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Título : Efficacy and safety of temelimab in multiple sclerosis: Results of a randomized phase 2b and extension study
Autoría: Hartung, Hans-Peter
Derfuss, Tobias
Cree, Bruce A.C.
Sormani, Maria Pia
Selmaj, Krysztof
Stutters, Jonathan  
Prados Carrasco, Ferran  
MacManus, David  
Schneble, Hans-Martin
Lambert, Estelle
Porchet, Hervé
Glanzman, Robert
Warne, David
Curtin, Francois
Kornmann, Gabrielle
Buffet, Bénédicte
Kremer, David
Küry, Patrick
Leppert, David
Rückle, Thomas
Barkhof, Frederik  
Otros: Universitat Oberta de Catalunya (UOC)
Universitat Oberta de Catalunya. eHealth Center
Citación : Hartung, H. P., Derfuss, T., Cree, B. A., Sormani, M. P., Selmaj, K., Stutters, J., Prados, F., MacManus, D., Schneble, H. M., Lambert, E., Porchet, H., Glanzman, R., Warne, D., Curtin, F., Kornmann, G., Buffet, B., Kremer, D., Küry, P., Leppert, D., Rückle, T., Barkhof, F. (2021). Efficacy and safety of temelimab in multiple sclerosis: Results of a randomized phase 2b and extension study. Multiple sclerosis (Houndmills, Basingstoke, England), 13524585211024997. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1177/13524585211024997
Resumen : Background: The envelope protein of human endogenous retrovirus W (HERV-W-Env) is expressed by macrophages and microglia, mediating axonal damage in chronic active MS lesions. Objective and Methods: This phase 2, double-blind, 48-week trial in relapsing-remitting MS with 48-week extension phase assessed the efficacy and safety of temelimab; a monoclonal antibody neutralizing HERV-W-Env. The primary endpoint was the reduction of cumulative gadolinium-enhancing T1-lesions in brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans at week 24. Additional endpoints included numbers of T2 and T1-hypointense lesions, magnetization transfer ratio, and brain atrophy. In total, 270 participants were randomized to receive monthly intravenous temelimab (6, 12, or 18 mg/kg) or placebo for 24 weeks; at week 24 placebo-treated participants were re-randomized to treatment groups. Results: The primary endpoint was not met. At week 48, participants treated with 18 mg/kg temelimab had fewer new T1-hypointense lesions (p = 0.014) and showed consistent, however statistically non-significant, reductions in brain atrophy and magnetization transfer ratio decrease, as compared with the placebo/comparator group. These latter two trends were sustained over 96 weeks. No safety issues emerged. Conclusion: Temelimab failed to show an effect on features of acute inflammation but demonstrated preliminary radiological signs of possible anti-neurodegenerative effects. Current data support the development of temelimab for progressive MS.
Palabras clave : timelimab
MRI
clinical trial
atrophy
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/13524585211024997
Tipo de documento: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Fecha de publicación : 9-jul-2021
Licencia de publicación: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/es/  
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