG, either as first treatment (naives) or after switching from self-injectable drugs (switchers). We performed a propensity score (PS)–based nearest-neighbor matching within a caliper of 0.05 to select patients with homogeneous baseline characteristics. Pairwise censoring was adopted to adjust for difference in length of follow-up between the 2 treatment groups. Comparisons were then conducted in matched samples with Cox models (stratified by center) with NEDA-3 as the main outcome. NEDA-3 was defined as no relapses, no disability worsening, and no MRI activity.ResultsOverall, 483 and 456 patients eligible for analysis started on FNG and DMF, respectively. The PS-matching procedure retained a total of 550 patients (275 per group). After a median on-study follow-up of 18 months, the proportions of patients with NEDA-3 were similar (FNG 73%, DMF 70%; hazard ratio [HR] 0.74, p = 0.078). Subgroup analyses showed a comparable effectiveness of the 2 drugs in naives (n = 170, HR 1.15, p = 0.689), whereas FNG was superior to DMF in the achievement of NEDA-3 status among switchers (n = 380, HR 0.57, p = 0.007).ConclusionWe found no significant difference between FNG and DMF on NEDA-3 status, while subgroup analyses suggest the superiority of FNG over DMF in patients switching from self-injectable drugs.Classification of evidenceThis study provides Class IV evidence that for patients with RRMS, DMF and FNG have comparable efficacy in treatment-naive patients and that FNG is superior to DMF in patients switching from self-injectable drugs.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Cited by
37 articles.
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