Recurrent disability progression endpoints in multiple sclerosis clinical trials

Author:

Bühler Alexandra1ORCID,Wolbers Marcel2,Model Fabian2,Wang Qing2,Belachew Shibeshih2ORCID,Manfrini Marianna2,Lorscheider Johannes3,Kappos Ludwig3ORCID,Beyersmann Jan4

Affiliation:

1. University of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON, Canada

2. F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd., Basel, Switzerland

3. Research Center for Clinical Neuroimmunology and Neuroscience Basel (RC2NB), Departments of Head, Spine and Neuromedicine, Clinical Research and Biomedical Engineering, University Hospital, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland

4. Ulm University, Ulm, Germany

Abstract

Background: The current standard endpoint to assess disability accumulation in multiple sclerosis (MS) clinical trials is the time to the first confirmed disability progression, which excludes subsequent progression events. Including recurrent progression events may permit a more comprehensive assessment of treatment effects on disability progression. Objective: To propose a definition of recurrent disability progression events and to compare time-to-first and recurrent event analysis. Methods: Recurrent disability progression events were defined by expanding the recommended first event definition. Marginal recurrent event methods (negative binomial model, Lin–Wei–Yang–Ying model) were compared with Cox regression in data from three randomized controlled trials in relapsing multiple sclerosis (RMS) and primary progressive multiple sclerosis (PPMS), and in simulated randomized controlled trial data. Results: The recurrent event analyses included a substantially larger number of progression events compared with the time-to-first-event analyses (+7.5% and +9.9% in the RMS trials and +22.7% in the PPMS trial). The increase in the number of events resulted in more precise treatment effect estimates and a corresponding gain in statistical power. Conclusion: Our results support the use of recurrent event data analysis, especially in progressive MS trials, to improve estimates of treatment effects, increase statistical power, and better capture the clinically meaningful long-term disability progression experience.

Funder

F. Hoffmann-La Roche

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

Reference24 articles.

1. Multiple Sclerosis International Federation. Atlas of multiple sclerosis (3rd ed.), https://www.atlasofms.org/map/global/epidemiology/number-of-people-with-ms (2020, accessed 8 February 2021).

2. Diagnosis and treatment of multiple sclerosis

3. Rating neurologic impairment in multiple sclerosis: An expanded disability status scale (EDSS)

4. Disability as an outcome in MS clinical trials

5. Disability Outcome Measures in Phase III Clinical Trials in Multiple Sclerosis

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