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Anti-CD20 Therapy for Relapsing Multiple Sclerosis

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Anti-CD20 Therapy for Relapsing Multiple Sclerosis

Data have shown that CD20-expressing B cells are crucial to the pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis (MS). First approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for MS in 2017, anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody therapies including ocrelizumab, ofatumumab, and ublituximab have proven effective at controlling the symptoms of relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS).

In this ReCAP, Dr Fred D. Lublin, of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, discusses recent data on anti-CD20 agents for RRMS, including results presented at the 2024 meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers (CMSC).

He discusses a protocol examining the effect on RRMS of extending dosage intervals or stopping anti-CD20 therapy after 1 or 2 years of treatment based on results suggesting that the B cells that return post depletion are predominantly regulatory rather than pathogenic.

Next, Dr Lublin discusses a paper presented at CMSC on risks for serious infections in individuals taking ocrelizumab or ofatumumab. Major predictors were found to be progressive disease, prior use of a disease-modifying therapy, and longer duration of therapy.

Finally, he considers recent studies comparing rituximab, an anti-CD20 therapy not approved for MS in the United States but commonly used off-label internationally, with more recent therapies such as ocrelizumab. Data currently indicate that an increased risk for infections are associated with rituximab vs ocrelizumab, but further research is under way.

--

Fred D. Lublin, MD, Director, The Corinne Goldsmith Dickinson Center for Multiple Sclerosis, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY

Fred D. Lublin, MD, has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships:

Sources of Funding for Research: Novartis; Biogen; Sanofi; NMSS; NIH; Brainstorm Cell Therapeutics

Consulting Agreements/Advisory Boards/DSMB: Biogen; EMD Serono; Novartis; Actelion/Janssen; Sanofi/Genzyme; Roche/Genentech; Horizon Therapeutics/Amgen; Bristol Myers Squibb; Mapi Pharma; Brainstorm Cell Therapeutics; Mylan/Viatris; Immunic; Avotres; Neurogene; LabCorp; Entelexo Biotherapeutics; Neuralight; SetPoint Medical; Hexal/Sandoz; Baim Institute; Sudo Biosciences; Lapix Therapeutics; Biohaven Pharmaceuticals; Abata Therapeutics; Cognito Therapeutics; ImmPACT Bio

Speaker: Sanofi

Stock Options: Avotres; Neuralight; Lapix Therapeutics; Entelexo

I may discuss unapproved agents that are in the MS developmental pipeline without any recommendation on their use.

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Data have shown that CD20-expressing B cells are crucial to the pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis (MS). First approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for MS in 2017, anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody therapies including ocrelizumab, ofatumumab, and ublituximab have proven effective at controlling the symptoms of relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS).

In this ReCAP, Dr Fred D. Lublin, of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, discusses recent data on anti-CD20 agents for RRMS, including results presented at the 2024 meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers (CMSC).

He discusses a protocol examining the effect on RRMS of extending dosage intervals or stopping anti-CD20 therapy after 1 or 2 years of treatment based on results suggesting that the B cells that return post depletion are predominantly regulatory rather than pathogenic.

Next, Dr Lublin discusses a paper presented at CMSC on risks for serious infections in individuals taking ocrelizumab or ofatumumab. Major predictors were found to be progressive disease, prior use of a disease-modifying therapy, and longer duration of therapy.

Finally, he considers recent studies comparing rituximab, an anti-CD20 therapy not approved for MS in the United States but commonly used off-label internationally, with more recent therapies such as ocrelizumab. Data currently indicate that an increased risk for infections are associated with rituximab vs ocrelizumab, but further research is under way.

--

Fred D. Lublin, MD, Director, The Corinne Goldsmith Dickinson Center for Multiple Sclerosis, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY

Fred D. Lublin, MD, has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships:

Sources of Funding for Research: Novartis; Biogen; Sanofi; NMSS; NIH; Brainstorm Cell Therapeutics

Consulting Agreements/Advisory Boards/DSMB: Biogen; EMD Serono; Novartis; Actelion/Janssen; Sanofi/Genzyme; Roche/Genentech; Horizon Therapeutics/Amgen; Bristol Myers Squibb; Mapi Pharma; Brainstorm Cell Therapeutics; Mylan/Viatris; Immunic; Avotres; Neurogene; LabCorp; Entelexo Biotherapeutics; Neuralight; SetPoint Medical; Hexal/Sandoz; Baim Institute; Sudo Biosciences; Lapix Therapeutics; Biohaven Pharmaceuticals; Abata Therapeutics; Cognito Therapeutics; ImmPACT Bio

Speaker: Sanofi

Stock Options: Avotres; Neuralight; Lapix Therapeutics; Entelexo

I may discuss unapproved agents that are in the MS developmental pipeline without any recommendation on their use.

Data have shown that CD20-expressing B cells are crucial to the pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis (MS). First approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for MS in 2017, anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody therapies including ocrelizumab, ofatumumab, and ublituximab have proven effective at controlling the symptoms of relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS).

In this ReCAP, Dr Fred D. Lublin, of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, discusses recent data on anti-CD20 agents for RRMS, including results presented at the 2024 meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers (CMSC).

He discusses a protocol examining the effect on RRMS of extending dosage intervals or stopping anti-CD20 therapy after 1 or 2 years of treatment based on results suggesting that the B cells that return post depletion are predominantly regulatory rather than pathogenic.

Next, Dr Lublin discusses a paper presented at CMSC on risks for serious infections in individuals taking ocrelizumab or ofatumumab. Major predictors were found to be progressive disease, prior use of a disease-modifying therapy, and longer duration of therapy.

Finally, he considers recent studies comparing rituximab, an anti-CD20 therapy not approved for MS in the United States but commonly used off-label internationally, with more recent therapies such as ocrelizumab. Data currently indicate that an increased risk for infections are associated with rituximab vs ocrelizumab, but further research is under way.

--

Fred D. Lublin, MD, Director, The Corinne Goldsmith Dickinson Center for Multiple Sclerosis, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY

Fred D. Lublin, MD, has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships:

Sources of Funding for Research: Novartis; Biogen; Sanofi; NMSS; NIH; Brainstorm Cell Therapeutics

Consulting Agreements/Advisory Boards/DSMB: Biogen; EMD Serono; Novartis; Actelion/Janssen; Sanofi/Genzyme; Roche/Genentech; Horizon Therapeutics/Amgen; Bristol Myers Squibb; Mapi Pharma; Brainstorm Cell Therapeutics; Mylan/Viatris; Immunic; Avotres; Neurogene; LabCorp; Entelexo Biotherapeutics; Neuralight; SetPoint Medical; Hexal/Sandoz; Baim Institute; Sudo Biosciences; Lapix Therapeutics; Biohaven Pharmaceuticals; Abata Therapeutics; Cognito Therapeutics; ImmPACT Bio

Speaker: Sanofi

Stock Options: Avotres; Neuralight; Lapix Therapeutics; Entelexo

I may discuss unapproved agents that are in the MS developmental pipeline without any recommendation on their use.

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Shift Needed in Research, Treatment, Care for Aging MS Population

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Thu, 06/20/2024 - 12:04

For the first time, the majority of patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) in the United States are, or soon will be, over age 55, a phenomenon that’s driving a shift in priorities including the creation of MS aging centers and a push for more clinical trials aimed at this growing patient population.

Given typical patterns of MS onset and its rate of progression, disease duration has long been thought to be the key variable driving disability, but Jennifer Graves, MD, PhD, director of the neuroimmunology research program at the University of California, San Diego, said she now believes that “patient age is actually more important.”

Brian Hoyle/MDedge News
Dr. Jennifer Graves

Speaking at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers (CMSC), Dr. Graves noted that it is well known that key MS symptoms increase over time, particularly during the transition from a relapsing to a progressive phenotype.

However, she maintains that, independent of disease progression, the impact of aging on MS has been underappreciated. She cited research showing that, relative to chronological age, biologic age is more robustly correlated with MS outcomes.

In studies evaluating variables such as telomere length, various markers of senescence, and DNA methylation patterns, Dr. Graves and others have shown that biologic versus chronological aging is more rapid in patients with MS than those without the disease. In addition, within the population with MS, there are also data supporting the premise that disease progression is slower in those with a younger versus older biologic age.

“This raises the question of whether biologic age is a driver of MS and whether we can slow the disease trajectory if we slow [biologic] aging,” Dr. Graves said. While she acknowledged that genetics play an important role in the aging process, she pointed to evidence showing exposure to toxins and other biological stressors, as well as poor lifestyle choices, such as lack of exercise and smoking, are modifiable aging variables.

There are already many avenues of research regarding aging processes and their interaction with MS. Dr. Graves spoke briefly about current research into the relationship between declining ovarian function, declining telomere length, and how this might relate to the transition to progressive MS and advancing disability. To date, her research has revealed a correlation between declining ovarian function and increasing MS disability.
 

Shifting Priorities

The rapid aging of the population with MS in the United States makes research into slowing biologic aging a priority, said Robert Motl, PhD, professor in the department of physical therapy, University of Alabama at Birmingham Multiple Sclerosis Center. He reported he was able to secure funding from the National MS Society for the Healthy Aging through LifesTyle MS Research Center 10 years ago.

“We are the first and, so far, the only research center devoted to the study of aging in MS,” said Dr. Motl, another participant in the CMSC aging symposium. Dr. Motl said he and a colleague have been evaluating specific strategies to meet the varied needs of aging patients with MS with a key focus on physical therapy and preserving function.

Yinan Zhang, MD, an assistant professor of neurology at the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center in Columbus, recently started a multidisciplinary clinic for the management of older patients with MS and said he hopes these types of clinics will help shed light on the unmet needs of older adults with MS — particularly the need for better therapies to address common types of neurodegeneration in this population.

“We need to move away from immunomodulatory agents [in older patients],” Dr. Zhang said. Older patients are typically excluded from therapeutic MS trials for a number of reasons, not least because trials have been traditionally targeted at relapsing disease, which is less common in older patients with MS. He believes older patients are particularly appropriate candidates for MS therapy trials aimed at progressive neurodegeneration, which is characteristic of late-stage disease. Therapies with the potential to slow, or even reverse, demyelination are among the novel strategies being pursued in progressive MS.
 

 

 

Multidisciplinary Approach

Dr. Zhang acknowledged that his recently established MS clinic is still in the early phases and is largely focused on comprehensive care designed to meet the diverse needs of older individuals who often have advanced disabilities and comorbidities.

Currently, each patient that attends the clinic consults with six different types of providers, including a psychologist, a pharmacist, and a physical therapist — all in a single appointment.

Dr. Zhang said his decision to open a clinic was motivated by the increased volume of older patients with MS and was inspired by similar clinics for other disease states in older individuals.

“The need is already strong and growing,” said Dr. Zhang, who speculated that these types of clinics will become widespread as the need for this care is more broadly recognized and accepted.

As the clinic evolves and matures, Dr. Zhang anticipates there will be a research component to better characterize cell senescence and aging processes that might eventually be modifiable or even reversible. He also speculated that aging in MS might eventually become a subspecialty.

Dr. Graves reported financial relationships with Horizon Therapeutics. Dr. Zhang reported no potential conflicts of interest. Dr. Motl reported financial relationships with Bristol-Myers Squibb.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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For the first time, the majority of patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) in the United States are, or soon will be, over age 55, a phenomenon that’s driving a shift in priorities including the creation of MS aging centers and a push for more clinical trials aimed at this growing patient population.

Given typical patterns of MS onset and its rate of progression, disease duration has long been thought to be the key variable driving disability, but Jennifer Graves, MD, PhD, director of the neuroimmunology research program at the University of California, San Diego, said she now believes that “patient age is actually more important.”

Brian Hoyle/MDedge News
Dr. Jennifer Graves

Speaking at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers (CMSC), Dr. Graves noted that it is well known that key MS symptoms increase over time, particularly during the transition from a relapsing to a progressive phenotype.

However, she maintains that, independent of disease progression, the impact of aging on MS has been underappreciated. She cited research showing that, relative to chronological age, biologic age is more robustly correlated with MS outcomes.

In studies evaluating variables such as telomere length, various markers of senescence, and DNA methylation patterns, Dr. Graves and others have shown that biologic versus chronological aging is more rapid in patients with MS than those without the disease. In addition, within the population with MS, there are also data supporting the premise that disease progression is slower in those with a younger versus older biologic age.

“This raises the question of whether biologic age is a driver of MS and whether we can slow the disease trajectory if we slow [biologic] aging,” Dr. Graves said. While she acknowledged that genetics play an important role in the aging process, she pointed to evidence showing exposure to toxins and other biological stressors, as well as poor lifestyle choices, such as lack of exercise and smoking, are modifiable aging variables.

There are already many avenues of research regarding aging processes and their interaction with MS. Dr. Graves spoke briefly about current research into the relationship between declining ovarian function, declining telomere length, and how this might relate to the transition to progressive MS and advancing disability. To date, her research has revealed a correlation between declining ovarian function and increasing MS disability.
 

Shifting Priorities

The rapid aging of the population with MS in the United States makes research into slowing biologic aging a priority, said Robert Motl, PhD, professor in the department of physical therapy, University of Alabama at Birmingham Multiple Sclerosis Center. He reported he was able to secure funding from the National MS Society for the Healthy Aging through LifesTyle MS Research Center 10 years ago.

“We are the first and, so far, the only research center devoted to the study of aging in MS,” said Dr. Motl, another participant in the CMSC aging symposium. Dr. Motl said he and a colleague have been evaluating specific strategies to meet the varied needs of aging patients with MS with a key focus on physical therapy and preserving function.

Yinan Zhang, MD, an assistant professor of neurology at the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center in Columbus, recently started a multidisciplinary clinic for the management of older patients with MS and said he hopes these types of clinics will help shed light on the unmet needs of older adults with MS — particularly the need for better therapies to address common types of neurodegeneration in this population.

“We need to move away from immunomodulatory agents [in older patients],” Dr. Zhang said. Older patients are typically excluded from therapeutic MS trials for a number of reasons, not least because trials have been traditionally targeted at relapsing disease, which is less common in older patients with MS. He believes older patients are particularly appropriate candidates for MS therapy trials aimed at progressive neurodegeneration, which is characteristic of late-stage disease. Therapies with the potential to slow, or even reverse, demyelination are among the novel strategies being pursued in progressive MS.
 

 

 

Multidisciplinary Approach

Dr. Zhang acknowledged that his recently established MS clinic is still in the early phases and is largely focused on comprehensive care designed to meet the diverse needs of older individuals who often have advanced disabilities and comorbidities.

Currently, each patient that attends the clinic consults with six different types of providers, including a psychologist, a pharmacist, and a physical therapist — all in a single appointment.

Dr. Zhang said his decision to open a clinic was motivated by the increased volume of older patients with MS and was inspired by similar clinics for other disease states in older individuals.

“The need is already strong and growing,” said Dr. Zhang, who speculated that these types of clinics will become widespread as the need for this care is more broadly recognized and accepted.

As the clinic evolves and matures, Dr. Zhang anticipates there will be a research component to better characterize cell senescence and aging processes that might eventually be modifiable or even reversible. He also speculated that aging in MS might eventually become a subspecialty.

Dr. Graves reported financial relationships with Horizon Therapeutics. Dr. Zhang reported no potential conflicts of interest. Dr. Motl reported financial relationships with Bristol-Myers Squibb.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

For the first time, the majority of patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) in the United States are, or soon will be, over age 55, a phenomenon that’s driving a shift in priorities including the creation of MS aging centers and a push for more clinical trials aimed at this growing patient population.

Given typical patterns of MS onset and its rate of progression, disease duration has long been thought to be the key variable driving disability, but Jennifer Graves, MD, PhD, director of the neuroimmunology research program at the University of California, San Diego, said she now believes that “patient age is actually more important.”

Brian Hoyle/MDedge News
Dr. Jennifer Graves

Speaking at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers (CMSC), Dr. Graves noted that it is well known that key MS symptoms increase over time, particularly during the transition from a relapsing to a progressive phenotype.

