Relapsing Remitting Multiple Sclerosis Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Multicentric Randomized PRAGmatic Trial to Compare the Effectiveness of Fingolimod Versus Dimethyl‐Fumarate on Patient Overall Disease Experience in Relapsing Remitting Multiple Sclerosis: Novel Data to Inform Decision-makers
This will be a 1:1 randomized open label trial. European and outside Europe centres will be involved. Aim of the project is to conduct a head-to-head comparison of effectiveness of two approved disease modifying treatments (DMTs) in patients with relapsing remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS). The term effectiveness refers to efficacy in a real life setting: this is intended to be in fact the first pragmatic multi-centre randomised controlled trial to directly assess the effectiveness of the new oral agents approved for MS (fingolimod/FTY versus dimethyl-fumarate/DMF) on disease activity, disability progression, quality of life, functioning and symptoms. It will be a randomized trial taking place in clinical care setting and comparing existing therapies, any of which may constitute standard care for naive patients or sub optimal responders to first-line drugs. Post hoc analysis will also identify the better treatment strategy on the different patient subgroups. Patient overall disease experience will be considered for the first time as the most important outcome. In fact, in addition to classical "no evidence of disease activity" (NEDA), a new composite NEDA taking account also of patient point of view and quality of life, will be proposed. Finally,the specific effectiveness profile of the two DMTs will be addressed, by exploring comparative benefits on different outcomes (disease activity, disability progression, brain atrophy, quality of life, fatigue, psychiatric and cognitive symptoms, medication satisfaction).
Background and significance
1. The expansion of the treatment landscape in MS has increased the complexity of treatment
decisions. Recommendations and algorithms can help to maximize the benefit of each available
therapy; however, there is currently no consensus algorithm available, with most of the
recently published recommendations being regional and most guidelines currently used in
clinical practice, being driven by the labels of the therapies. The lack of head-to-head
clinical trials for approved drugs is crucial since head-to-head trials constitute the gold
standard for efficacy comparisons. This kind of information is mandatory for informed and
objective health decisions. The present proposal aims at filling this critical gap in
evidence. Randomized head-to-head trials are the best method for evaluating the efficacy of
different treatments and to help the clinicians and the patients in health decision making.
Randomized controlled trials, designed as experiments with high internal validity, have the
ability to determine cause effect relationships. These experiments employ comprehensive
designs to control for most, if not all, sources of bias by means of randomization, blinding,
allocation concealment, etc. Usually, extended inclusion and exclusion criteria are used to
identify a clearly defined population group of participants who would benefit from the
intervention under investigation. Although the above experimental design, if correctly
applied, leads to well-controlled trials with statistically credible results, the
applicability of these results to real life practice may be questionable.
Here the investigators aim at conducting a comparative open label trial preserving the
internal validity due to randomization and generalizability due to a pragmatic design. The
term pragmatic is used for trials designed to test the effectiveness of the intervention in a
broad routine clinical practice. The explanatory trial is designed in order to control for
all known biases and confounders, so that the intervention's effect is maximized. The
pragmatic trial, on the other hand, is designed to test interventions in the full spectrum of
everyday clinical settings in order to maximize applicability and generalizability.1 This is
intended to be the first pragmatic multi-centre randomised controlled trial to directly
assess the effectiveness of the new oral agents approved for MS (FTY/gilenya versus
DMF/tecfidera). FTY (0.5 mg/day) and DMF (240 mg twice daily) are both efficacious in the
treatment of MS and both offer the convenience of an oral administration. As such they are
similarly valuable alternative treatments for MS patients, and are indeed frequently proposed
as possible alternative treatment options to MS patients. Indication for FTY is restricted in
Europe to second line in first-line therapy non responders or in active naïve patients. DMF
is highly prescribed also in active naive patients and as switching strategy in patients who
do not adequately respond to self-injectable DMTs, such as FTY.
The need for randomized trials with approved drugs exists when treatment decision in clinical
practice is challenged by the lack of evidence of superiority of one drug for a specific
group of patients.
The efficacy profile of the two oral drug have been characterized in large clinical
development programs. Oral therapies have been shown to offer benefits with regard to these
clinical and MRI outcomes when compared with placebo in phase 3 trials.2-5 The clinical
efficacy of these therapies over traditional injectable DMTs has been demonstrated for FTY in
the trial assessing injectable interferon versus FTY720 oral in RRMS (TRANSFORMS).6 Findings
of these phase 3 trials indicate that oral therapies may represent an advance in the
treatment of MS because they offer effective treatment options that are often better
tolerated and more convenient than the traditional injectable DMTs. There are no head-to-head
controlled trials comparing the efficacy of the different oral DMTs. This is an area of much
interest to neurologists and healthcare decision makers; therefore, indirect treatment
comparisons have recently been performed. Of these, a recent study has compared FTY with DMF
using a network meta-analysis approach and found no significant differences in relapse rate
or in the proportion of patients with disability progression.7 Standard network meta-analysis
methods may be susceptible to bias because of differences in trial populations and
methodologies. Subgroup and post hoc analyses of the phase 3 trials of DMTs have demonstrated
that differences in patient baseline characteristics influence the observed effect of DMTs on
relapse rate and disability progression,6,8 and that the application of different definitions
of disability progression has a large impact on disability outcomes.9 Therefore, it is
important to adjust for these potentially confounding factors when assessing the comparative
efficacy of these oral DMTs. It has been reported that FTY therapy results in a higher
probability of no evidence of disease activity (NEDA) than DMF therapy when phase 3 trial
data are indirectly compared and differences between trials are adjusted for.10 These
findings must, however, be interpreted with caution, owing to the assumptions inherent in any
modeling approach.
The need for high-quality, widely applicable evidence is gaining momentum, especially amidst
health care policy makers. The increased costs of interventions and health care in a
resource-limited environment have fueled the demand for clinically effective and applicable
evidence. Here the investigators aim at conducting a comparative open label trial preserving
the internal validity due to randomization and generalizability due to a pragmatic design. It
will be the first randomized pragmatic trials in MS. Policy makers have an active interest in
pragmatic trials, since these are designed to answer the question most relevant to a decision
maker's agenda: comparative effectiveness of interventions in the routine practice. The
availability of comparative data from routine practice will help policy makers to efficiently
allocate resources and manpower and will drive patients and clinicians in shared and informed
health decisions. The evolving MS landscape, in which a number of new treatments are
appearing—each with their own benefits and risks—will require a change in the nature of
interactions between patients and their physicians, with a shared approach to clinical
decision making that emphasizes patient-related goals. Together, these innovations in MS
management offer exciting new opportunities to optimize treatment outcomes. This will
necessitate attention both to traditional clinical endpoints such as relapses and disability,
to objective radiological surrogates of disease activity, and to newer outcome measures such
as brain atrophy , cognition and patient-reported outcomes. In line with this, the present
proposal aims at comparing the effectiveness of two oral MS agents on patient overall disease
experience. If, traditionally, both clinical trials and routine medical care have relied on
outcomes assessed by healthcare professionals, here the investigators want to focus also on
the importance of self-evaluation of health, thus growing participation of individuals in
their own care. The investigators can foresee a continuum where patient empowerment
contributes to improve his/her healthcare and, at the same time, makes valuable medical data
accessible to the medical community for future therapeutic developments.
The whole idea of applicable and generalizable research is very appealing and of benefit to
the health sciences community.
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