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Arch Neurol. Clinical Effect of Neutralizing Antibodies to Interferon Beta That Persist Long After Cessation of Therapy for Multiple Sclerosis

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  • Arch Neurol. Clinical Effect of Neutralizing Antibodies to Interferon Beta That Persist Long After Cessation of Therapy for Multiple Sclerosis

    Clinical Effect of Neutralizing Antibodies to Interferon Beta That Persist Long After Cessation of Therapy for Multiple Sclerosis (Arch Neurol., abstract, edited)
    Clinical Effect of Neutralizing Antibodies to Interferon Beta That Persist Long After Cessation of Therapy for Multiple Sclerosis

    Laura F. van der Voort, MD; Francesca Gilli, PhD; Antonio Bertolotto, MD; Dirk L. Knol, PhD; Bernard M. J. Uitdehaag, MD, PhD; Chris H. Polman, MD, PhD; Joep Killestein, MD, PhD

    Arch Neurol. 2010;67(4)doi:10.1001/archneurol.2010.21).


    Objectives
    To confirm that neutralizing antibodies (NAb) to interferon beta can persist after therapy withdrawal and to evaluate whether persisting NAb are associated with a worse clinical disease course in multiple sclerosis (MS).

    Design
    Retrospective study.

    Setting
    Tertiary referral center in the Netherlands.

    Patients
    A total of 71 patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis treated with interferon beta in the past.

    Main Outcome Measures
    Persisting NAb after therapy withdrawal were tested using the cytopathic effect assay. Patients with and without persisting NAb were compared on several outcomes: the change in annualized relapse rate from prior to interferon beta treatment initiation to after cessation of treatment, time to sustained disability on the Kurtzke Expanded Disability Status Scale, and the use of disease-modifying treatments after cessation of treatment with interferon beta.

    Results
    Seventeen of 71 patients (24%) tested NAb positive after a median interval of 25 months (interquartile range, 10-51 months) after interferon beta treatment cessation. Eleven of these 17 patients (15%) were high-titer NAb positive (>150 10-fold reduction units per mL). Persisting NAb were associated with an increase in the annualized relapse rate (P = .04) and a reduction in time to reach a sustained Expanded Disability Status Scale score of 6.0, ie, the need for unilateral assistance to walk 100 m (P = .02). Moreover, NAb-positive patients were treated with second-line therapy significantly more often, especially mitoxantrone (P = .006).

    Conclusion
    Anti?interferon beta NAb can persist after interferon beta treatment withdrawal and are associated with overt clinical disease activity. This is made apparent by an increase in relapse rate and faster disability progression and is supported by the observed need for more aggressive therapy after interferon beta treatment cessation. Prospective studies are warranted to confirm these results.


    Author Affiliations:
    Departments of Neurology (Drs van der Voort, Uitdehaag, Polman, and Killestein) and Epidemiology and Biostatistics (Drs Knol and Uitdehaag), VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands; and Centro di Riferimento Regionale Sclerosi Multipla and Neurobiologia Clinica, ASO San Luigi Gonzaga, Orbassano, Torino, Italy (Drs Gilli and Bertolotto).
    -
    <cite cite="http://archneur.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/abstract/2010.21v1?etoc">Arch Neurol -- Abstract: Clinical Effect of Neutralizing Antibodies to Interferon Beta That Persist Long After Cessation of Therapy for Multiple Sclerosis, February 8, 2010, van der Voort et al. 0 (2010): 2010.21</cite>
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