However, she maintains that, independent of disease progression, the impact of aging on MS has been underappreciated. She cited research showing that, relative to chronological age, biologic age is more robustly correlated with MS outcomes.

In studies evaluating variables such as telomere length, various markers of senescence, and DNA methylation patterns, Dr. Graves and others have shown that biologic versus chronological aging is more rapid in patients with MS than those without the disease. In addition, within the population with MS, there are also data supporting the premise that disease progression is slower in those with a younger versus older biologic age.

“This raises the question of whether biologic age is a driver of MS and whether we can slow the disease trajectory if we slow [biologic] aging,” Dr. Graves said. While she acknowledged that genetics play an important role in the aging process, she pointed to evidence showing exposure to toxins and other biological stressors, as well as poor lifestyle choices, such as lack of exercise and smoking, are modifiable aging variables.

There are already many avenues of research regarding aging processes and their interaction with MS. Dr. Graves spoke briefly about current research into the relationship between declining ovarian function, declining telomere length, and how this might relate to the transition to progressive MS and advancing disability. To date, her research has revealed a correlation between declining ovarian function and increasing MS disability.
 

Shifting Priorities

The rapid aging of the population with MS in the United States makes research into slowing biologic aging a priority, said Robert Motl, PhD, professor in the department of physical therapy, University of Alabama at Birmingham Multiple Sclerosis Center. He reported he was able to secure funding from the National MS Society for the Healthy Aging through LifesTyle MS Research Center 10 years ago.

“We are the first and, so far, the only research center devoted to the study of aging in MS,” said Dr. Motl, another participant in the CMSC aging symposium. Dr. Motl said he and a colleague have been evaluating specific strategies to meet the varied needs of aging patients with MS with a key focus on physical therapy and preserving function.

Yinan Zhang, MD, an assistant professor of neurology at the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center in Columbus, recently started a multidisciplinary clinic for the management of older patients with MS and said he hopes these types of clinics will help shed light on the unmet needs of older adults with MS — particularly the need for better therapies to address common types of neurodegeneration in this population.

“We need to move away from immunomodulatory agents [in older patients],” Dr. Zhang said. Older patients are typically excluded from therapeutic MS trials for a number of reasons, not least because trials have been traditionally targeted at relapsing disease, which is less common in older patients with MS. He believes older patients are particularly appropriate candidates for MS therapy trials aimed at progressive neurodegeneration, which is characteristic of late-stage disease. Therapies with the potential to slow, or even reverse, demyelination are among the novel strategies being pursued in progressive MS.
 

 

 

Multidisciplinary Approach

Dr. Zhang acknowledged that his recently established MS clinic is still in the early phases and is largely focused on comprehensive care designed to meet the diverse needs of older individuals who often have advanced disabilities and comorbidities.

Currently, each patient that attends the clinic consults with six different types of providers, including a psychologist, a pharmacist, and a physical therapist — all in a single appointment.

Dr. Zhang said his decision to open a clinic was motivated by the increased volume of older patients with MS and was inspired by similar clinics for other disease states in older individuals.

“The need is already strong and growing,” said Dr. Zhang, who speculated that these types of clinics will become widespread as the need for this care is more broadly recognized and accepted.

As the clinic evolves and matures, Dr. Zhang anticipates there will be a research component to better characterize cell senescence and aging processes that might eventually be modifiable or even reversible. He also speculated that aging in MS might eventually become a subspecialty.

Dr. Graves reported financial relationships with Horizon Therapeutics. Dr. Zhang reported no potential conflicts of interest. Dr. Motl reported financial relationships with Bristol-Myers Squibb.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Prospective MS Trial Proves Ocrelizumab Efficacy in Under-Represented Populations

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Mon, 06/17/2024 - 11:50

In a population of Black/African American and Hispanic/Latino patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), ocrelizumab had high efficacy and an acceptable safety profile, according to the results of a 1-year analysis of the CHIMES trial. The study is the first-ever prospective study of an MS disease-modifying therapy (DMT) exclusively performed in under-represented populations, and offers lessons to researchers aiming to design more inclusive clinical trials to bolster participation by under-represented populations.

“The goal was to better understand efficacy of therapy in under-represented populations because we typically have very low numbers of these patients in our clinical trials, although there are multiple studies over the past decades suggesting that there may be poorer outcomes in Black and Hispanic individuals, particularly in the United States, and that there also may be more aggressive disease,” said Mitzi Williams, MD, who presented the study in a poster session at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.

The team recruited 113 Black participants and 69 Hispanic participants, and, in fact, over-recruited the target number by 25%, and did so 2 months before the launch of the study in July 2020, which just happened to be in the midst of a global pandemic.

After 48 weeks of ocrelizumab treatment, 46.0% of Black participants and 58.0% of Hispanic participants achieved no evidence of disease activity in three components (NEDA-3), while 94.7% and 95.7% were free from relapses, respectively, and 94.7% and 94.2% were free from disease worsening. Serious adverse events occurred in 6.2% and 4.3% of each group, respectively, and there were no new safety signals in either group.

“The good news is that the efficacy and safety was very similar to what we saw in other clinical trials. I don’t think we really expected it to be much different, because when we think about race, it’s a social construct, not a biologic construct. What we do hope to find out is more about some of the interplay of social determinants of health, and how getting on high efficacy treatment can improve and increase productivity and outcomes in the long term,” said Dr. Williams, who is medical director of Joi Life Wellness Group, Smyrna, Georgia.

The researchers succeeded by involving patient advocates and advocacy organizations at the very earliest stages of the trial design. “We were very intentional about looking at things like social determinants of health, childcare, transportation, and things like that to ease some of the burden of participating in the trial, obviously in a legal and compliant way,” said Dr. Williams. The team also ensured complete and accurate translation of patient materials into Spanish.

The study was also a phase 4 trial, which may have simplified recruitment. “So it’s a therapy that’s already approved, which may make people feel more comfortable, but obviously the goal is for our phase 3 trials to make sure that we are recruiting represented populations. We’re taking these learnings and applying them to the broader clinical trial population so that hopefully we won’t have to come back and do phase 4 studies like this,” said Dr. Williams.

She noted that the results of more inclusive studies don’t just benefit underserved populations. “You have groups of people that are suffering and having more disability from a condition, and you need to understand why. When we broaden the population to understand those that are most vulnerable and underserved and [having the worst outcomes], it really helps us to better treat everybody. Because if we can get a hold of those factors that make us do the worst, then we can also better understand the factors that make us do the best,” said Dr. Williams.
 

 

 

Inclusive Recruitment in Clinical Trials

Asked for comment, Ahmed Obeidat, MD, PhD, highlighted the importance of inclusive recruitment. “The study is very important because historically and even in most recent clinical trials, these groups were markedly under-represented and most completed clinical trials derive conclusions based on the study of a nondiverse, White-non-Hispanic predominant population,” said Dr. Obeidat, who is an associate professor at the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. He pointed to a systematic review showing that the median percentage of White participants in MS clinical trials was 93% and ranged from 86% to 98%.

“Several factors may contribute to the disparity in clinical trial participation, and solutions must be explored and developed. CHIMES is a first step in this direction where the study itself is designed to address disparity in MS clinical trial participation,” said Dr. Obeidat.

Dr. Obeidat also pointed to the need to consider other forms of diversity in clinical trials, such as older patients and those with advanced disability. “Investigators, coordinators, and other staff should all strive to be as inclusive as possible in clinical trials,” he said.

Dr. Williams has received consulting fees from Alexion, Biogen, Bristol Myers Squibb, EMD Serono, Genentech Inc., Janssen, Novartis, Sanofi, and TG Therapeutics, and serves on speakers bureaus for Biogen, Bristol Myers Squibb, EMD Serono, Janssen, Genentech, and TG Therapeutics. Dr. Ahmed Z. Obeidat has financial relationships with Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Banner Life Sciences, BD Biosciences, Biogen, Biologix Solutions, Bristol Myers Squibb, Celgene, EMD Serono, Genentech, GW Pharmaceuticals, Horizon Therapeutics, Jazz Pharmaceuticals, Novartis, Sandoz, Sanofi Genzyme, TG Therapeutics, and Viela Bio.

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In a population of Black/African American and Hispanic/Latino patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), ocrelizumab had high efficacy and an acceptable safety profile, according to the results of a 1-year analysis of the CHIMES trial. The study is the first-ever prospective study of an MS disease-modifying therapy (DMT) exclusively performed in under-represented populations, and offers lessons to researchers aiming to design more inclusive clinical trials to bolster participation by under-represented populations.

“The goal was to better understand efficacy of therapy in under-represented populations because we typically have very low numbers of these patients in our clinical trials, although there are multiple studies over the past decades suggesting that there may be poorer outcomes in Black and Hispanic individuals, particularly in the United States, and that there also may be more aggressive disease,” said Mitzi Williams, MD, who presented the study in a poster session at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.

The team recruited 113 Black participants and 69 Hispanic participants, and, in fact, over-recruited the target number by 25%, and did so 2 months before the launch of the study in July 2020, which just happened to be in the midst of a global pandemic.

After 48 weeks of ocrelizumab treatment, 46.0% of Black participants and 58.0% of Hispanic participants achieved no evidence of disease activity in three components (NEDA-3), while 94.7% and 95.7% were free from relapses, respectively, and 94.7% and 94.2% were free from disease worsening. Serious adverse events occurred in 6.2% and 4.3% of each group, respectively, and there were no new safety signals in either group.

“The good news is that the efficacy and safety was very similar to what we saw in other clinical trials. I don’t think we really expected it to be much different, because when we think about race, it’s a social construct, not a biologic construct. What we do hope to find out is more about some of the interplay of social determinants of health, and how getting on high efficacy treatment can improve and increase productivity and outcomes in the long term,” said Dr. Williams, who is medical director of Joi Life Wellness Group, Smyrna, Georgia.

The researchers succeeded by involving patient advocates and advocacy organizations at the very earliest stages of the trial design. “We were very intentional about looking at things like social determinants of health, childcare, transportation, and things like that to ease some of the burden of participating in the trial, obviously in a legal and compliant way,” said Dr. Williams. The team also ensured complete and accurate translation of patient materials into Spanish.

The study was also a phase 4 trial, which may have simplified recruitment. “So it’s a therapy that’s already approved, which may make people feel more comfortable, but obviously the goal is for our phase 3 trials to make sure that we are recruiting represented populations. We’re taking these learnings and applying them to the broader clinical trial population so that hopefully we won’t have to come back and do phase 4 studies like this,” said Dr. Williams.

She noted that the results of more inclusive studies don’t just benefit underserved populations. “You have groups of people that are suffering and having more disability from a condition, and you need to understand why. When we broaden the population to understand those that are most vulnerable and underserved and [having the worst outcomes], it really helps us to better treat everybody. Because if we can get a hold of those factors that make us do the worst, then we can also better understand the factors that make us do the best,” said Dr. Williams.
 

 

 

Inclusive Recruitment in Clinical Trials

Asked for comment, Ahmed Obeidat, MD, PhD, highlighted the importance of inclusive recruitment. “The study is very important because historically and even in most recent clinical trials, these groups were markedly under-represented and most completed clinical trials derive conclusions based on the study of a nondiverse, White-non-Hispanic predominant population,” said Dr. Obeidat, who is an associate professor at the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. He pointed to a systematic review showing that the median percentage of White participants in MS clinical trials was 93% and ranged from 86% to 98%.

“Several factors may contribute to the disparity in clinical trial participation, and solutions must be explored and developed. CHIMES is a first step in this direction where the study itself is designed to address disparity in MS clinical trial participation,” said Dr. Obeidat.

Dr. Obeidat also pointed to the need to consider other forms of diversity in clinical trials, such as older patients and those with advanced disability. “Investigators, coordinators, and other staff should all strive to be as inclusive as possible in clinical trials,” he said.

Dr. Williams has received consulting fees from Alexion, Biogen, Bristol Myers Squibb, EMD Serono, Genentech Inc., Janssen, Novartis, Sanofi, and TG Therapeutics, and serves on speakers bureaus for Biogen, Bristol Myers Squibb, EMD Serono, Janssen, Genentech, and TG Therapeutics. Dr. Ahmed Z. Obeidat has financial relationships with Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Banner Life Sciences, BD Biosciences, Biogen, Biologix Solutions, Bristol Myers Squibb, Celgene, EMD Serono, Genentech, GW Pharmaceuticals, Horizon Therapeutics, Jazz Pharmaceuticals, Novartis, Sandoz, Sanofi Genzyme, TG Therapeutics, and Viela Bio.

In a population of Black/African American and Hispanic/Latino patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), ocrelizumab had high efficacy and an acceptable safety profile, according to the results of a 1-year analysis of the CHIMES trial. The study is the first-ever prospective study of an MS disease-modifying therapy (DMT) exclusively performed in under-represented populations, and offers lessons to researchers aiming to design more inclusive clinical trials to bolster participation by under-represented populations.

“The goal was to better understand efficacy of therapy in under-represented populations because we typically have very low numbers of these patients in our clinical trials, although there are multiple studies over the past decades suggesting that there may be poorer outcomes in Black and Hispanic individuals, particularly in the United States, and that there also may be more aggressive disease,” said Mitzi Williams, MD, who presented the study in a poster session at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.

The team recruited 113 Black participants and 69 Hispanic participants, and, in fact, over-recruited the target number by 25%, and did so 2 months before the launch of the study in July 2020, which just happened to be in the midst of a global pandemic.

After 48 weeks of ocrelizumab treatment, 46.0% of Black participants and 58.0% of Hispanic participants achieved no evidence of disease activity in three components (NEDA-3), while 94.7% and 95.7% were free from relapses, respectively, and 94.7% and 94.2% were free from disease worsening. Serious adverse events occurred in 6.2% and 4.3% of each group, respectively, and there were no new safety signals in either group.

“The good news is that the efficacy and safety was very similar to what we saw in other clinical trials. I don’t think we really expected it to be much different, because when we think about race, it’s a social construct, not a biologic construct. What we do hope to find out is more about some of the interplay of social determinants of health, and how getting on high efficacy treatment can improve and increase productivity and outcomes in the long term,” said Dr. Williams, who is medical director of Joi Life Wellness Group, Smyrna, Georgia.

The researchers succeeded by involving patient advocates and advocacy organizations at the very earliest stages of the trial design. “We were very intentional about looking at things like social determinants of health, childcare, transportation, and things like that to ease some of the burden of participating in the trial, obviously in a legal and compliant way,” said Dr. Williams. The team also ensured complete and accurate translation of patient materials into Spanish.

The study was also a phase 4 trial, which may have simplified recruitment. “So it’s a therapy that’s already approved, which may make people feel more comfortable, but obviously the goal is for our phase 3 trials to make sure that we are recruiting represented populations. We’re taking these learnings and applying them to the broader clinical trial population so that hopefully we won’t have to come back and do phase 4 studies like this,” said Dr. Williams.

She noted that the results of more inclusive studies don’t just benefit underserved populations. “You have groups of people that are suffering and having more disability from a condition, and you need to understand why. When we broaden the population to understand those that are most vulnerable and underserved and [having the worst outcomes], it really helps us to better treat everybody. Because if we can get a hold of those factors that make us do the worst, then we can also better understand the factors that make us do the best,” said Dr. Williams.
 

 

 

Inclusive Recruitment in Clinical Trials

Asked for comment, Ahmed Obeidat, MD, PhD, highlighted the importance of inclusive recruitment. “The study is very important because historically and even in most recent clinical trials, these groups were markedly under-represented and most completed clinical trials derive conclusions based on the study of a nondiverse, White-non-Hispanic predominant population,” said Dr. Obeidat, who is an associate professor at the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. He pointed to a systematic review showing that the median percentage of White participants in MS clinical trials was 93% and ranged from 86% to 98%.

“Several factors may contribute to the disparity in clinical trial participation, and solutions must be explored and developed. CHIMES is a first step in this direction where the study itself is designed to address disparity in MS clinical trial participation,” said Dr. Obeidat.

Dr. Obeidat also pointed to the need to consider other forms of diversity in clinical trials, such as older patients and those with advanced disability. “Investigators, coordinators, and other staff should all strive to be as inclusive as possible in clinical trials,” he said.

