AI Article Synopsis

  • - The CLARITY study, a 96-week double-blind trial, showed that cladribine tablets significantly improved MRI outcomes in patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) compared to placebo.
  • - Patients taking cladribine had markedly lower numbers of active lesions (T1 Gd+, active T2, and combined unique lesions) at the study's end, with around 87-91% free of T1 Gd+ lesions versus only 48% in the placebo group, all with p-values less than 0.001.
  • - The results indicated that both doses of cladribine were effective across various patient groups, leading to clinically meaningful reductions in disease activity and a higher

Article Abstract

We herein provide a comprehensive assessment of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) outcomes from CLARITY, a 96-week, double-blind study demonstrating significant clinical and MRI improvements in patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) treated with cladribine tablets. Patients with RRMS were randomized 1:1:1 to annual short-course therapy with cladribine tablets cumulative dose 3.5 or 5.25 mg/kg or placebo. MRI endpoints included mean number of T1 gadolinium-enhancing (Gd+), active T2 and combined unique (CU) lesions/patient/scan. MRI-measured disease activity was significantly reduced in both cladribine tablets groups versus placebo. The proportion of patients with no active lesions at study end was: T1 Gd+ lesions: 86.8 and 91.0 versus 48.3 % (p < 0.001); active T2 lesions: 61.7 and 62.5 versus 28.4 % (p < 0.001); CU lesions: 59.6 and 60.7 versus 26.1 % (p < 0.001). Clinically meaningful and significant reductions in active lesion counts and increases in proportions of active lesion-free patients were achieved consistently in cladribine tablet groups when data were stratified by baseline disease characteristics. For example, the percentage of patients who remained lesion-free over the study was significantly greater in cladribine tablet groups than in the placebo group for all lesion types regardless of relapse category at baseline (p < 0.001 for all analyses of patients with ≤1 or 2 relapses; p ≤ 0.022 for analyses of patients with ≥3 relapses). MRI-measured disease activity was greatly reduced by both doses of cladribine tablets, with consistent effect across clinically relevant patient populations. These findings add to our scientific understanding of the neurological impact of this therapeutic modality in patients with RRMS.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00415-012-6775-0DOI Listing

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