Interest Of The Work: Multiple sclerosis (MS) disease modifying therapies (DMT) utilization increased during the last decade with the approval of new drugs. Symptomatic treatments also play an important role. Describing time trends and demographic characteristics for DMT and symptomatic treatments utilization in population-based MS patients will lead to a better knowledge of the resources distribution.
Methods: Repeated cross-sectional analysis on each calendar year were implemented retrospectively on the health insurance claims database in France from 2013 until 2015 regarding DMT, fampridine, fluoxetine, psychiatrist office visits, and Physical therapy sessions to calculate an utilization rate defined as the number of MS patients (whenever the date of diagnosis) who filled at least 1 prescription or service within the studied calendar year per cent MS patients covered the same calendar year (number of users per cent MS population per annum). Beneficiaries with MS were identified by their exemption of co-payment for long-term disease (ALD).
Results: DMT utilization rate increased from 34.22% in 2013 to 38.73% in 2015. The increase was due to recently developed DMT as first-generation DMT utilization rate decreased from 30.20% to 20.06%. Rates were not different between genders but significantly decreased with age. The average age of users was significantly lower for DMT than for symptomatic treatments (recently developed DMT: 43.63, first-generation DMT: 45.84, psychiatrist office visits: 49.08, Fampyra: 55.41, Physical therapy sessions: 55.88, fluoxetine: 58.26). Regional DMT utilization rates ranged from 31.68% in Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes to 42.58% in Normandie. They were not correlated to regional rates of MS prevalence (R-Square=0.0558; P=0.2556) nor to the presence of a MS reference centre in the region (Chi-Square=0.0190; P=0.8905). In 2015 the six DMTs with the highest rates were by decreasing orders: Tecfidera, Avonex, Gilenya, Aubagio, Copaxone, and Rebif. Half of them were recently developed orally-administered drugs.
Perspectives: Complex factors may explain the interprovincial variability. Low DMT utilization rates in the most aged patients who also have the highest recourse rate to symptomatic treatments reflect the fact that the indication of disease modifying therapies do not address older patient's needs. New DMTs with medical indications for the late degenerative phase are needed.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.lpm.2018.04.013 | DOI Listing |
J Neurol
January 2025
Second Department of Neurology, Attikon University Hospital, National & Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece.
Introduction: The current literature on the prevalence and potential association between disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) and cancer risk in the MS population has yielded mixed findings.
Methods: This study aimed to estimate cancer prevalence and cancer risk in patients with MS (PwMS) under prolonged DMT exposure. Database search include: MEDLINE PUBMED, SCOPUS, and Google Scholar.
BMC Neurol
January 2025
Real World Solutions, IQVIA, 2400 Ellis Road, Durham, NC, 27703, USA.
Background: To evaluate the overall satisfaction, device usability, and injection experience of MS patients self-administering ofatumumab using the Sensoready autoinjector device in the United States (US).
Methods: This US-based, cross-sectional survey study included patients with MS (≥ 18 years) who self-administered ofatumumab using the Sensoready device within the previous 12 months of the survey. Eligible patients were administered a 30-item de novo questionnaire that focused on overall device satisfaction, device usability, convenience/flexibility for travel with the device, user confidence, injection experience, and time to administer the injection.
Neurol Clin Pract
April 2025
Brigham MS Center (MKH), Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; Georgia State University (MCM), Atlanta; Brigham and Women's Hospital (TDM, JP-P, CS, JZ), Boston, MA; Massachusetts General Hospital (ECK), Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; University of Vermont (AJS), Burlington; Elliot Lewis MS Center (EL, JK), Wellesley, MA; University of Massachusetts (CI, IB), Worcester, MA; Novartis Pharmaceuticals (JMS), Jersey City, NJ; Concord Hospital (AC), NH; and University of British Columbia (ADS), Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Background And Objectives: Multiple sclerosis (MS) affects more than 1 million people in the United States, including reproductive-age women. There has been a paucity of prospective, pregnancy registries based on MS disease rather than medication exposures. A prospective MS pregnancy registry (PREG-MS) was established in 2017 as a prospective, single-cohort, real-world MS pregnancy registry in New England States of the United States, with goals to evaluate (1) course of MS and disease-modifying therapies (DMT) use during conception attempts and in the peripartum period, (2) pregnancy outcomes in women with MS (WwMS), and (3) longer-term developmental outcomes in offspring of WwMS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBJPsych Open
January 2025
Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK.
Background: Alcohol use in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is under-researched. Previous reviews have explored substance use as a whole, but this neglects individual characteristics unique to different substances. Alcohol use in non-clinical samples is associated with diverse responses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurology
February 2025
Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada.
Objectives: To compare disease-modifying therapy (DMT) use between people living with multiple sclerosis (pwMS) who resided in rural vs urban areas.
Methods: This retrospective cohort study used population-level individually linked administrative data to identify pwMS on April 1, 2019 (index date), in Alberta, Canada. DMT use was compared between pwMS who resided in rural vs urban areas during a 1-year postindex period.
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