Dr. Williams has received consulting fees from Alexion, Biogen, Bristol Myers Squibb, EMD Serono, Genentech Inc., Janssen, Novartis, Sanofi, and TG Therapeutics, and serves on speakers bureaus for Biogen, Bristol Myers Squibb, EMD Serono, Janssen, Genentech, and TG Therapeutics. Dr. Ahmed Z. Obeidat has financial relationships with Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Banner Life Sciences, BD Biosciences, Biogen, Biologix Solutions, Bristol Myers Squibb, Celgene, EMD Serono, Genentech, GW Pharmaceuticals, Horizon Therapeutics, Jazz Pharmaceuticals, Novartis, Sandoz, Sanofi Genzyme, TG Therapeutics, and Viela Bio.

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Pediatric Ocrelizumab Dose Established for MS

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In pediatric multiple sclerosis (MS), the optimal dose of ocrelizumab is the same as the 600 mg adult dose for patients weighing more than 35 kg, according to pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) data from the OPERETTA 1 phase 2 clinical trial. The safety profile was similar to adult patients.

“While we believe the disease to be the same in children and adolescents, [MS] is distinguished by its very inflammatory nature, oftentimes causing two to three times the number of relapses per year as their adult-onset colleagues,” said Teri Schreiner, MD, during a presentation of the results at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.

Approved therapies for pediatric MS include fingolimod in the United States and Europe, as well as dimethyl fumarate in Europe. “There’s a real need for high-efficacy treatment [in pediatric patients], again referring back to this disease being very inflammatory in children and adolescents. We oftentimes will use medications off label but this is clearly suboptimal as we lack safety data, and oftentimes run into difficulty with insurance approval of off-label use of medicine,” said Dr. Schreiner, who is an associate professor of neurology at University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora.

To determine the dose in pediatric patients that would produce comparable PK and PD to adults, the researchers dosed six patients aged 10-18 with 300 mg ocrelizumab, and 17 such patients with 600 mg ocrelizumab during a 24-week dose-exploration period, followed by a 264-week optional extension period. The cohorts were separated based on weight of less than or more than 40 kg. The mean ages were 11.2 years (mean weight, 34.9 kg) and 15.3 years (mean weight, 62.3 kg), respectively.

During the dose-exploration period, seven blood draws were performed to characterize PK. “When the PK data was analyzed, we saw that the proper cut-off point was 35 kilos. At less than 35 kilos, the appropriate dose was half of that adult dose, so 300 milligrams every 6 months, whereas above 35 kilos, the proper dose was actually 600, or the adult dose. Given the rarity of pediatric-onset MS patients less than 35 kilos, most patients will benefit from the adult dose of 600 milligrams twice yearly,” said Dr. Schreiner.

PD data were also encouraging. “The primary PD was the absence of CD-19 B cells, and that was tracked over time. While there were a few patients in both cohorts that had modest reconstitution, there was no patient in our study that crossed the retreatment threshold, and all blood samples were negative for anti-drug antibodies,” said Dr. Schreiner.

Adverse events occurred in five of six patients in the 300 mg group (83%; 4 grade 2, 1 grade 3) and 100% of patients in the 600 mg group (1 grade 1, 9 grade 2, 6 grade 3, 1 grade 4). There was one serious adverse event in the 300 mg group (16.7%) and four serious adverse events in the 600 mg group (23.5%). None led to treatment discontinuation. “This is largely consistent with what was seen in the adult studies of ocrelizumab,” said Dr. Schreiner.

Roche is now recruiting for the phase 3 OPERETTA 2 trial, which will use the 600 mg dose and compare outcomes to a fingolimod arm.
 

 

 

Establishing Safety in the Pediatric Population

“In [pediatric onset MS] it’s an important piece of information to design OPERETTA 2 and to dose ocrelizumab in pediatric-onset MS in general,” said Jeffrey A Cohen, MD, professor of neurology at the Cleveland Clinic, who was asked for comment.

During the Q&A period, Dr. Schreiner was asked whether it is possible to extrapolate experience from rituximab to the pediatric population. “They’re very similar molecules, and we know the mechanisms of action, but I think part of the importance of doing these studies is to get the safety data so that we actually can say with certainty, we are giving you a drug that has this list of side effects and we know about them definitively. We all use other high-efficacy medications, but I don’t think we can exactly extrapolate,” said Dr. Schreiner.

Session moderator Amy Perrin Ross, APN, noted the lack of approved pediatric therapies for MS. “This is an extremely important study, because we at least in the lower 48 are quite limited in our resources for approved pediatric cases. Information like this will make it easier for a potential pediatric indication, which would then make it easier on us to go after [treatment of the disease in this population]. The weight-based dosing, I think, is really a good thing. Patients have been asking for weight-based dosing on everything for many years,” she said.

Ahmed Obeidat, MD, PhD, associate professor at the Medical College of Wisconsin, also praised the study. “While pediatric MS is rare, it is an area of unmet need when it comes to disease-modifying therapies as only fingolimod is FDA-approved, and many use B cell–depleting therapy, such as rituximab, off label to treat children with MS with good outcomes. The need for guidance on the dosing of B cell–depleting therapy is a main priority for research in pediatric MS,” he said.

The study was funded by Roche. Dr. Schreiner has consulted for Roche and Cycle Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Cohen has consulted for Astoria, Bristol Myers Squibb, Convelo, EMD Serono Inc, FiND, INMune, and Sandoz. Dr. Obeidat has financial relationships with Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Banner Life Sciences, BD Biosciences, Biogen, Biologix Solutions, Bristol Myers Squibb, Celgene, EMD Serono, Genentech, GW Pharmaceuticals, Horizon Therapeutics, Jazz Pharmaceuticals, Novartis, Sandoz, Sanofi Genzyme, TG Therapeutics, and Viela Bio. Ms. Ross has consulted for EMD Serono, BMS, Horizon, Alexion, TG Therapeutics, Novartis, Roche, and Sanofi.

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In pediatric multiple sclerosis (MS), the optimal dose of ocrelizumab is the same as the 600 mg adult dose for patients weighing more than 35 kg, according to pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) data from the OPERETTA 1 phase 2 clinical trial. The safety profile was similar to adult patients.

“While we believe the disease to be the same in children and adolescents, [MS] is distinguished by its very inflammatory nature, oftentimes causing two to three times the number of relapses per year as their adult-onset colleagues,” said Teri Schreiner, MD, during a presentation of the results at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.

Approved therapies for pediatric MS include fingolimod in the United States and Europe, as well as dimethyl fumarate in Europe. “There’s a real need for high-efficacy treatment [in pediatric patients], again referring back to this disease being very inflammatory in children and adolescents. We oftentimes will use medications off label but this is clearly suboptimal as we lack safety data, and oftentimes run into difficulty with insurance approval of off-label use of medicine,” said Dr. Schreiner, who is an associate professor of neurology at University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora.

To determine the dose in pediatric patients that would produce comparable PK and PD to adults, the researchers dosed six patients aged 10-18 with 300 mg ocrelizumab, and 17 such patients with 600 mg ocrelizumab during a 24-week dose-exploration period, followed by a 264-week optional extension period. The cohorts were separated based on weight of less than or more than 40 kg. The mean ages were 11.2 years (mean weight, 34.9 kg) and 15.3 years (mean weight, 62.3 kg), respectively.

During the dose-exploration period, seven blood draws were performed to characterize PK. “When the PK data was analyzed, we saw that the proper cut-off point was 35 kilos. At less than 35 kilos, the appropriate dose was half of that adult dose, so 300 milligrams every 6 months, whereas above 35 kilos, the proper dose was actually 600, or the adult dose. Given the rarity of pediatric-onset MS patients less than 35 kilos, most patients will benefit from the adult dose of 600 milligrams twice yearly,” said Dr. Schreiner.

PD data were also encouraging. “The primary PD was the absence of CD-19 B cells, and that was tracked over time. While there were a few patients in both cohorts that had modest reconstitution, there was no patient in our study that crossed the retreatment threshold, and all blood samples were negative for anti-drug antibodies,” said Dr. Schreiner.

Adverse events occurred in five of six patients in the 300 mg group (83%; 4 grade 2, 1 grade 3) and 100% of patients in the 600 mg group (1 grade 1, 9 grade 2, 6 grade 3, 1 grade 4). There was one serious adverse event in the 300 mg group (16.7%) and four serious adverse events in the 600 mg group (23.5%). None led to treatment discontinuation. “This is largely consistent with what was seen in the adult studies of ocrelizumab,” said Dr. Schreiner.

Roche is now recruiting for the phase 3 OPERETTA 2 trial, which will use the 600 mg dose and compare outcomes to a fingolimod arm.
 

 

 

Establishing Safety in the Pediatric Population

“In [pediatric onset MS] it’s an important piece of information to design OPERETTA 2 and to dose ocrelizumab in pediatric-onset MS in general,” said Jeffrey A Cohen, MD, professor of neurology at the Cleveland Clinic, who was asked for comment.

During the Q&A period, Dr. Schreiner was asked whether it is possible to extrapolate experience from rituximab to the pediatric population. “They’re very similar molecules, and we know the mechanisms of action, but I think part of the importance of doing these studies is to get the safety data so that we actually can say with certainty, we are giving you a drug that has this list of side effects and we know about them definitively. We all use other high-efficacy medications, but I don’t think we can exactly extrapolate,” said Dr. Schreiner.

Session moderator Amy Perrin Ross, APN, noted the lack of approved pediatric therapies for MS. “This is an extremely important study, because we at least in the lower 48 are quite limited in our resources for approved pediatric cases. Information like this will make it easier for a potential pediatric indication, which would then make it easier on us to go after [treatment of the disease in this population]. The weight-based dosing, I think, is really a good thing. Patients have been asking for weight-based dosing on everything for many years,” she said.

Ahmed Obeidat, MD, PhD, associate professor at the Medical College of Wisconsin, also praised the study. “While pediatric MS is rare, it is an area of unmet need when it comes to disease-modifying therapies as only fingolimod is FDA-approved, and many use B cell–depleting therapy, such as rituximab, off label to treat children with MS with good outcomes. The need for guidance on the dosing of B cell–depleting therapy is a main priority for research in pediatric MS,” he said.

The study was funded by Roche. Dr. Schreiner has consulted for Roche and Cycle Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Cohen has consulted for Astoria, Bristol Myers Squibb, Convelo, EMD Serono Inc, FiND, INMune, and Sandoz. Dr. Obeidat has financial relationships with Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Banner Life Sciences, BD Biosciences, Biogen, Biologix Solutions, Bristol Myers Squibb, Celgene, EMD Serono, Genentech, GW Pharmaceuticals, Horizon Therapeutics, Jazz Pharmaceuticals, Novartis, Sandoz, Sanofi Genzyme, TG Therapeutics, and Viela Bio. Ms. Ross has consulted for EMD Serono, BMS, Horizon, Alexion, TG Therapeutics, Novartis, Roche, and Sanofi.

In pediatric multiple sclerosis (MS), the optimal dose of ocrelizumab is the same as the 600 mg adult dose for patients weighing more than 35 kg, according to pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) data from the OPERETTA 1 phase 2 clinical trial. The safety profile was similar to adult patients.

“While we believe the disease to be the same in children and adolescents, [MS] is distinguished by its very inflammatory nature, oftentimes causing two to three times the number of relapses per year as their adult-onset colleagues,” said Teri Schreiner, MD, during a presentation of the results at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.

Approved therapies for pediatric MS include fingolimod in the United States and Europe, as well as dimethyl fumarate in Europe. “There’s a real need for high-efficacy treatment [in pediatric patients], again referring back to this disease being very inflammatory in children and adolescents. We oftentimes will use medications off label but this is clearly suboptimal as we lack safety data, and oftentimes run into difficulty with insurance approval of off-label use of medicine,” said Dr. Schreiner, who is an associate professor of neurology at University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora.

To determine the dose in pediatric patients that would produce comparable PK and PD to adults, the researchers dosed six patients aged 10-18 with 300 mg ocrelizumab, and 17 such patients with 600 mg ocrelizumab during a 24-week dose-exploration period, followed by a 264-week optional extension period. The cohorts were separated based on weight of less than or more than 40 kg. The mean ages were 11.2 years (mean weight, 34.9 kg) and 15.3 years (mean weight, 62.3 kg), respectively.

During the dose-exploration period, seven blood draws were performed to characterize PK. “When the PK data was analyzed, we saw that the proper cut-off point was 35 kilos. At less than 35 kilos, the appropriate dose was half of that adult dose, so 300 milligrams every 6 months, whereas above 35 kilos, the proper dose was actually 600, or the adult dose. Given the rarity of pediatric-onset MS patients less than 35 kilos, most patients will benefit from the adult dose of 600 milligrams twice yearly,” said Dr. Schreiner.

PD data were also encouraging. “The primary PD was the absence of CD-19 B cells, and that was tracked over time. While there were a few patients in both cohorts that had modest reconstitution, there was no patient in our study that crossed the retreatment threshold, and all blood samples were negative for anti-drug antibodies,” said Dr. Schreiner.

Adverse events occurred in five of six patients in the 300 mg group (83%; 4 grade 2, 1 grade 3) and 100% of patients in the 600 mg group (1 grade 1, 9 grade 2, 6 grade 3, 1 grade 4). There was one serious adverse event in the 300 mg group (16.7%) and four serious adverse events in the 600 mg group (23.5%). None led to treatment discontinuation. “This is largely consistent with what was seen in the adult studies of ocrelizumab,” said Dr. Schreiner.

Roche is now recruiting for the phase 3 OPERETTA 2 trial, which will use the 600 mg dose and compare outcomes to a fingolimod arm.
 

 

 

Establishing Safety in the Pediatric Population

“In [pediatric onset MS] it’s an important piece of information to design OPERETTA 2 and to dose ocrelizumab in pediatric-onset MS in general,” said Jeffrey A Cohen, MD, professor of neurology at the Cleveland Clinic, who was asked for comment.

During the Q&A period, Dr. Schreiner was asked whether it is possible to extrapolate experience from rituximab to the pediatric population. “They’re very similar molecules, and we know the mechanisms of action, but I think part of the importance of doing these studies is to get the safety data so that we actually can say with certainty, we are giving you a drug that has this list of side effects and we know about them definitively. We all use other high-efficacy medications, but I don’t think we can exactly extrapolate,” said Dr. Schreiner.

Session moderator Amy Perrin Ross, APN, noted the lack of approved pediatric therapies for MS. “This is an extremely important study, because we at least in the lower 48 are quite limited in our resources for approved pediatric cases. Information like this will make it easier for a potential pediatric indication, which would then make it easier on us to go after [treatment of the disease in this population]. The weight-based dosing, I think, is really a good thing. Patients have been asking for weight-based dosing on everything for many years,” she said.

Ahmed Obeidat, MD, PhD, associate professor at the Medical College of Wisconsin, also praised the study. “While pediatric MS is rare, it is an area of unmet need when it comes to disease-modifying therapies as only fingolimod is FDA-approved, and many use B cell–depleting therapy, such as rituximab, off label to treat children with MS with good outcomes. The need for guidance on the dosing of B cell–depleting therapy is a main priority for research in pediatric MS,” he said.

The study was funded by Roche. Dr. Schreiner has consulted for Roche and Cycle Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Cohen has consulted for Astoria, Bristol Myers Squibb, Convelo, EMD Serono Inc, FiND, INMune, and Sandoz. Dr. Obeidat has financial relationships with Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Banner Life Sciences, BD Biosciences, Biogen, Biologix Solutions, Bristol Myers Squibb, Celgene, EMD Serono, Genentech, GW Pharmaceuticals, Horizon Therapeutics, Jazz Pharmaceuticals, Novartis, Sandoz, Sanofi Genzyme, TG Therapeutics, and Viela Bio. Ms. Ross has consulted for EMD Serono, BMS, Horizon, Alexion, TG Therapeutics, Novartis, Roche, and Sanofi.

