Conference Coverage

VIDEO: Efficacy of DMTs decreases with age


 

REPORTING FROM ACTRIMS FORUM 2018

The efficacy of immunomodulatory disease-modifying therapies for multiple sclerosis decreases with age, and high-efficacy drugs do a better job of inhibiting MS disability compared with low-efficacy drugs only in patients younger than 40.5 years.

Those are the key conclusions from a meta-analysis of the age-dependent efficacy of MS treatments that was published in the November 2017 issue of Frontiers in Neurology. In a video interview, Ann Marie Weideman, lead study author, discussed highlights from the meta-analysis at the meeting held by the Americas Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis. The meta-analysis drew from more than 28,000 individuals with MS participating in 38 trials of 13 categories of immunomodulatory drugs.

Ms. Weideman is an IRTA Fellow at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, Bethesda, Md. She reported that study coauthor Bibiana Bielekova, MD, is coinventor of several patents related to daclizumab.

Recommended Reading

Pregnancy and MS: How do they affect each other?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Preliminary results promising from ublituximab phase II study for MS
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA: Gadolinium retention prompts new GBCA class warning, safety measures
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA: Gadolinium retention prompts new GBCA class warning, safety measures
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA cites manufacturer of autologous stem cells for regulatory, manufacturing missteps
MDedge Internal Medicine
Two MS diagnostic criteria found to have similar accuracy
MDedge Internal Medicine
Rituximab may outperform some other first-line multiple sclerosis treatments
MDedge Internal Medicine
2017 update to McDonald criteria loosens MS diagnosis somewhat
MDedge Internal Medicine
VIDEO: Alemtuzumab associated with long-term MS control in TOPAZ study
MDedge Internal Medicine
VIDEO: New MS ambulatory measure could fill clinical gap
MDedge Internal Medicine