SAN DIEGO – The authors note that many MOGAD patients never experience a relapse and it is difficult to predict which ones will.
MOGAD can cause optic neuritis, transverse myelitis, and acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM). It was first described in 2007, and the best approaches to therapy are not yet understood. The new study is at least a starting point for understanding treatment outcomes, according to Philippe Bilodeau, MD, who presented the study during a poster session at the annual meeting held by the Americas Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ACTRIMS).
Predicting which patients will relapse
“I think one of the biggest unanswered clinical questions in MOGAD is trying to determine who’s going to go on to have relapsing MOGAD. About 30% to 40% of patients with MOGAD will never have a second attack. So one of the big questions is: How can we identify patients who would benefit from immunotherapy, and how can we identify patients who will have a more benign disease course and may not need to be started on a treatment,” said Dr. Bilodeau, a neurology resident at Massachusetts General Hospital/Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston.
The researchers analyzed data from 143 patients seen at Massachusetts General or Brigham and Women’s Hospital who had presented with their first attack. Over a follow-up period of 5 years, the relapse rate was 61.8%. The researchers examined various factors, including age of onset, high MOG titer, attack type, and male sex, and found that only the latter came close to predicting relapse, though it fell short of clinical significance (hazard ratio [HR], 0.61; P = .07).
However, treatment with mycophenolate, azathioprine, intravenous immunoglobulins (IVIG), rituximab, or tocilizumab strongly predicted a lower probability of relapse (HR, 0.25; P < .0001).
The most effective treatment for relapsing MOGAD
In a separate poster, his team examined a subset of the cohort of 88 patients who were treated with mycophenolate mofetil, B-cell depletion, rituximab, or IV immunoglobulins (IVIG) during a first or second relapse, as well as an analysis of every relapse experienced by any patient during the course of their disease. “Using a negative binomial regression, we looked at the annualized relapse rates and incidence rate ratios between the different treatments. No matter how you looked at the data – even if you looked at total time on IVIG, if you looked at time on monotherapy, excluding if they were on prednisone at the same time if they were on both IVIG and rituximab, if you only consider patients that were on high dose IVIG – IVIG was by far the best treatment and rituximab was always the least effective, and mycophenolate was always between IVIG and rituximab. So I think in that cohort, we can say with some confidence that IVIG is the most effective treatment for relapsing MOGAD,” said Dr. Bilodeau.