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The Positive Effects of Exercise in MS

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Changed
Wed, 06/12/2024 - 09:41

Exercise has a long history in multiple sclerosis (MS). In 1838, the Scottish physician John Abercrombie reported that a patient with “a diminution of muscular power,” who could walk but only unsteadily, decided after various failed treatments like “evacuations and spare diet” to try “violent exercise.” He walked 5-6 miles on a warm evening, as quickly as he was able, and returned home “much fatigued, and considerably heated. Next morning he had severe pains in the calves of his legs, but his other complaints were much diminished, and in a few days disappeared. He has ever since enjoyed good health,” Dr. Abercrombie was quoted in Multiple Sclerosis: The History of a Disease by T. Jock Murray.

The first randomized, controlled trial of an exercise intervention for MS didn’t appear in the literature until 1988, but more than 200 have been published in the years since, according to Robert Motl, PhD, who spoke about exercise interventions for MS at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.

Robert Motl


In fact, the evidence shows that exercise can improve walking performance and quality of life. “When we look at what we might call the unseen symptoms, we can see the exercise training is very effective at reducing fatigue in people with MS. It’s very effective at reducing depressive mood in individuals living with MS. There is moderate evidence that it can improve mobility, particularly lower extremity mobility and walking performance in individuals living with multiple sclerosis, as well as balance. And lastly, we see consistent evidence that exercise training can improve quality of life,” said Dr. Motl, who is a professor of kinesiology and nutrition at University of Illinois, Chicago.

There is less evidence that exercise training helps mobility, anxiety, pain, and participation, he said.

Dr. Motl showed the results of various meta-analyses that he co-authored of randomized, controlled trials (RCTs) of exercise training. One meta-analysis of 20 trials that examined the effect on fitness found an effect size of 0.47, which was about one-half of a standard deviation, and is considered to be a clinically meaningful effect. There was also about a 20% improvement in aerobic capacity, and this improves the capacity for maintaining independence, according to Dr. Motl. “That’s huge as individuals who are living with MS over a long-term period of time are aging with this chronic disease and independence does become an issue later in life. We maybe can forestall some of that,” he said.

Another meta-analysis of 17 RCTs examining exercise training and fatigue found a similar effect size of 0.452. When the authors limited the analysis to studies that used the Fatigue Severity Score and its benchmark of clinically significant fatigue of 4.0, “they were able to reduce the mean fatigue severity score below 4.0, meaning you’re taking individuals who have severe fatigue and reducing their fatigue below a threshold of severity that impacts everyday life. So this is something that is clinically meaningful and relevant to the lives of individuals with MS,” he said.

With respect to depression, a meta-analysis of 14 randomized, controlled trials found an effect size of 0.55 standard deviations. The researchers found that the effect size was associated with the number of days per week: The effect was size was doubled among individuals who exercised 3 or more times per week. Another meta-analysis of walking found an average 2-second improvement in walking speed and about a 40-meter improvement in walking endurance. “I believe that’s pretty comparable to what you see with Ampyra (dalfampridine) and its effects on walking speeds, so we’re seeing something that’s as good as a pharmacological agent for managing walking in MS,” said Dr. Motl.

Another meta-analysis of health-related quality of life found that the effect on the physical domain was about twice as large as the effect on mental health–related quality of life. “I think that makes sense because when you are engaging in exercise, it’s a physically invoking stimulus. As you see adaptations, your perceptions of your physical health improve,” said Dr. Motl.

Dr. Motl also addressed safety. There have been some concerns that exercise could lead to temporary worsening of symptoms, “but it was blown up into a major, major problem when it is only 5% of individuals who have these sorts of severe problems,” said Dr. Motl. A systematic review in 2023 found an adverse event rate of 1.2% in the control groups and 2.0% in the exercise groups. This was about the same rates that are seen in the general population, according to Dr. Motl. A consistent adverse event was lower back pain, but further analysis showed it was only reported with resistance training. “The beauty of that is that we have incredible people in the field of MS, who know how to deliver resistance training more safely. And if we do that more effectively, we can avoid this very common injury with exercise training,” said Dr. Motl.

The review also found a 25% reduction in relapses. “It was very interesting. I don’t know if we want to say exercise is a disease-modifying behavior yet, but that effect at the time that these studies were done was about the same as some of the early disease-modifying therapies, showing the same degree of reduction of relapse rate,” said Dr. Motl.

Dr. Motl also discussed updated guidelines for exercise in patients with mild to moderate MS, as well as Parkinson’s disease and stroke survivors. The general advice is for 2-3 days of moderate aerobic exercise per week, beginning at 10 minutes and gradually increasing to 30 minutes per session. The newer guidelines added an option for advanced aerobic exercise, which can be up to 5 times per week and up to 40 minutes per session. Activities include ergometry, walking, aquatics, and elliptical machines for general aerobic exercise, while advanced exercise can also include running or road cycling. Resistance exercise can be done 2-3 times per week with 1-3 sets of 8-15 repetitions, with a total of 5-10 exercises. The authors recommend weight machines, free weights, or resistance bands.

Dr. Motl has received funding from the Department of Defense, National Institutes of Health, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, National Multiple Sclerosis Society, and Bristol Myers Squibb Foundation.

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Exercise has a long history in multiple sclerosis (MS). In 1838, the Scottish physician John Abercrombie reported that a patient with “a diminution of muscular power,” who could walk but only unsteadily, decided after various failed treatments like “evacuations and spare diet” to try “violent exercise.” He walked 5-6 miles on a warm evening, as quickly as he was able, and returned home “much fatigued, and considerably heated. Next morning he had severe pains in the calves of his legs, but his other complaints were much diminished, and in a few days disappeared. He has ever since enjoyed good health,” Dr. Abercrombie was quoted in Multiple Sclerosis: The History of a Disease by T. Jock Murray.

The first randomized, controlled trial of an exercise intervention for MS didn’t appear in the literature until 1988, but more than 200 have been published in the years since, according to Robert Motl, PhD, who spoke about exercise interventions for MS at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.

Robert Motl


In fact, the evidence shows that exercise can improve walking performance and quality of life. “When we look at what we might call the unseen symptoms, we can see the exercise training is very effective at reducing fatigue in people with MS. It’s very effective at reducing depressive mood in individuals living with MS. There is moderate evidence that it can improve mobility, particularly lower extremity mobility and walking performance in individuals living with multiple sclerosis, as well as balance. And lastly, we see consistent evidence that exercise training can improve quality of life,” said Dr. Motl, who is a professor of kinesiology and nutrition at University of Illinois, Chicago.

There is less evidence that exercise training helps mobility, anxiety, pain, and participation, he said.

Dr. Motl showed the results of various meta-analyses that he co-authored of randomized, controlled trials (RCTs) of exercise training. One meta-analysis of 20 trials that examined the effect on fitness found an effect size of 0.47, which was about one-half of a standard deviation, and is considered to be a clinically meaningful effect. There was also about a 20% improvement in aerobic capacity, and this improves the capacity for maintaining independence, according to Dr. Motl. “That’s huge as individuals who are living with MS over a long-term period of time are aging with this chronic disease and independence does become an issue later in life. We maybe can forestall some of that,” he said.

Another meta-analysis of 17 RCTs examining exercise training and fatigue found a similar effect size of 0.452. When the authors limited the analysis to studies that used the Fatigue Severity Score and its benchmark of clinically significant fatigue of 4.0, “they were able to reduce the mean fatigue severity score below 4.0, meaning you’re taking individuals who have severe fatigue and reducing their fatigue below a threshold of severity that impacts everyday life. So this is something that is clinically meaningful and relevant to the lives of individuals with MS,” he said.

With respect to depression, a meta-analysis of 14 randomized, controlled trials found an effect size of 0.55 standard deviations. The researchers found that the effect size was associated with the number of days per week: The effect was size was doubled among individuals who exercised 3 or more times per week. Another meta-analysis of walking found an average 2-second improvement in walking speed and about a 40-meter improvement in walking endurance. “I believe that’s pretty comparable to what you see with Ampyra (dalfampridine) and its effects on walking speeds, so we’re seeing something that’s as good as a pharmacological agent for managing walking in MS,” said Dr. Motl.

Another meta-analysis of health-related quality of life found that the effect on the physical domain was about twice as large as the effect on mental health–related quality of life. “I think that makes sense because when you are engaging in exercise, it’s a physically invoking stimulus. As you see adaptations, your perceptions of your physical health improve,” said Dr. Motl.

Dr. Motl also addressed safety. There have been some concerns that exercise could lead to temporary worsening of symptoms, “but it was blown up into a major, major problem when it is only 5% of individuals who have these sorts of severe problems,” said Dr. Motl. A systematic review in 2023 found an adverse event rate of 1.2% in the control groups and 2.0% in the exercise groups. This was about the same rates that are seen in the general population, according to Dr. Motl. A consistent adverse event was lower back pain, but further analysis showed it was only reported with resistance training. “The beauty of that is that we have incredible people in the field of MS, who know how to deliver resistance training more safely. And if we do that more effectively, we can avoid this very common injury with exercise training,” said Dr. Motl.

The review also found a 25% reduction in relapses. “It was very interesting. I don’t know if we want to say exercise is a disease-modifying behavior yet, but that effect at the time that these studies were done was about the same as some of the early disease-modifying therapies, showing the same degree of reduction of relapse rate,” said Dr. Motl.

Dr. Motl also discussed updated guidelines for exercise in patients with mild to moderate MS, as well as Parkinson’s disease and stroke survivors. The general advice is for 2-3 days of moderate aerobic exercise per week, beginning at 10 minutes and gradually increasing to 30 minutes per session. The newer guidelines added an option for advanced aerobic exercise, which can be up to 5 times per week and up to 40 minutes per session. Activities include ergometry, walking, aquatics, and elliptical machines for general aerobic exercise, while advanced exercise can also include running or road cycling. Resistance exercise can be done 2-3 times per week with 1-3 sets of 8-15 repetitions, with a total of 5-10 exercises. The authors recommend weight machines, free weights, or resistance bands.

Dr. Motl has received funding from the Department of Defense, National Institutes of Health, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, National Multiple Sclerosis Society, and Bristol Myers Squibb Foundation.

Exercise has a long history in multiple sclerosis (MS). In 1838, the Scottish physician John Abercrombie reported that a patient with “a diminution of muscular power,” who could walk but only unsteadily, decided after various failed treatments like “evacuations and spare diet” to try “violent exercise.” He walked 5-6 miles on a warm evening, as quickly as he was able, and returned home “much fatigued, and considerably heated. Next morning he had severe pains in the calves of his legs, but his other complaints were much diminished, and in a few days disappeared. He has ever since enjoyed good health,” Dr. Abercrombie was quoted in Multiple Sclerosis: The History of a Disease by T. Jock Murray.

The first randomized, controlled trial of an exercise intervention for MS didn’t appear in the literature until 1988, but more than 200 have been published in the years since, according to Robert Motl, PhD, who spoke about exercise interventions for MS at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.

Robert Motl


In fact, the evidence shows that exercise can improve walking performance and quality of life. “When we look at what we might call the unseen symptoms, we can see the exercise training is very effective at reducing fatigue in people with MS. It’s very effective at reducing depressive mood in individuals living with MS. There is moderate evidence that it can improve mobility, particularly lower extremity mobility and walking performance in individuals living with multiple sclerosis, as well as balance. And lastly, we see consistent evidence that exercise training can improve quality of life,” said Dr. Motl, who is a professor of kinesiology and nutrition at University of Illinois, Chicago.

There is less evidence that exercise training helps mobility, anxiety, pain, and participation, he said.

Dr. Motl showed the results of various meta-analyses that he co-authored of randomized, controlled trials (RCTs) of exercise training. One meta-analysis of 20 trials that examined the effect on fitness found an effect size of 0.47, which was about one-half of a standard deviation, and is considered to be a clinically meaningful effect. There was also about a 20% improvement in aerobic capacity, and this improves the capacity for maintaining independence, according to Dr. Motl. “That’s huge as individuals who are living with MS over a long-term period of time are aging with this chronic disease and independence does become an issue later in life. We maybe can forestall some of that,” he said.

Another meta-analysis of 17 RCTs examining exercise training and fatigue found a similar effect size of 0.452. When the authors limited the analysis to studies that used the Fatigue Severity Score and its benchmark of clinically significant fatigue of 4.0, “they were able to reduce the mean fatigue severity score below 4.0, meaning you’re taking individuals who have severe fatigue and reducing their fatigue below a threshold of severity that impacts everyday life. So this is something that is clinically meaningful and relevant to the lives of individuals with MS,” he said.

With respect to depression, a meta-analysis of 14 randomized, controlled trials found an effect size of 0.55 standard deviations. The researchers found that the effect size was associated with the number of days per week: The effect was size was doubled among individuals who exercised 3 or more times per week. Another meta-analysis of walking found an average 2-second improvement in walking speed and about a 40-meter improvement in walking endurance. “I believe that’s pretty comparable to what you see with Ampyra (dalfampridine) and its effects on walking speeds, so we’re seeing something that’s as good as a pharmacological agent for managing walking in MS,” said Dr. Motl.

Another meta-analysis of health-related quality of life found that the effect on the physical domain was about twice as large as the effect on mental health–related quality of life. “I think that makes sense because when you are engaging in exercise, it’s a physically invoking stimulus. As you see adaptations, your perceptions of your physical health improve,” said Dr. Motl.

Dr. Motl also addressed safety. There have been some concerns that exercise could lead to temporary worsening of symptoms, “but it was blown up into a major, major problem when it is only 5% of individuals who have these sorts of severe problems,” said Dr. Motl. A systematic review in 2023 found an adverse event rate of 1.2% in the control groups and 2.0% in the exercise groups. This was about the same rates that are seen in the general population, according to Dr. Motl. A consistent adverse event was lower back pain, but further analysis showed it was only reported with resistance training. “The beauty of that is that we have incredible people in the field of MS, who know how to deliver resistance training more safely. And if we do that more effectively, we can avoid this very common injury with exercise training,” said Dr. Motl.

The review also found a 25% reduction in relapses. “It was very interesting. I don’t know if we want to say exercise is a disease-modifying behavior yet, but that effect at the time that these studies were done was about the same as some of the early disease-modifying therapies, showing the same degree of reduction of relapse rate,” said Dr. Motl.

Dr. Motl also discussed updated guidelines for exercise in patients with mild to moderate MS, as well as Parkinson’s disease and stroke survivors. The general advice is for 2-3 days of moderate aerobic exercise per week, beginning at 10 minutes and gradually increasing to 30 minutes per session. The newer guidelines added an option for advanced aerobic exercise, which can be up to 5 times per week and up to 40 minutes per session. Activities include ergometry, walking, aquatics, and elliptical machines for general aerobic exercise, while advanced exercise can also include running or road cycling. Resistance exercise can be done 2-3 times per week with 1-3 sets of 8-15 repetitions, with a total of 5-10 exercises. The authors recommend weight machines, free weights, or resistance bands.

Dr. Motl has received funding from the Department of Defense, National Institutes of Health, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, National Multiple Sclerosis Society, and Bristol Myers Squibb Foundation.

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MS in Men: Unusual, and Unusually Challenging

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Multiple sclerosis (MS) is much more commonly diagnosed in women, but men get the diagnosis too and can present some special challenges to disease management and treatment. Disease course, mental health, and social function may be different in male patients.

Among the clinical differences: Men may be diagnosed at an older age, often closer to 30 years of age, and they more often experience memory problems, spinal cord lesions, and motor symptoms. They are at higher risk of progressive-onset disease, but have lower relapse rates. Disability rates are higher in men than in women, but long-term survival is no different. Brain atrophy is also more common among men.

Not all MRI facilities will include brain atrophy assessment, so it is a good idea to put an order in for brain atrophy when there are reasons to be concerned, such as cognitive effects or issues with walking, according to Jeffrey Hernandez, DNP, during a talk at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers. Dr. Hernandez is affiliated with the University of Miami Multiple Sclerosis Center.
 

Addressing Sensitive Topics

Men may be less willing to discuss their symptoms, in part because they may have been raised to be tough and stoic. “Looking for help might make them feel more vulnerable,” said Dr. Hernandez. That’s not a feeling that most men are familiar with, he said. Men “don’t want to be deemed or seem weak or dependent on anyone.” Consequently, men are less likely to complain about any symptom, said Dr. Hernandez.

