Temporal profile of lymphocyte counts and relationship with infections with fingolimod therapy in paediatric patients with multiple sclerosis: Results from the PARADIGMS study

2020 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Temporal profile of lymphocyte counts and relationship with infections with fingolimod therapy in paediatric patients with multiple sclerosis: Results from the PARADIGMS study​
Chitnis, T.; Banwell, B.; Krupp, L.; Arnold, D. L; Bar-Or, A.; Brück, W.   & Giovannoni, G. et al.​ (2020) 
Multiple Sclerosis Journal27(6) pp. 922​-932​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/1352458520936934 

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Authors
Chitnis, Tanuja; Banwell, Brenda; Krupp, Lauren; Arnold, Douglas L; Bar-Or, Amit; Brück, Wolfgang ; Giovannoni, Gavin; Greenberg, Benjamin; Ghezzi, Angelo; Waubant, Emmanuelle; Rostasy, Kevin; Deiva, Kumaran; Huppke, Peter ; Wolinsky, Jerry S; Zhang, Ying; Azmon, Amin; K-Laflamme, Annik; Karan, Rajesh; Gärtner, Jutta 
Abstract
Background: Reduction in absolute lymphocyte count (ALC) is expected with fingolimod treatment. Objective: To evaluate the effect of fingolimod 0.5 mg versus intramuscular interferon β-1a (30 μg) on ALC and its relationship with infections in paediatric-onset multiple sclerosis (POMS) up to 4 years. Methods: We assessed ALC at baseline, monthly till 3 months, and every 3 months (core phase) and with variable periodicity (extension phase) of Phase 3 PARADIGMS study (N = 215). Incidence rates (IRs) of infection-related adverse events (infAEs)/100 patient-years were analysed by on-study nadir ALC. Results: With fingolimod, ALC rapidly reduced to 29.9%–34.4% of baseline values within 2 weeks and remained stable thereafter; no relevant changes observed with interferon. IRs of infAEs were 67.6 with fingolimod and 61.8 with interferon; IR ratios with respect to interferon, overall: 1.09, by nadir ALC 0.2–0.4 × 109/L: 1.13 and \u0026gt;0.4 × 109/L: 0.91. Three patients had a single episode of ALC \u0026lt;0.2 × 109/L (core phase). No opportunistic infections were observed and infection risk did not increase during the extension phase. Conclusion: In paediatric patients, the overall incidence of infections was comparable between fingolimod and interferon. No association was observed between nadir ALC and infections in POMS, although sample size may have been too small to rule an association.
Issue Date
2020
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Journal
Multiple Sclerosis Journal 
ISSN
1352-4585
eISSN
1477-0970
Language
English
Sponsor
novartis pharma https://doi.org/10.13039/100008792

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