Conference Coverage

Updated MS guidelines advocate earlier, more aggressive treatment


 

From ECTRIMS 2021

Updated European guidelines on the treatment of patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) have been announced and include a recommendation for siponimod (Mayzent) in progressive MS, as well as a general emphasis toward earlier and more aggressive treatment.

The updated guidelines were presented at the annual meeting of the European Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ECTRIMS) and are the result of a collaboration between ECTRIMS and the European Academy of Neurology (EAN).

Maria Pia Amato, MD, ECTRIMS president and co-chair of the guidelines steering committee, noted that the European MS treatment guidelines were last published in 2018. “Since then more trials have been published, and we felt this was a good time to incorporate the new evidence into updated guidelines,” she said.

“As before, the updated guidelines contain a number of core questions that address the efficacy of disease-modifying therapies, early treatment decisions, disease/treatment response monitoring and treatment modifications, treatment suspension and disease reactivation, and pregnancy and breastfeeding,” Dr. Amato said.

New recommendations

New features of the updated guidelines include a recommendation for siponimod for secondary progressive MS with evidence of disease inflammatory activity; in addition, there is more emphasis on starting treatment early, with greater consideration of higher efficacy drugs, depending on the characteristics of the disease and the patient, Dr. Amato commented.

“We also provided more detailed information on disease-modifying therapy use in pregnancy and breastfeeding and also for women with high disease activity who desire to become pregnant,” she added.

Other new features include the introduction of clinical questions dealing with treatment safety and monitoring (for example, for natalizumab) and also considering the current COVID-19 pandemic scenario; switching strategies with more detailed practical indications on timing; and long lasting effects of drugs such as alemtuzumab and cladribine, Dr. Amato said.

The updated guidelines include the following recommendations:

  • The entire spectrum of disease-modifying drugs should be prescribed by a neurologist with expertise in MS and ready access to adequate infrastructure to provide proper monitoring of patents, comprehensive assessment, early detection of side effects, and the capacity to address those side effects promptly.
  • Offer interferon or glatiramer acetate to patients with clinically isolated syndrome (CIS) highly suggestive of MS and an abnormal MRI with lesions suggestive of MS who do not fulfill criteria for MS.
  • For patients with relapsing-remitting MS, the choice between a wide range of available drugs (interferon, glatiramer acetate, teriflunomide, dimethyl fumarate, cladribine, fingolimod, ozanimod, ponesimod, natalizumab, alemtuzumab, ocrelizumab, rituximab, or ofatumumab), from modestly to highly effective, will depend on factors including: underlying disability progression, disease severity/clinical or radiological activity, patient characteristics and morbidity, drug safety profile, family planning, and patient preferences.

Progressive MS

  • For patients with secondary progressive MS with evidence of inflammatory activity (relapses and/or MRI activity), offer treatment with siponimod. Treatment with other therapies used for relapsing remitting MS may also be considered.
  • For secondary progressive MS without evidence of inflammatory activity, particularly in young patients and those in whom progression has started recently, consider treatment with siponimod or anti-CD20 monoclonal antibodies, taking into account that there is scarce evidence to support their use in this setting.
  • For patients with active secondary progressive MS when there is no other therapy available, consider treatment with mitoxantrone, taking into account the safety concerns and tolerability issues of this agent.
  • Consider ocrelizumab for patients with primary progressive MS, particularly early and active (clinically and/or radiologically) disease.

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