He advised asking more open-ended questions in an effort to draw men out. “Just ask how they’re doing. See if anything has changed from their usual habits, have their activities of daily living changed, has their work performance changed? That can give you an indication. One of my patients [said he] was demoted from [his] position, that the demotion was related to cognitive impairment and the way that he was working. That gives you an idea as to where you can help intervene and perhaps make an improvement for that patient’s quality of life, or consider switching treatments,” said Dr. Hernandez.

Men are less likely to report symptoms such as tingling, physical complaints, cognitive difficulties, mood changes, and sexual dysfunction. That doesn’t mean they’re not experiencing issues, though, especially when it comes to sexual problems. Dr. Hernandez recalled one patient who just stared out the window when asked about his sex life. “Then I said, the next time I want your wife to be here, and then she spilled the beans on everything. So it’s important sometimes to include other members of the family or their partners in the conversation to give you some insight. And perhaps that day it wasn’t a priority for him, but then the next time it was a priority for his wife,” he said.

He pointed out that erectile dysfunction could be due to a physiological response to MS, or to psychological effects.

Low testosterone levels may also play a role in MS, since it is a natural anti-inflammatory hormone. Hypogonadism has been found to be high among men with MS in some studies. MS in men is associated with more enhancing lesions, greater cognitive decline, and increased risk of disability, while high levels of testosterone are linked to neuroprotective effects and lower risk of developing MS.

Men with MS are more likely than women to report suicidal thoughts when depressed, and mental health can be taboo, as men may try to solve problems on their own before seeking help. “But a lot of the times they can use a little bit of help, whether it be from talk therapy or meds. With the expansion of telemedicine, virtual care has skyrocketed in psychiatry. I advocate strongly for it. Psychologytoday.com is a very common portal that I recommend so they can look up providers with their insurances, and they can see who gives in person versus virtual care. They can do it from the comfort of their car. I’ve had people in their car crying because they don’t want to be in their house when they talk to me,” said Dr. Hernandez.

Physical struggles can lead men to feel they’ve lost their independence, and that they are no longer the protector of the household. Divorce is common, which can lead to social isolation. One patient wanted to see Dr. Hernandez monthly, a request that he had to decline. “Sometimes they want to discuss these things and they just don’t have someone to talk to,” said Dr. Hernandez. Social support programs through the National MS Society, the MS Foundation, or the Multiple Sclerosis Association of America may sponsor local programs that could be beneficial.

Dr. Hernandez has no relevant financial disclosures.

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Multiple sclerosis (MS) is much more commonly diagnosed in women, but men get the diagnosis too and can present some special challenges to disease management and treatment. Disease course, mental health, and social function may be different in male patients.

Among the clinical differences: Men may be diagnosed at an older age, often closer to 30 years of age, and they more often experience memory problems, spinal cord lesions, and motor symptoms. They are at higher risk of progressive-onset disease, but have lower relapse rates. Disability rates are higher in men than in women, but long-term survival is no different. Brain atrophy is also more common among men.

Not all MRI facilities will include brain atrophy assessment, so it is a good idea to put an order in for brain atrophy when there are reasons to be concerned, such as cognitive effects or issues with walking, according to Jeffrey Hernandez, DNP, during a talk at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers. Dr. Hernandez is affiliated with the University of Miami Multiple Sclerosis Center.
 

Addressing Sensitive Topics

Men may be less willing to discuss their symptoms, in part because they may have been raised to be tough and stoic. “Looking for help might make them feel more vulnerable,” said Dr. Hernandez. That’s not a feeling that most men are familiar with, he said. Men “don’t want to be deemed or seem weak or dependent on anyone.” Consequently, men are less likely to complain about any symptom, said Dr. Hernandez.

He advised asking more open-ended questions in an effort to draw men out. “Just ask how they’re doing. See if anything has changed from their usual habits, have their activities of daily living changed, has their work performance changed? That can give you an indication. One of my patients [said he] was demoted from [his] position, that the demotion was related to cognitive impairment and the way that he was working. That gives you an idea as to where you can help intervene and perhaps make an improvement for that patient’s quality of life, or consider switching treatments,” said Dr. Hernandez.

Men are less likely to report symptoms such as tingling, physical complaints, cognitive difficulties, mood changes, and sexual dysfunction. That doesn’t mean they’re not experiencing issues, though, especially when it comes to sexual problems. Dr. Hernandez recalled one patient who just stared out the window when asked about his sex life. “Then I said, the next time I want your wife to be here, and then she spilled the beans on everything. So it’s important sometimes to include other members of the family or their partners in the conversation to give you some insight. And perhaps that day it wasn’t a priority for him, but then the next time it was a priority for his wife,” he said.

He pointed out that erectile dysfunction could be due to a physiological response to MS, or to psychological effects.

Low testosterone levels may also play a role in MS, since it is a natural anti-inflammatory hormone. Hypogonadism has been found to be high among men with MS in some studies. MS in men is associated with more enhancing lesions, greater cognitive decline, and increased risk of disability, while high levels of testosterone are linked to neuroprotective effects and lower risk of developing MS.

Men with MS are more likely than women to report suicidal thoughts when depressed, and mental health can be taboo, as men may try to solve problems on their own before seeking help. “But a lot of the times they can use a little bit of help, whether it be from talk therapy or meds. With the expansion of telemedicine, virtual care has skyrocketed in psychiatry. I advocate strongly for it. Psychologytoday.com is a very common portal that I recommend so they can look up providers with their insurances, and they can see who gives in person versus virtual care. They can do it from the comfort of their car. I’ve had people in their car crying because they don’t want to be in their house when they talk to me,” said Dr. Hernandez.

Physical struggles can lead men to feel they’ve lost their independence, and that they are no longer the protector of the household. Divorce is common, which can lead to social isolation. One patient wanted to see Dr. Hernandez monthly, a request that he had to decline. “Sometimes they want to discuss these things and they just don’t have someone to talk to,” said Dr. Hernandez. Social support programs through the National MS Society, the MS Foundation, or the Multiple Sclerosis Association of America may sponsor local programs that could be beneficial.

Dr. Hernandez has no relevant financial disclosures.

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is much more commonly diagnosed in women, but men get the diagnosis too and can present some special challenges to disease management and treatment. Disease course, mental health, and social function may be different in male patients.

Among the clinical differences: Men may be diagnosed at an older age, often closer to 30 years of age, and they more often experience memory problems, spinal cord lesions, and motor symptoms. They are at higher risk of progressive-onset disease, but have lower relapse rates. Disability rates are higher in men than in women, but long-term survival is no different. Brain atrophy is also more common among men.

Not all MRI facilities will include brain atrophy assessment, so it is a good idea to put an order in for brain atrophy when there are reasons to be concerned, such as cognitive effects or issues with walking, according to Jeffrey Hernandez, DNP, during a talk at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers. Dr. Hernandez is affiliated with the University of Miami Multiple Sclerosis Center.
 

Addressing Sensitive Topics

Men may be less willing to discuss their symptoms, in part because they may have been raised to be tough and stoic. “Looking for help might make them feel more vulnerable,” said Dr. Hernandez. That’s not a feeling that most men are familiar with, he said. Men “don’t want to be deemed or seem weak or dependent on anyone.” Consequently, men are less likely to complain about any symptom, said Dr. Hernandez.

He advised asking more open-ended questions in an effort to draw men out. “Just ask how they’re doing. See if anything has changed from their usual habits, have their activities of daily living changed, has their work performance changed? That can give you an indication. One of my patients [said he] was demoted from [his] position, that the demotion was related to cognitive impairment and the way that he was working. That gives you an idea as to where you can help intervene and perhaps make an improvement for that patient’s quality of life, or consider switching treatments,” said Dr. Hernandez.

Men are less likely to report symptoms such as tingling, physical complaints, cognitive difficulties, mood changes, and sexual dysfunction. That doesn’t mean they’re not experiencing issues, though, especially when it comes to sexual problems. Dr. Hernandez recalled one patient who just stared out the window when asked about his sex life. “Then I said, the next time I want your wife to be here, and then she spilled the beans on everything. So it’s important sometimes to include other members of the family or their partners in the conversation to give you some insight. And perhaps that day it wasn’t a priority for him, but then the next time it was a priority for his wife,” he said.

He pointed out that erectile dysfunction could be due to a physiological response to MS, or to psychological effects.

Low testosterone levels may also play a role in MS, since it is a natural anti-inflammatory hormone. Hypogonadism has been found to be high among men with MS in some studies. MS in men is associated with more enhancing lesions, greater cognitive decline, and increased risk of disability, while high levels of testosterone are linked to neuroprotective effects and lower risk of developing MS.

Men with MS are more likely than women to report suicidal thoughts when depressed, and mental health can be taboo, as men may try to solve problems on their own before seeking help. “But a lot of the times they can use a little bit of help, whether it be from talk therapy or meds. With the expansion of telemedicine, virtual care has skyrocketed in psychiatry. I advocate strongly for it. Psychologytoday.com is a very common portal that I recommend so they can look up providers with their insurances, and they can see who gives in person versus virtual care. They can do it from the comfort of their car. I’ve had people in their car crying because they don’t want to be in their house when they talk to me,” said Dr. Hernandez.

Physical struggles can lead men to feel they’ve lost their independence, and that they are no longer the protector of the household. Divorce is common, which can lead to social isolation. One patient wanted to see Dr. Hernandez monthly, a request that he had to decline. “Sometimes they want to discuss these things and they just don’t have someone to talk to,” said Dr. Hernandez. Social support programs through the National MS Society, the MS Foundation, or the Multiple Sclerosis Association of America may sponsor local programs that could be beneficial.

Dr. Hernandez has no relevant financial disclosures.

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Investigational MS Med Nearly Eliminates Disease Activity on MRI

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Wed, 06/05/2024 - 15:23

NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE — A second-generation anti-CD40L monoclonal antibody suppresses multiple sclerosis (MS) disease activity on MRI to an uncommonly high degree, new trial data suggested.

Researchers found a near absence of new brain lesions at 48 weeks in patients on the highest dose. At this level of disease suppression, there was no evidence of increased infection risk, which investigators said might relate to its mechanism of action. In addition, there were no thrombotic events, which is what defeated a first-generation drug in this same class.

Among those initially randomly assigned to receive 1200 mg every 4 weeks, 96% were free of new gadolinium-positive (Gd+ T1) lesions at 48 weeks, reported investigator Yang Mao-Draayer, MD, PhD, director of Clinical and Experimental Therapeutics at the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation’s Multiple Sclerosis Center of Excellence, Oklahoma City. Annual relapse rates were also low.

The findings were presented at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.
 

No Effect on Lymphocyte Count

As previously reported, 12-week frexalimab results were noteworthy because they provided validation for CD40L as a target in the control of MS. One of the unique features of this therapy relative to many other immunomodulatory therapies is that it has shown little, if any, effect on lymphocyte counts or immunoglobulin levels.

In the double-blind randomized phase 2 trial, 125 patients with MS of all other MS therapy were randomized in a 4:4:4:1 ratio to 1200-mg frexalimab administered intravenously every 4 weeks after a loading dose, to 300-mg frexalimab administered subcutaneously every 2 weeks after a loading dose, or to one of the two matching placebo arms.

For the primary endpoint of new Gd+ T1 lesions at the end of the blinded study, the rates at week 12 were 0.2 and 0.3 in the higher- and lower-dose treatment groups, respectively, and 1.4 in the pooled placebo groups.

At 48 weeks, the results were even better. From 12 weeks, the rate of Gd+ T1 lesions in the high-dose group continued to fall, reaching 0.1 at week 24 and 0.0 at week 48. In the lower-dose group, there was also a stepwise decline over time with a value of 0.2 at week 48. The annual relapse rate at week 48 was 0.4.
 

Reengineered Agent

In the placebo groups, the same type of suppression of disease activity was observed after they were switched to active therapy at the end of 12 weeks.

By 24 weeks, the number of new Gd+ T1 lesions had fallen to 0.3 in placebo patients switched to the higher dose and 1.0 in those switched to the lower dose.

By week 48, the rates were 0.2 in both of the switch arms.

The proportions of patients free of new Gd+ T1 lesions at 48 weeks were 96% in the group started and maintained on the highest dose of frexalimab, 87% in those started and maintained on the lower dose, 90% in those started on placebo and switched to the highest dose of frexalimab, and 92% of placebo patients switched to the lower dose.

“T2 lesion volume from baseline through week 48 was stable in patients who continued receiving frexalimab and decreased in placebo participants after switching to frexalimab at week 12,” Dr. Mao-Draayer reported.

The CD40-CD40L co-stimulatory pathway that regulates both adaptive and innate immune responses has been pursued as a target for MS therapies for decades, Dr. Mao-Draayer said.

A first-generation monoclonal antibody directed at elevated levels of CD40L, which is implicated in the inflammation that drives MS, showed promise but was abandoned after it was associated with an increased risk for thromboembolic events in a phase 1 trial, she said.

However, the second-generation agent was engineered to avoid an interaction with platelets, which played a role in the risk for thrombosis associated with the failure of the earlier drug.

As with the first-generation agent, frexalimab had little or no impact on lymphocyte count or immunoglobulin G and immunoglobulin M levels. Both remained stable during the 12-week controlled trial and through the ongoing open-label extension, Dr. Mao-Draayer said.

This might be a factor in the low level of adverse events. Most importantly, there have been no thromboembolic events associated with frexalimab so far, but the follow-up data also show rates of infection and other events, such as nasopharyngitis, that were comparable with placebo in the 12-week controlled trial and have not increased over longer-term monitoring.

Such adverse events as headache and COVID-19 infection have also occurred at rates similar to placebo.

Two phase 3 trials are underway. FREXALT is being conducted in relapsing-remitting MS. FREVIV has enrolled patients with nonrelapsing secondary progressive MS.
 

 

 

Impressively Low New Lesion Count

Commenting on the findings, Jeffrey Cohen, MD, director of the Mellen Center for Multiple Sclerosis, Cleveland Clinic, who was not involved in the research, said that over the course of the extended follow-up, MS activity in the central nervous system as measured with new Gd+ T1 lesions was impressively low. 

He noted that the phase 2 open-label follow-up continues to support the promise of frexalimab. But Dr. Cohen cautioned that this does not obviate the need for phase 3 data.

In particular, he said that an immunomodulatory agent that does not affect the lymphocyte count has a theoretical advantage, but pointed out that the benefit is still presumably mediated by blocking pathways that mediate autoimmune activity.

Even if lymphocyte count is unaffected, the immunomodulatory pathway by which frexalimab does exert its benefit might pose a different set of risks, he said.

“We will not have sufficient data to judge the promise of this agent until the phase 3 trials are completed,” he said.

Dr. Mao-Draayer reported financial relationships with Acorda, Bayer, Biogen, Bristol Myers Squibb, Celgene, EMD Serono, Genentech, Horizon, Janssen, Novartis, Questor, Teva, and Sanofi, which provided funding for the phase 2 frexalimab trial. Dr. Cohen reported financial relationships with Astoria, Convelo, EMD Serono, FiND, INmune, and Sandoz.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE — A second-generation anti-CD40L monoclonal antibody suppresses multiple sclerosis (MS) disease activity on MRI to an uncommonly high degree, new trial data suggested.

Researchers found a near absence of new brain lesions at 48 weeks in patients on the highest dose. At this level of disease suppression, there was no evidence of increased infection risk, which investigators said might relate to its mechanism of action. In addition, there were no thrombotic events, which is what defeated a first-generation drug in this same class.

Among those initially randomly assigned to receive 1200 mg every 4 weeks, 96% were free of new gadolinium-positive (Gd+ T1) lesions at 48 weeks, reported investigator Yang Mao-Draayer, MD, PhD, director of Clinical and Experimental Therapeutics at the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation’s Multiple Sclerosis Center of Excellence, Oklahoma City. Annual relapse rates were also low.

The findings were presented at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.
 

No Effect on Lymphocyte Count

As previously reported, 12-week frexalimab results were noteworthy because they provided validation for CD40L as a target in the control of MS. One of the unique features of this therapy relative to many other immunomodulatory therapies is that it has shown little, if any, effect on lymphocyte counts or immunoglobulin levels.

