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Wearing-off symptoms during standard and extended natalizumab dosing intervals: Experiences from the COVID-19 pandemic

Gerd Haga Bringeland, Nello Blaser, Kjell‐Morten Myhr, Christian A. Vedeler, Sonia Gavasso

2021Journal of the Neurological Sciences14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Natalizumab effectively prevents disease activity in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis, but many treated patients report subjective wearing-off symptoms at the end of the 4-week interval between infusions. Extended interval dosing (EID) is a promising strategy to mitigate the risk of natalizumab-associated progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy, but it is unknown whether EID affects wearing-off symptoms. In this observational study, we evaluated if prevalence or intensity of wearing-off symptoms changed when natalizumab dosing intervals were extended from 4 to 6 weeks in 30 treated patients during the outbreak of COVID-19 in Norway. New or increased wearing-off symptoms during EID were reported by 50%. Symptom increase was more frequent among patients with pre-existing wearing-off symptoms during standard dosing compared to patients without such pre-existing symptoms [p = 0.0005]. Our observations support the need to study the effect of EID on wearing-off symptoms in randomized controlled trials.

Topics & Concepts

NatalizumabMedicineDosingObservational studyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Randomized controlled trialMultiple sclerosisProgressive multifocal leukoencephalopathyPandemicInternal medicineDiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)ImmunologyPolyomavirus and related diseasesMultiple Sclerosis Research StudiesFull-Duplex Wireless Communications
Wearing-off symptoms during standard and extended natalizumab dosing intervals: Experiences from the COVID-19 pandemic | Litcius