The relevance of fatigue to relapse rate in multiple sclerosis: Applying patient preference data to the OPTIMUM trial

Author:

Fox Robert J1ORCID,Tervonen Tommi2ORCID,Phillips-Beyer Andrea3,Sidorenko Tatiana4,Boyanova Neli4,Brooks Anne5,Hennessy Brian4,Jamieson Carol6ORCID,Levitan Bennett6

Affiliation:

1. Mellen Center for Multiple Sclerosis, Neurological Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH, USA

2. Kielo Research, Zug, Switzerland Evidera, London, UK

3. Innovus Consulting Ltd, London, UK

4. Actelion Pharmaceuticals, Part of Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies, Allschwil, Switzerland

5. Evidera, Bethesda, MD, USA

6. Janssen Research & Development, LLC, Titusville, NJ, USA

Abstract

Background: In the OPTIMUM trial in patients with relapsing MS, treatment differences in annualized relapse rate (ARR, 0.088) and change in fatigue at week 108 (3.57 points, measured using the Fatigue Symptoms and Impacts Questionnaire–Relapsing Multiple Sclerosis, symptom domain (FSIQ-RMS-S)) favored ponesimod over teriflunomide. However, the importance of the fatigue outcome to patients was unclear. Objective: To assess the importance of the OPTIMUM FSIQ-RMS-S results using data from an MS discrete choice experiment (DCE). Methods: The DCE included components to correlate levels of physical and cognitive fatigue with FSIQ-RMS-S scores. Changes in relapses/year and time to MS progression equivalent to the treatment difference in fatigue in OPTIMUM were determined for similar fatigue levels as mean baseline fatigue in OPTIMUM. Results: DCE participants would accept 0.06 more relapses/year or a 0.15–0.17 year decrease in time to MS progression for a 3.57-point difference in physical fatigue on the FSIQ-RMS-S. To improve cognitive fatigue by 3.57-points on the FSIQ-RMS-S, DCE participants would accept 0.09–0.10 more relapses/year or a 0.24–0.28 year decrease in time to MS progression. Conclusion: MS patients would accept 0.06 more relapses/year to change their fatigue by a similar magnitude as the between-treatment difference observed in the OPTIMUM trial.

Funder

Actelion Pharmaceuticals

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

Reference18 articles.

1. Multiple sclerosis related fatigue

2. National Multiple Sclerosis Society. Fatigue, https://www.nationalmssociety.org/Symptoms-Diagnosis/MS-Symptoms/Fatigue (2021, accessed August 24, 2021).

3. Health-related quality of life in multiple sclerosis

4. Quality of life in patients with multiple sclerosis

5. Fatigue predicts disease worsening in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis patients

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Treatment preferences in relation to fatigue of patients with relapsing multiple sclerosis: A discrete choice experiment;Multiple Sclerosis Journal - Experimental, Translational and Clinical;2023-01

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