In the double-blind randomized phase 2 trial, 125 patients with MS of all other MS therapy were randomized in a 4:4:4:1 ratio to 1200-mg frexalimab administered intravenously every 4 weeks after a loading dose, to 300-mg frexalimab administered subcutaneously every 2 weeks after a loading dose, or to one of the two matching placebo arms.

For the primary endpoint of new Gd+ T1 lesions at the end of the blinded study, the rates at week 12 were 0.2 and 0.3 in the higher- and lower-dose treatment groups, respectively, and 1.4 in the pooled placebo groups.

At 48 weeks, the results were even better. From 12 weeks, the rate of Gd+ T1 lesions in the high-dose group continued to fall, reaching 0.1 at week 24 and 0.0 at week 48. In the lower-dose group, there was also a stepwise decline over time with a value of 0.2 at week 48. The annual relapse rate at week 48 was 0.4.
 

Reengineered Agent

In the placebo groups, the same type of suppression of disease activity was observed after they were switched to active therapy at the end of 12 weeks.

By 24 weeks, the number of new Gd+ T1 lesions had fallen to 0.3 in placebo patients switched to the higher dose and 1.0 in those switched to the lower dose.

By week 48, the rates were 0.2 in both of the switch arms.

The proportions of patients free of new Gd+ T1 lesions at 48 weeks were 96% in the group started and maintained on the highest dose of frexalimab, 87% in those started and maintained on the lower dose, 90% in those started on placebo and switched to the highest dose of frexalimab, and 92% of placebo patients switched to the lower dose.

“T2 lesion volume from baseline through week 48 was stable in patients who continued receiving frexalimab and decreased in placebo participants after switching to frexalimab at week 12,” Dr. Mao-Draayer reported.

The CD40-CD40L co-stimulatory pathway that regulates both adaptive and innate immune responses has been pursued as a target for MS therapies for decades, Dr. Mao-Draayer said.

A first-generation monoclonal antibody directed at elevated levels of CD40L, which is implicated in the inflammation that drives MS, showed promise but was abandoned after it was associated with an increased risk for thromboembolic events in a phase 1 trial, she said.

However, the second-generation agent was engineered to avoid an interaction with platelets, which played a role in the risk for thrombosis associated with the failure of the earlier drug.

As with the first-generation agent, frexalimab had little or no impact on lymphocyte count or immunoglobulin G and immunoglobulin M levels. Both remained stable during the 12-week controlled trial and through the ongoing open-label extension, Dr. Mao-Draayer said.

This might be a factor in the low level of adverse events. Most importantly, there have been no thromboembolic events associated with frexalimab so far, but the follow-up data also show rates of infection and other events, such as nasopharyngitis, that were comparable with placebo in the 12-week controlled trial and have not increased over longer-term monitoring.

Such adverse events as headache and COVID-19 infection have also occurred at rates similar to placebo.

Two phase 3 trials are underway. FREXALT is being conducted in relapsing-remitting MS. FREVIV has enrolled patients with nonrelapsing secondary progressive MS.
 

 

 

Impressively Low New Lesion Count

Commenting on the findings, Jeffrey Cohen, MD, director of the Mellen Center for Multiple Sclerosis, Cleveland Clinic, who was not involved in the research, said that over the course of the extended follow-up, MS activity in the central nervous system as measured with new Gd+ T1 lesions was impressively low. 

He noted that the phase 2 open-label follow-up continues to support the promise of frexalimab. But Dr. Cohen cautioned that this does not obviate the need for phase 3 data.

In particular, he said that an immunomodulatory agent that does not affect the lymphocyte count has a theoretical advantage, but pointed out that the benefit is still presumably mediated by blocking pathways that mediate autoimmune activity.

Even if lymphocyte count is unaffected, the immunomodulatory pathway by which frexalimab does exert its benefit might pose a different set of risks, he said.

“We will not have sufficient data to judge the promise of this agent until the phase 3 trials are completed,” he said.

Dr. Mao-Draayer reported financial relationships with Acorda, Bayer, Biogen, Bristol Myers Squibb, Celgene, EMD Serono, Genentech, Horizon, Janssen, Novartis, Questor, Teva, and Sanofi, which provided funding for the phase 2 frexalimab trial. Dr. Cohen reported financial relationships with Astoria, Convelo, EMD Serono, FiND, INmune, and Sandoz.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE — A second-generation anti-CD40L monoclonal antibody suppresses multiple sclerosis (MS) disease activity on MRI to an uncommonly high degree, new trial data suggested.

Researchers found a near absence of new brain lesions at 48 weeks in patients on the highest dose. At this level of disease suppression, there was no evidence of increased infection risk, which investigators said might relate to its mechanism of action. In addition, there were no thrombotic events, which is what defeated a first-generation drug in this same class.

Among those initially randomly assigned to receive 1200 mg every 4 weeks, 96% were free of new gadolinium-positive (Gd+ T1) lesions at 48 weeks, reported investigator Yang Mao-Draayer, MD, PhD, director of Clinical and Experimental Therapeutics at the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation’s Multiple Sclerosis Center of Excellence, Oklahoma City. Annual relapse rates were also low.

The findings were presented at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.
 

No Effect on Lymphocyte Count

As previously reported, 12-week frexalimab results were noteworthy because they provided validation for CD40L as a target in the control of MS. One of the unique features of this therapy relative to many other immunomodulatory therapies is that it has shown little, if any, effect on lymphocyte counts or immunoglobulin levels.

In the double-blind randomized phase 2 trial, 125 patients with MS of all other MS therapy were randomized in a 4:4:4:1 ratio to 1200-mg frexalimab administered intravenously every 4 weeks after a loading dose, to 300-mg frexalimab administered subcutaneously every 2 weeks after a loading dose, or to one of the two matching placebo arms.

For the primary endpoint of new Gd+ T1 lesions at the end of the blinded study, the rates at week 12 were 0.2 and 0.3 in the higher- and lower-dose treatment groups, respectively, and 1.4 in the pooled placebo groups.

At 48 weeks, the results were even better. From 12 weeks, the rate of Gd+ T1 lesions in the high-dose group continued to fall, reaching 0.1 at week 24 and 0.0 at week 48. In the lower-dose group, there was also a stepwise decline over time with a value of 0.2 at week 48. The annual relapse rate at week 48 was 0.4.
 

Reengineered Agent

In the placebo groups, the same type of suppression of disease activity was observed after they were switched to active therapy at the end of 12 weeks.

By 24 weeks, the number of new Gd+ T1 lesions had fallen to 0.3 in placebo patients switched to the higher dose and 1.0 in those switched to the lower dose.

By week 48, the rates were 0.2 in both of the switch arms.

The proportions of patients free of new Gd+ T1 lesions at 48 weeks were 96% in the group started and maintained on the highest dose of frexalimab, 87% in those started and maintained on the lower dose, 90% in those started on placebo and switched to the highest dose of frexalimab, and 92% of placebo patients switched to the lower dose.

“T2 lesion volume from baseline through week 48 was stable in patients who continued receiving frexalimab and decreased in placebo participants after switching to frexalimab at week 12,” Dr. Mao-Draayer reported.

The CD40-CD40L co-stimulatory pathway that regulates both adaptive and innate immune responses has been pursued as a target for MS therapies for decades, Dr. Mao-Draayer said.

A first-generation monoclonal antibody directed at elevated levels of CD40L, which is implicated in the inflammation that drives MS, showed promise but was abandoned after it was associated with an increased risk for thromboembolic events in a phase 1 trial, she said.

However, the second-generation agent was engineered to avoid an interaction with platelets, which played a role in the risk for thrombosis associated with the failure of the earlier drug.

As with the first-generation agent, frexalimab had little or no impact on lymphocyte count or immunoglobulin G and immunoglobulin M levels. Both remained stable during the 12-week controlled trial and through the ongoing open-label extension, Dr. Mao-Draayer said.

This might be a factor in the low level of adverse events. Most importantly, there have been no thromboembolic events associated with frexalimab so far, but the follow-up data also show rates of infection and other events, such as nasopharyngitis, that were comparable with placebo in the 12-week controlled trial and have not increased over longer-term monitoring.

Such adverse events as headache and COVID-19 infection have also occurred at rates similar to placebo.

Two phase 3 trials are underway. FREXALT is being conducted in relapsing-remitting MS. FREVIV has enrolled patients with nonrelapsing secondary progressive MS.
 

 

 

Impressively Low New Lesion Count

Commenting on the findings, Jeffrey Cohen, MD, director of the Mellen Center for Multiple Sclerosis, Cleveland Clinic, who was not involved in the research, said that over the course of the extended follow-up, MS activity in the central nervous system as measured with new Gd+ T1 lesions was impressively low. 

He noted that the phase 2 open-label follow-up continues to support the promise of frexalimab. But Dr. Cohen cautioned that this does not obviate the need for phase 3 data.

In particular, he said that an immunomodulatory agent that does not affect the lymphocyte count has a theoretical advantage, but pointed out that the benefit is still presumably mediated by blocking pathways that mediate autoimmune activity.

Even if lymphocyte count is unaffected, the immunomodulatory pathway by which frexalimab does exert its benefit might pose a different set of risks, he said.

“We will not have sufficient data to judge the promise of this agent until the phase 3 trials are completed,” he said.

Dr. Mao-Draayer reported financial relationships with Acorda, Bayer, Biogen, Bristol Myers Squibb, Celgene, EMD Serono, Genentech, Horizon, Janssen, Novartis, Questor, Teva, and Sanofi, which provided funding for the phase 2 frexalimab trial. Dr. Cohen reported financial relationships with Astoria, Convelo, EMD Serono, FiND, INmune, and Sandoz.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Strategies for MS Fatigue and Sleep Issues

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Fatigue and sleep problems are common among patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), but there are ways to help them manage these difficulties through personalized care.

Fatigue related to MS is complex, but it often follows a pattern. “Oftentimes when I meet with patients for the first time, they’re not always sure [what their own pattern is]. They know that the fatigue is present, and it’s limiting their activities. It’s important for us to break down and see that pattern for [the patient] specifically, and what are some ways that we can intervene to perhaps make that pattern something that improves quality of life and day-to-day living,” said Grace Tworek, PsyD, during a presentation at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers (CMSC).

A cycle may start on a day that a patient has lots of energy. They are ambitious that day and get a lot done on their “to do” list while they have the energy. Unfortunately, they commonly overdo it, leading to fatigue the next day. Over ensuing days, the patient might feel unable to engage in everyday tasks and begin to feel they are falling behind. This in turn can affect mood, resulting in increased symptoms of depression and anxiety. That leads to days of inactivity and rest, which leads to recovery. Then comes a day with better mood and increased energy, where the cycle can begin again.

It’s an addressable problem. “What we really want to do is break this cycle, get out of those peaks and valleys of high energy days and very low energy days to try to create more sustainable patterns” said Dr. Tworek, who is a staff health psychologist at Cleveland Clinic’s Mellen Center for Multiple Sclerosis, Cleveland, Ohio.
 

Fatigue

When addressing fatigue in MS patients, Dr. Tworek and her colleagues begin with a fatigue diary that includes typical activities engaged in throughout the day. It also distinguishes between activities the patient feels are important and activities that give them satisfaction.

“If we can find ways to include these [satisfying] activities, and not focus only on those important activities. This is where that quality of life really comes into play. But I always say to folks, we are not striving for perfection at first. I want you to write down what’s actually happening so we can use this data to later inform how we are going to make changes,” said Dr. Tworek.

It’s also important to encourage patients to seek help. Activities that are neither important nor satisfying may not need doing at all, and they encourage patients to seek help in other tasks. As for tasks that are important in their day-to-day lives, “How can we break those down? We break those down by pacing activities,” said Dr. Tworek.

A simple way to pace yourself is to use “The rule of two.” It asks: How long can I do a task before I experience a two-point increase on a 1-10 fatigue scale. “At that time, is when we want to start inserting breaks. We want to find activities we can do that will reduce [fatigue] or get us back to baseline. Or if that’s not realistic, keep us where we are at rather than increasing fatigue,” said Dr. Tworek.

Another way to think about it is spoon theory, sometimes referred to as coin theory. The idea is that you wake up each morning with ten spoons. Each task on a given day will cost a certain number of spoons. “You might start your day, you go downstairs, you have breakfast, and you’re already down to seven points, the next day, you might still be at 10. So it’s really about monitoring where you’re at in terms of how many coins or spoons you’re spending so that we can then reflect on how many coins or spoons do I have left?” said Dr. Tworek.

The strategy can aid communication with partners or family members who may have difficulty understanding MS fatigue. “Sometimes putting a number to it can really open up the doors to having these difficult conversations with friends and family,” said Dr. Tworek.
 

 

 

Sleep

Fatigue and sleep are naturally intertwined, and sleep problems are also common in MS, with 30%-56% reporting problems, depending on the estimate.

One concept to think about is sleep drive. “From the moment we wake up, we are building sleep pressure, just like from the moment you stop eating, your body starts building pressure to eat again,” said Dr. Tworek.

Naps can interfere with that drive, much like a snack can rob you of a meal-time appetite. “A nap is going to curb that appetite for sleep, making it more difficult potentially to fall asleep,” said Dr. Tworek. If a nap is absolutely necessary, it’s better to do it earlier in the day to allow time to build sleep pressure again.

As with fatigue, Dr. Tworek has patients fill out a sleep diary that documents difficulty falling or staying asleep, timing and length of awakenings, quality of sleep, length and timing of any naps, and other factors. It sometimes reveals patterns, like difficulty falling asleep on specific days of the week. Such rhythms may be attributable to regular stressors, like anticipating some event the next morning. Then it might be possible to tie in other techniques like stress management to reduce accompanying anxiety.

Sleep hygiene is an important factor, employing strategies like staying off screens or social media while in bed. “About 1 hour before bedtime, we want to try to create some relaxation time,” said Dr. Tworek.

Her clinic also emphasizes consistent wake time. “If we are waking every day in about the same half hour period, we are able to build that sleep pressure consistently. [Then] your body is going to let you know when it is time for bed. You’re going to feel sleepiness,” said Dr. Tworek.

Dr. Tworek did not report any disclosures or conflicts of interest.

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Fatigue and sleep problems are common among patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), but there are ways to help them manage these difficulties through personalized care.

Fatigue related to MS is complex, but it often follows a pattern. “Oftentimes when I meet with patients for the first time, they’re not always sure [what their own pattern is]. They know that the fatigue is present, and it’s limiting their activities. It’s important for us to break down and see that pattern for [the patient] specifically, and what are some ways that we can intervene to perhaps make that pattern something that improves quality of life and day-to-day living,” said Grace Tworek, PsyD, during a presentation at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers (CMSC).

A cycle may start on a day that a patient has lots of energy. They are ambitious that day and get a lot done on their “to do” list while they have the energy. Unfortunately, they commonly overdo it, leading to fatigue the next day. Over ensuing days, the patient might feel unable to engage in everyday tasks and begin to feel they are falling behind. This in turn can affect mood, resulting in increased symptoms of depression and anxiety. That leads to days of inactivity and rest, which leads to recovery. Then comes a day with better mood and increased energy, where the cycle can begin again.

It’s an addressable problem. “What we really want to do is break this cycle, get out of those peaks and valleys of high energy days and very low energy days to try to create more sustainable patterns” said Dr. Tworek, who is a staff health psychologist at Cleveland Clinic’s Mellen Center for Multiple Sclerosis, Cleveland, Ohio.
 

Fatigue

When addressing fatigue in MS patients, Dr. Tworek and her colleagues begin with a fatigue diary that includes typical activities engaged in throughout the day. It also distinguishes between activities the patient feels are important and activities that give them satisfaction.

“If we can find ways to include these [satisfying] activities, and not focus only on those important activities. This is where that quality of life really comes into play. But I always say to folks, we are not striving for perfection at first. I want you to write down what’s actually happening so we can use this data to later inform how we are going to make changes,” said Dr. Tworek.

It’s also important to encourage patients to seek help. Activities that are neither important nor satisfying may not need doing at all, and they encourage patients to seek help in other tasks. As for tasks that are important in their day-to-day lives, “How can we break those down? We break those down by pacing activities,” said Dr. Tworek.

