HONOLULU – Two years of taking the investigational oral drug laquinimod reduced multiple sclerosis relapses and slowed progression toward disability and brain atrophy, compared with placebo, in a phase III study of 1,106 patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis.
The annualized relapse rate declined by 23% among patients who took laquinimod 0.6 mg daily in the randomized trial, which involved 139 centers in 24 countries, Dr. Giancarlo Comi and his associates reported at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology. The annualized relapse rates were 0.304 on laquinimod and 0.395 on placebo.
The laquinimod group also showed a 36% reduction in disability progression, which "is quite a big thing, more than what has been reported" in previous drug studies, said Dr. Comi, director of the department of neurology and the institute of experimental neurology at the Scientific Institute and University of Vita-Salute San Raffaele, Milan.
Most importantly, he said in an interview, the laquinimod group showed 33% less brain atrophy over the course of the study. "That’s interesting because most drugs fail to have an effect on this," he said.
These multiple benefits may be due to laquinimod’s novel mechanism of action, which addresses both the disease’s acute inflammatory activity and the accumulation of irreversible tissue damage, he said.
The results suggest that laquinimod is a "very promising" treatment, Dr. Comi said. "In the end, what matters is how much damage there is to the patient and how much the drug was able to prevent that."
Baseline characteristics of the two groups were similar, including demographics, clinical factors and MRI findings. At the start of the study, 46% of the laquinimod group and 40% of the placebo group had active disease. Patients in both groups had had MS for an average of 9 years.
Patients underwent clinical evaluations every 3 months and yearly MRI exams. By the end of the study, the mean number of gadolinium-enhanced lesions on MRI was 37% lower in the laquinimod group and the mean number of new T2 lesions was 30% lower, compared with placebo. The mean number of new T1 lesions, which are characterized by more severe tissue damage, was 27% lower with the drug, compared with placebo.
Laquinimod appeared to be well tolerated. Seventy-nine percent of patients who were randomized to laquinimod and 77% of patients who were randomized to placebo finished the double-blind study.
Elevations of liver enzymes were more common in the laquinimod group (7%) than in the placebo group (3%), but these were transient and reversible and did not lead to any signs of liver problems, Dr. Comi said. Liver enzyme elevations greater than three times the upper limit of normal occurred in 2% of the placebo group and 5% of the laquinimod group.
The overall rates of adverse events were low (22% on laquinimod and 16% on placebo) and did not differ significantly between the drug and placebo groups. Two patients on placebo died from unrelated causes, with no deaths in the laquinimod group. The laquinimod group reported higher rates of abdominal pain (5%) and back pain (16%), compared with placebo (3% and 9%, respectively).
In 2010, the oral medication fingolimod (Gilenya) was approved as adjunctive therapy for relapsing-remitting MS. Concerns about increased risks for cardiac problems, immune suppression, and cancer with fingolimod were not a problem in the laquinimod study, Dr. Comi said.
One patient in the placebo group developed pericarditis. There was no evidence of decreased immune function on laquinimod. For example, 17% on placebo on 20% on laquinimod developed herpes infection. There were six cases of cancer in the placebo group and eight in the laquinimod group, for rates of 1.1% and 1.5%, respectively.
A parallel trial is underway to confirm the findings, and results from that trial are expected in the fall of 2011, he said.
Teva Pharmaceuticals, which is developing laquinimod, funded the study. Dr. Comi has received compensation from Teva, Novartis, Sanofi-Aventis, Merck Serono, and Bayer Schering Pharma. Some of his associates in the study reported relationships with Teva and other companies manufacturing drugs for MS.