A simple way to pace yourself is to use “The rule of two.” It asks: How long can I do a task before I experience a two-point increase on a 1-10 fatigue scale. “At that time, is when we want to start inserting breaks. We want to find activities we can do that will reduce [fatigue] or get us back to baseline. Or if that’s not realistic, keep us where we are at rather than increasing fatigue,” said Dr. Tworek.

Another way to think about it is spoon theory, sometimes referred to as coin theory. The idea is that you wake up each morning with ten spoons. Each task on a given day will cost a certain number of spoons. “You might start your day, you go downstairs, you have breakfast, and you’re already down to seven points, the next day, you might still be at 10. So it’s really about monitoring where you’re at in terms of how many coins or spoons you’re spending so that we can then reflect on how many coins or spoons do I have left?” said Dr. Tworek.

The strategy can aid communication with partners or family members who may have difficulty understanding MS fatigue. “Sometimes putting a number to it can really open up the doors to having these difficult conversations with friends and family,” said Dr. Tworek.
 

 

 

Sleep

Fatigue and sleep are naturally intertwined, and sleep problems are also common in MS, with 30%-56% reporting problems, depending on the estimate.

One concept to think about is sleep drive. “From the moment we wake up, we are building sleep pressure, just like from the moment you stop eating, your body starts building pressure to eat again,” said Dr. Tworek.

Naps can interfere with that drive, much like a snack can rob you of a meal-time appetite. “A nap is going to curb that appetite for sleep, making it more difficult potentially to fall asleep,” said Dr. Tworek. If a nap is absolutely necessary, it’s better to do it earlier in the day to allow time to build sleep pressure again.

As with fatigue, Dr. Tworek has patients fill out a sleep diary that documents difficulty falling or staying asleep, timing and length of awakenings, quality of sleep, length and timing of any naps, and other factors. It sometimes reveals patterns, like difficulty falling asleep on specific days of the week. Such rhythms may be attributable to regular stressors, like anticipating some event the next morning. Then it might be possible to tie in other techniques like stress management to reduce accompanying anxiety.

Sleep hygiene is an important factor, employing strategies like staying off screens or social media while in bed. “About 1 hour before bedtime, we want to try to create some relaxation time,” said Dr. Tworek.

Her clinic also emphasizes consistent wake time. “If we are waking every day in about the same half hour period, we are able to build that sleep pressure consistently. [Then] your body is going to let you know when it is time for bed. You’re going to feel sleepiness,” said Dr. Tworek.

Dr. Tworek did not report any disclosures or conflicts of interest.

Fatigue and sleep problems are common among patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), but there are ways to help them manage these difficulties through personalized care.

Fatigue related to MS is complex, but it often follows a pattern. “Oftentimes when I meet with patients for the first time, they’re not always sure [what their own pattern is]. They know that the fatigue is present, and it’s limiting their activities. It’s important for us to break down and see that pattern for [the patient] specifically, and what are some ways that we can intervene to perhaps make that pattern something that improves quality of life and day-to-day living,” said Grace Tworek, PsyD, during a presentation at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers (CMSC).

A cycle may start on a day that a patient has lots of energy. They are ambitious that day and get a lot done on their “to do” list while they have the energy. Unfortunately, they commonly overdo it, leading to fatigue the next day. Over ensuing days, the patient might feel unable to engage in everyday tasks and begin to feel they are falling behind. This in turn can affect mood, resulting in increased symptoms of depression and anxiety. That leads to days of inactivity and rest, which leads to recovery. Then comes a day with better mood and increased energy, where the cycle can begin again.

It’s an addressable problem. “What we really want to do is break this cycle, get out of those peaks and valleys of high energy days and very low energy days to try to create more sustainable patterns” said Dr. Tworek, who is a staff health psychologist at Cleveland Clinic’s Mellen Center for Multiple Sclerosis, Cleveland, Ohio.
 

Fatigue

When addressing fatigue in MS patients, Dr. Tworek and her colleagues begin with a fatigue diary that includes typical activities engaged in throughout the day. It also distinguishes between activities the patient feels are important and activities that give them satisfaction.

“If we can find ways to include these [satisfying] activities, and not focus only on those important activities. This is where that quality of life really comes into play. But I always say to folks, we are not striving for perfection at first. I want you to write down what’s actually happening so we can use this data to later inform how we are going to make changes,” said Dr. Tworek.

It’s also important to encourage patients to seek help. Activities that are neither important nor satisfying may not need doing at all, and they encourage patients to seek help in other tasks. As for tasks that are important in their day-to-day lives, “How can we break those down? We break those down by pacing activities,” said Dr. Tworek.

A simple way to pace yourself is to use “The rule of two.” It asks: How long can I do a task before I experience a two-point increase on a 1-10 fatigue scale. “At that time, is when we want to start inserting breaks. We want to find activities we can do that will reduce [fatigue] or get us back to baseline. Or if that’s not realistic, keep us where we are at rather than increasing fatigue,” said Dr. Tworek.

Another way to think about it is spoon theory, sometimes referred to as coin theory. The idea is that you wake up each morning with ten spoons. Each task on a given day will cost a certain number of spoons. “You might start your day, you go downstairs, you have breakfast, and you’re already down to seven points, the next day, you might still be at 10. So it’s really about monitoring where you’re at in terms of how many coins or spoons you’re spending so that we can then reflect on how many coins or spoons do I have left?” said Dr. Tworek.

The strategy can aid communication with partners or family members who may have difficulty understanding MS fatigue. “Sometimes putting a number to it can really open up the doors to having these difficult conversations with friends and family,” said Dr. Tworek.
 

 

 

Sleep

Fatigue and sleep are naturally intertwined, and sleep problems are also common in MS, with 30%-56% reporting problems, depending on the estimate.

One concept to think about is sleep drive. “From the moment we wake up, we are building sleep pressure, just like from the moment you stop eating, your body starts building pressure to eat again,” said Dr. Tworek.

Naps can interfere with that drive, much like a snack can rob you of a meal-time appetite. “A nap is going to curb that appetite for sleep, making it more difficult potentially to fall asleep,” said Dr. Tworek. If a nap is absolutely necessary, it’s better to do it earlier in the day to allow time to build sleep pressure again.

As with fatigue, Dr. Tworek has patients fill out a sleep diary that documents difficulty falling or staying asleep, timing and length of awakenings, quality of sleep, length and timing of any naps, and other factors. It sometimes reveals patterns, like difficulty falling asleep on specific days of the week. Such rhythms may be attributable to regular stressors, like anticipating some event the next morning. Then it might be possible to tie in other techniques like stress management to reduce accompanying anxiety.

Sleep hygiene is an important factor, employing strategies like staying off screens or social media while in bed. “About 1 hour before bedtime, we want to try to create some relaxation time,” said Dr. Tworek.

Her clinic also emphasizes consistent wake time. “If we are waking every day in about the same half hour period, we are able to build that sleep pressure consistently. [Then] your body is going to let you know when it is time for bed. You’re going to feel sleepiness,” said Dr. Tworek.

Dr. Tworek did not report any disclosures or conflicts of interest.

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In MS With Mild Symptoms, Non-Motor Symptoms Predict Later Mobility Problems

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Tue, 06/04/2024 - 13:08

Among people with MS who have mild symptoms, non-motor symptoms like dizziness, fatigue, and spasticity predict later perception of balance, walking, and physical quality of life. However, these associations fall away among patients with more severe disease, according to a new study performed in Australia. The findings could eventually help tailor physical activity interventions.

The research grew out of frustrations with developing interventions focused on strength. “There are many systematic reviews showing stronger and stronger evidence that exercise is beneficial. It does change your walking. It does improve your balance,” said Katrina Williams, PhD, during a presentation of the results at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.

However, when her group’s intervention studies yielded no statistically significant improvements, she began to search for explanations, and began to suspect heterogeneity among MS patients. Their clinic took all comers, regardless of disability level. “[Our attitude was] we will make it work. We’ll get you actively moving and exercising. But when you break down a lot of those systematic reviews, there’s not a lot of teasing out of disability levels. So, potentially, it is the disability level that might be leading to why some people don’t change or why we’re not getting the statistically significant benefits, because we’re not addressing the individual at their level of disease progression,” said Dr. Williams, who is a senior lecturer in physiotherapy at the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.

“Physiotherapists, we love exercise, we love movement, but we’re a bit unidimensional. It’s some strength training, [or] let’s get on that bike and do cardiovascular. But that may not be enough for individuals who have different symptoms profiles. We’re assuming that the motor profile is the most important, and the one that needs to be addressed in these individuals,” said Dr. Williams.
 

Focusing on Non-Motor Symptoms

When she searched the literature, she could find little evidence of non-motor symptoms correlating to walking, balance, or even quality of life. To dig deeper, her group studied 220 MS patients in Australia who self-reported symptoms of dizziness, vision problems, fatigue, and spasticity. The population had a mean age of 42 years, and 82% were female. They ranged in disease severity from disease step (DS) 0 to DS 6. The researchers categorized respondents as between DS 0 (mild symptoms that were mostly sensory) to DS 3 (MS interferes with walking) and from DS 4 (early cane use) to DS 6 (requiring bilateral walking support).

Deficits were more commonly reported in the DS 4-6 group than the DS 0-3 group with respect to light touch (88% vs 72%), proprioception (63% vs 41%), fatigue (100% vs 96%), and spasticity (78% vs 69%). There were no significant differences in dizziness, vision, or memory/cognition/emotion.

A linear regression model incorporating sensory worsening, age, social participation, perceived deficit, and spasticity showed an R2 adjusted value of 0.73. However, when they looked only at DS 0-3 patients, the R2 value strengthened to 0.86. Among the DS 4-6 group, the correlation largely disappeared with an R2 value of 0.16. Specifically, there were stronger associations in the DS 0-3 group than the overall group (DS 0-6) between perceived walking deficit and sensory worsening (R2 0.45 vs 0.31), fatigue (0.67 vs 0.05), spasticity (0.47 vs 0.16), and balance (0.8 vs 0.16).

“Most non-motor symptoms do have moderate to weak correlations to walking confidence and walking balance, and quality of life, and the correlations do decline as disability worsens. Those with less disability had more correlations that were stronger, particularly for the walking and balance confidence. So [among those] walking without an aid, there are more non-motor correlations aligned to the actual outcomes. In more disabled, they fell away, so there’s something else going on that we do have to look at,” said Dr. Williams.

She called for other clinicians to explore non-motor symptoms in patients with less disability, and the relationships of those symptoms to gait, balance, and overall MS impact, in the hopes that such observations could improve the tailoring of physiotherapy programs.
 

 

 

Perception May Differ From Actual Function

During the Q&A session, Nora Fritz, PhD, an associate professor of neurology at Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan, asked about the lack of correlations seen in more disabled patients. “It’s not exactly what you would expect to happen,” said Dr. Fritz, in an interview.

She asked Dr. Williams if the study had sufficient power to detect associations in patients with more severe disability, since the study had a relatively small sample size and many predictors in its regression model. Dr. Fritz also noted that perceptions may differ from actual function, so actual function can’t be captured using a survey. Dr. Williams responded that the group is now working to incorporate more clinical measures to their correlations.

Another audience member said she was “perplexed” by the drop-off of correlation in the most severe group. She suggested the possibility that as patients become more disabled, they may be less likely to perceive the relatively less severe non-motor symptoms and therefore did not report them.

Dr. Williams and Dr. Fritz have no relevant financial disclosures.

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Among people with MS who have mild symptoms, non-motor symptoms like dizziness, fatigue, and spasticity predict later perception of balance, walking, and physical quality of life. However, these associations fall away among patients with more severe disease, according to a new study performed in Australia. The findings could eventually help tailor physical activity interventions.

The research grew out of frustrations with developing interventions focused on strength. “There are many systematic reviews showing stronger and stronger evidence that exercise is beneficial. It does change your walking. It does improve your balance,” said Katrina Williams, PhD, during a presentation of the results at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.

However, when her group’s intervention studies yielded no statistically significant improvements, she began to search for explanations, and began to suspect heterogeneity among MS patients. Their clinic took all comers, regardless of disability level. “[Our attitude was] we will make it work. We’ll get you actively moving and exercising. But when you break down a lot of those systematic reviews, there’s not a lot of teasing out of disability levels. So, potentially, it is the disability level that might be leading to why some people don’t change or why we’re not getting the statistically significant benefits, because we’re not addressing the individual at their level of disease progression,” said Dr. Williams, who is a senior lecturer in physiotherapy at the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.

“Physiotherapists, we love exercise, we love movement, but we’re a bit unidimensional. It’s some strength training, [or] let’s get on that bike and do cardiovascular. But that may not be enough for individuals who have different symptoms profiles. We’re assuming that the motor profile is the most important, and the one that needs to be addressed in these individuals,” said Dr. Williams.
 

Focusing on Non-Motor Symptoms

When she searched the literature, she could find little evidence of non-motor symptoms correlating to walking, balance, or even quality of life. To dig deeper, her group studied 220 MS patients in Australia who self-reported symptoms of dizziness, vision problems, fatigue, and spasticity. The population had a mean age of 42 years, and 82% were female. They ranged in disease severity from disease step (DS) 0 to DS 6. The researchers categorized respondents as between DS 0 (mild symptoms that were mostly sensory) to DS 3 (MS interferes with walking) and from DS 4 (early cane use) to DS 6 (requiring bilateral walking support).

Deficits were more commonly reported in the DS 4-6 group than the DS 0-3 group with respect to light touch (88% vs 72%), proprioception (63% vs 41%), fatigue (100% vs 96%), and spasticity (78% vs 69%). There were no significant differences in dizziness, vision, or memory/cognition/emotion.

A linear regression model incorporating sensory worsening, age, social participation, perceived deficit, and spasticity showed an R2 adjusted value of 0.73. However, when they looked only at DS 0-3 patients, the R2 value strengthened to 0.86. Among the DS 4-6 group, the correlation largely disappeared with an R2 value of 0.16. Specifically, there were stronger associations in the DS 0-3 group than the overall group (DS 0-6) between perceived walking deficit and sensory worsening (R2 0.45 vs 0.31), fatigue (0.67 vs 0.05), spasticity (0.47 vs 0.16), and balance (0.8 vs 0.16).

“Most non-motor symptoms do have moderate to weak correlations to walking confidence and walking balance, and quality of life, and the correlations do decline as disability worsens. Those with less disability had more correlations that were stronger, particularly for the walking and balance confidence. So [among those] walking without an aid, there are more non-motor correlations aligned to the actual outcomes. In more disabled, they fell away, so there’s something else going on that we do have to look at,” said Dr. Williams.

She called for other clinicians to explore non-motor symptoms in patients with less disability, and the relationships of those symptoms to gait, balance, and overall MS impact, in the hopes that such observations could improve the tailoring of physiotherapy programs.
 

 

 

Perception May Differ From Actual Function

During the Q&A session, Nora Fritz, PhD, an associate professor of neurology at Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan, asked about the lack of correlations seen in more disabled patients. “It’s not exactly what you would expect to happen,” said Dr. Fritz, in an interview.

She asked Dr. Williams if the study had sufficient power to detect associations in patients with more severe disability, since the study had a relatively small sample size and many predictors in its regression model. Dr. Fritz also noted that perceptions may differ from actual function, so actual function can’t be captured using a survey. Dr. Williams responded that the group is now working to incorporate more clinical measures to their correlations.

Another audience member said she was “perplexed” by the drop-off of correlation in the most severe group. She suggested the possibility that as patients become more disabled, they may be less likely to perceive the relatively less severe non-motor symptoms and therefore did not report them.

Dr. Williams and Dr. Fritz have no relevant financial disclosures.

Among people with MS who have mild symptoms, non-motor symptoms like dizziness, fatigue, and spasticity predict later perception of balance, walking, and physical quality of life. However, these associations fall away among patients with more severe disease, according to a new study performed in Australia. The findings could eventually help tailor physical activity interventions.

The research grew out of frustrations with developing interventions focused on strength. “There are many systematic reviews showing stronger and stronger evidence that exercise is beneficial. It does change your walking. It does improve your balance,” said Katrina Williams, PhD, during a presentation of the results at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.

However, when her group’s intervention studies yielded no statistically significant improvements, she began to search for explanations, and began to suspect heterogeneity among MS patients. Their clinic took all comers, regardless of disability level. “[Our attitude was] we will make it work. We’ll get you actively moving and exercising. But when you break down a lot of those systematic reviews, there’s not a lot of teasing out of disability levels. So, potentially, it is the disability level that might be leading to why some people don’t change or why we’re not getting the statistically significant benefits, because we’re not addressing the individual at their level of disease progression,” said Dr. Williams, who is a senior lecturer in physiotherapy at the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.

“Physiotherapists, we love exercise, we love movement, but we’re a bit unidimensional. It’s some strength training, [or] let’s get on that bike and do cardiovascular. But that may not be enough for individuals who have different symptoms profiles. We’re assuming that the motor profile is the most important, and the one that needs to be addressed in these individuals,” said Dr. Williams.
 

Focusing on Non-Motor Symptoms

When she searched the literature, she could find little evidence of non-motor symptoms correlating to walking, balance, or even quality of life. To dig deeper, her group studied 220 MS patients in Australia who self-reported symptoms of dizziness, vision problems, fatigue, and spasticity. The population had a mean age of 42 years, and 82% were female. They ranged in disease severity from disease step (DS) 0 to DS 6. The researchers categorized respondents as between DS 0 (mild symptoms that were mostly sensory) to DS 3 (MS interferes with walking) and from DS 4 (early cane use) to DS 6 (requiring bilateral walking support).

Deficits were more commonly reported in the DS 4-6 group than the DS 0-3 group with respect to light touch (88% vs 72%), proprioception (63% vs 41%), fatigue (100% vs 96%), and spasticity (78% vs 69%). There were no significant differences in dizziness, vision, or memory/cognition/emotion.

A linear regression model incorporating sensory worsening, age, social participation, perceived deficit, and spasticity showed an R2 adjusted value of 0.73. However, when they looked only at DS 0-3 patients, the R2 value strengthened to 0.86. Among the DS 4-6 group, the correlation largely disappeared with an R2 value of 0.16. Specifically, there were stronger associations in the DS 0-3 group than the overall group (DS 0-6) between perceived walking deficit and sensory worsening (R2 0.45 vs 0.31), fatigue (0.67 vs 0.05), spasticity (0.47 vs 0.16), and balance (0.8 vs 0.16).

“Most non-motor symptoms do have moderate to weak correlations to walking confidence and walking balance, and quality of life, and the correlations do decline as disability worsens. Those with less disability had more correlations that were stronger, particularly for the walking and balance confidence. So [among those] walking without an aid, there are more non-motor correlations aligned to the actual outcomes. In more disabled, they fell away, so there’s something else going on that we do have to look at,” said Dr. Williams.

She called for other clinicians to explore non-motor symptoms in patients with less disability, and the relationships of those symptoms to gait, balance, and overall MS impact, in the hopes that such observations could improve the tailoring of physiotherapy programs.
 

 

 

Perception May Differ From Actual Function

During the Q&A session, Nora Fritz, PhD, an associate professor of neurology at Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan, asked about the lack of correlations seen in more disabled patients. “It’s not exactly what you would expect to happen,” said Dr. Fritz, in an interview.

She asked Dr. Williams if the study had sufficient power to detect associations in patients with more severe disability, since the study had a relatively small sample size and many predictors in its regression model. Dr. Fritz also noted that perceptions may differ from actual function, so actual function can’t be captured using a survey. Dr. Williams responded that the group is now working to incorporate more clinical measures to their correlations.

Another audience member said she was “perplexed” by the drop-off of correlation in the most severe group. She suggested the possibility that as patients become more disabled, they may be less likely to perceive the relatively less severe non-motor symptoms and therefore did not report them.

Dr. Williams and Dr. Fritz have no relevant financial disclosures.

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A Simple Stress Intervention for MS

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Fri, 05/31/2024 - 12:06

— Stress in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) can have serious effects on quality of life, but there is some evidence that it could worsen inflammation through activation of pro-inflammatory cytokines, leading to more relapses.

A new intervention seeks to help patients with MS reduce stress using biofeedback, employing simple, readily available pulse oximeters and focusing on breathing and other simple coping skills.

Observational studies have suggested that stress may lead to relapses, according to Amy Sullivan, PsyD, who spoke during a session at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.

She cited a study conducted during the 34-day war between Israel and Lebanon in 2006, which found more exacerbations among 156 Israeli patients with relapsing-remitting MS patients during the period of hostilities. There were 18 relapses that occurred during the war, and 44% of those who experienced a relapse reported experience intense subjective stress, versus 20% of those who did not experience a relapse, and 67% of relapsers reported high levels of distress linked to rocket attack exposure, versus 42% of those who did not have a relapse (P = .05).

Another study of 216 Lebanese MS patients found 23 relapses during the 2-month war period, compared with a mean of 8.4 during other 2-month periods.

“So we have two observational studies that are showing us that there’s a pretty strong link or correlation between war, a very stressful life event, and MS relapses,” said Dr. Sullivan.

That relationship has prompted development of interventions to reduce stress in MS patients in hopes of improving clinical outcomes. One that “shaped our practice,” according to Dr. Sullivan, was published in 2012. It was the first high-quality randomized controlled trial of such an intervention, she said.

The program was based on cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and lasted 24 weeks and 16 psychotherapy sessions. Compared with controls, participants had fewer MRI brain lesions, but there were no differences after week 24. “[That] tells us that when people stopped the stress management techniques, the intervention did not give them protection,” said Dr. Sullivan.

Her group aimed to build on that work by developing a program that would be easier for busy patients to learn and incorporate into their lives. “Being in a psychotherapist office for 24 weeks to me was not feasible. I didn’t think that this was something that individuals would have interest in,” said Dr. Sullivan.

They focused on skills to manage stress, delivered over four sessions and designed to be employed in their private life. “We want them to go into the world for 4 to 6 weeks to do the skills that we taught them in that particular session, and then they come back and they tell us how that worked. We also recognize that each skill is not going to work. It’s not a one-size-fits-all for each person,” said Dr. Sullivan.

In addition to patient self-reports, the team measured physiological indicators of stress like pulse (beats per minute), breath rate (breaths per minute), and saturated oxygen (%SpO2). The measures were taken before and after stress management exercises.

The first session included psychoeducation and diaphragmatic breathing for relaxation. The second reviewed the nervous system and the stress response. The third introduced visualization and guided imagery that was individualized for each patient. The fourth focused on mindfulness and distress tolerance.

The study included 195 individuals (mean age, 44.4 years; 72.0% female, 71.5% White).

In all four sessions, patients achieved significant in-session improvements in breath rate, pulse, and saturated oxygen, as well as improvements from the first to the final session: Among 124 patients who completed at least 2 sessions, Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) scores improved by 1.61 (P < .001), Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) scores by 1.08 (P = .004), breaths per minute by 3.38 (P = .001), and SpO2 by 1.67 (P = .016). There was no significant change in pulse.

The high dropout rate could be seen as a weakness, but it was actually designed into the program. “We encouraged people to drop out when they were done. Our program is built on feasibility, and it’s built based on wanting our patients to get what they need out of our treatment, and then go live their lives. We don’t want them to feel tied to our offices, so they voluntarily discontinued after they felt they had sufficiently mastered stress management skills,” said Dr. Sullivan.

The results “suggest that short-term treatment with stress management skills can impact physiological and emotional stress in MS. [The] stress management protocol is likely a great adjunctive treatment to bolster skills traditionally taught during psychotherapy sessions,” said Dr. Sullivan.

During the Q&A period, an audience member asked why the group deviated from traditional cognitive behavioral therapy and moved into more right-brain activities. “In our practice, we’re very eclectic. We don’t believe that just CBT helps, or just behavioral therapy helps, or just [dialectical behavior therapy] helps. We want to teach the skills which we believe are the most important skills to train people on,” said Dr. Sullivan.

Dr. Sullivan did not report any relevant disclosures.

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— Stress in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) can have serious effects on quality of life, but there is some evidence that it could worsen inflammation through activation of pro-inflammatory cytokines, leading to more relapses.

A new intervention seeks to help patients with MS reduce stress using biofeedback, employing simple, readily available pulse oximeters and focusing on breathing and other simple coping skills.

Observational studies have suggested that stress may lead to relapses, according to Amy Sullivan, PsyD, who spoke during a session at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.

She cited a study conducted during the 34-day war between Israel and Lebanon in 2006, which found more exacerbations among 156 Israeli patients with relapsing-remitting MS patients during the period of hostilities. There were 18 relapses that occurred during the war, and 44% of those who experienced a relapse reported experience intense subjective stress, versus 20% of those who did not experience a relapse, and 67% of relapsers reported high levels of distress linked to rocket attack exposure, versus 42% of those who did not have a relapse (P = .05).

Another study of 216 Lebanese MS patients found 23 relapses during the 2-month war period, compared with a mean of 8.4 during other 2-month periods.

“So we have two observational studies that are showing us that there’s a pretty strong link or correlation between war, a very stressful life event, and MS relapses,” said Dr. Sullivan.

That relationship has prompted development of interventions to reduce stress in MS patients in hopes of improving clinical outcomes. One that “shaped our practice,” according to Dr. Sullivan, was published in 2012. It was the first high-quality randomized controlled trial of such an intervention, she said.

The program was based on cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and lasted 24 weeks and 16 psychotherapy sessions. Compared with controls, participants had fewer MRI brain lesions, but there were no differences after week 24. “[That] tells us that when people stopped the stress management techniques, the intervention did not give them protection,” said Dr. Sullivan.

Her group aimed to build on that work by developing a program that would be easier for busy patients to learn and incorporate into their lives. “Being in a psychotherapist office for 24 weeks to me was not feasible. I didn’t think that this was something that individuals would have interest in,” said Dr. Sullivan.

They focused on skills to manage stress, delivered over four sessions and designed to be employed in their private life. “We want them to go into the world for 4 to 6 weeks to do the skills that we taught them in that particular session, and then they come back and they tell us how that worked. We also recognize that each skill is not going to work. It’s not a one-size-fits-all for each person,” said Dr. Sullivan.

In addition to patient self-reports, the team measured physiological indicators of stress like pulse (beats per minute), breath rate (breaths per minute), and saturated oxygen (%SpO2). The measures were taken before and after stress management exercises.

The first session included psychoeducation and diaphragmatic breathing for relaxation. The second reviewed the nervous system and the stress response. The third introduced visualization and guided imagery that was individualized for each patient. The fourth focused on mindfulness and distress tolerance.

The study included 195 individuals (mean age, 44.4 years; 72.0% female, 71.5% White).

In all four sessions, patients achieved significant in-session improvements in breath rate, pulse, and saturated oxygen, as well as improvements from the first to the final session: Among 124 patients who completed at least 2 sessions, Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) scores improved by 1.61 (P < .001), Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) scores by 1.08 (P = .004), breaths per minute by 3.38 (P = .001), and SpO2 by 1.67 (P = .016). There was no significant change in pulse.

The high dropout rate could be seen as a weakness, but it was actually designed into the program. “We encouraged people to drop out when they were done. Our program is built on feasibility, and it’s built based on wanting our patients to get what they need out of our treatment, and then go live their lives. We don’t want them to feel tied to our offices, so they voluntarily discontinued after they felt they had sufficiently mastered stress management skills,” said Dr. Sullivan.

The results “suggest that short-term treatment with stress management skills can impact physiological and emotional stress in MS. [The] stress management protocol is likely a great adjunctive treatment to bolster skills traditionally taught during psychotherapy sessions,” said Dr. Sullivan.

During the Q&A period, an audience member asked why the group deviated from traditional cognitive behavioral therapy and moved into more right-brain activities. “In our practice, we’re very eclectic. We don’t believe that just CBT helps, or just behavioral therapy helps, or just [dialectical behavior therapy] helps. We want to teach the skills which we believe are the most important skills to train people on,” said Dr. Sullivan.

Dr. Sullivan did not report any relevant disclosures.

— Stress in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) can have serious effects on quality of life, but there is some evidence that it could worsen inflammation through activation of pro-inflammatory cytokines, leading to more relapses.

A new intervention seeks to help patients with MS reduce stress using biofeedback, employing simple, readily available pulse oximeters and focusing on breathing and other simple coping skills.

Observational studies have suggested that stress may lead to relapses, according to Amy Sullivan, PsyD, who spoke during a session at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.

She cited a study conducted during the 34-day war between Israel and Lebanon in 2006, which found more exacerbations among 156 Israeli patients with relapsing-remitting MS patients during the period of hostilities. There were 18 relapses that occurred during the war, and 44% of those who experienced a relapse reported experience intense subjective stress, versus 20% of those who did not experience a relapse, and 67% of relapsers reported high levels of distress linked to rocket attack exposure, versus 42% of those who did not have a relapse (P = .05).

Another study of 216 Lebanese MS patients found 23 relapses during the 2-month war period, compared with a mean of 8.4 during other 2-month periods.

“So we have two observational studies that are showing us that there’s a pretty strong link or correlation between war, a very stressful life event, and MS relapses,” said Dr. Sullivan.

That relationship has prompted development of interventions to reduce stress in MS patients in hopes of improving clinical outcomes. One that “shaped our practice,” according to Dr. Sullivan, was published in 2012. It was the first high-quality randomized controlled trial of such an intervention, she said.

The program was based on cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and lasted 24 weeks and 16 psychotherapy sessions. Compared with controls, participants had fewer MRI brain lesions, but there were no differences after week 24. “[That] tells us that when people stopped the stress management techniques, the intervention did not give them protection,” said Dr. Sullivan.

Her group aimed to build on that work by developing a program that would be easier for busy patients to learn and incorporate into their lives. “Being in a psychotherapist office for 24 weeks to me was not feasible. I didn’t think that this was something that individuals would have interest in,” said Dr. Sullivan.

They focused on skills to manage stress, delivered over four sessions and designed to be employed in their private life. “We want them to go into the world for 4 to 6 weeks to do the skills that we taught them in that particular session, and then they come back and they tell us how that worked. We also recognize that each skill is not going to work. It’s not a one-size-fits-all for each person,” said Dr. Sullivan.

In addition to patient self-reports, the team measured physiological indicators of stress like pulse (beats per minute), breath rate (breaths per minute), and saturated oxygen (%SpO2). The measures were taken before and after stress management exercises.

The first session included psychoeducation and diaphragmatic breathing for relaxation. The second reviewed the nervous system and the stress response. The third introduced visualization and guided imagery that was individualized for each patient. The fourth focused on mindfulness and distress tolerance.

The study included 195 individuals (mean age, 44.4 years; 72.0% female, 71.5% White).

In all four sessions, patients achieved significant in-session improvements in breath rate, pulse, and saturated oxygen, as well as improvements from the first to the final session: Among 124 patients who completed at least 2 sessions, Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) scores improved by 1.61 (P < .001), Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) scores by 1.08 (P = .004), breaths per minute by 3.38 (P = .001), and SpO2 by 1.67 (P = .016). There was no significant change in pulse.

The high dropout rate could be seen as a weakness, but it was actually designed into the program. “We encouraged people to drop out when they were done. Our program is built on feasibility, and it’s built based on wanting our patients to get what they need out of our treatment, and then go live their lives. We don’t want them to feel tied to our offices, so they voluntarily discontinued after they felt they had sufficiently mastered stress management skills,” said Dr. Sullivan.

The results “suggest that short-term treatment with stress management skills can impact physiological and emotional stress in MS. [The] stress management protocol is likely a great adjunctive treatment to bolster skills traditionally taught during psychotherapy sessions,” said Dr. Sullivan.

During the Q&A period, an audience member asked why the group deviated from traditional cognitive behavioral therapy and moved into more right-brain activities. “In our practice, we’re very eclectic. We don’t believe that just CBT helps, or just behavioral therapy helps, or just [dialectical behavior therapy] helps. We want to teach the skills which we believe are the most important skills to train people on,” said Dr. Sullivan.

Dr. Sullivan did not report any relevant disclosures.

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