Short-Term Relapse Quantitation as a Fully Surrogate Endpoint for Long-Term Sustained Progression of Disability in RRMS Patients Treated with Natalizumab

Joint Authors

Miao, X.
Sandrock, A.
Richert, J. R.
Meyerson, L.
Wang, Y. C.

Source

Neurology Research International

Issue

Vol. 2011, Issue 2011 (31 Dec. 2011), pp.1-6, 6 p.

Publisher

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

Publication Date

2011-12-26

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

6

Main Subjects

Medicine

Abstract EN

Time to sustained worsening in the expanded disability status scale as the standard for evaluating the accumulation of disability has been used as a measure of clinical efficacy in many relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) clinical trials.

However, this measurement usually requires a large sample and long-term study to demonstrate the treatment effect.

Annualized relapse rate or time to first relapse is also widely used as alternative measurements of clinical efficacy.

A formal statistical validation of short-term relapse activity as a surrogate endpoint for long-term sustained progression of disability could potentially permit smaller, shorter, and less expensive clinical trials in RRMS.

Four statistical validation/evaluation approaches consistently showed that relapse activity through one year of treatment serves as statistically valid surrogate endpoint for time to sustained progression of disability.

The analysis demonstrates that long-term sustained progression of disability can be predicted by short-term relapse measures with 4 consistent validations of statistical approaches, including a formal statistical hypothesis test.

This was demonstrated in a large phase III trial of natalizumab and showed that the beneficial clinical effect of natalizumab on sustained progression of disability at 2 years in patients with RRMS can be predicted by the total number of relapses at 1 year.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Wang, Y. C.& Sandrock, A.& Richert, J. R.& Meyerson, L.& Miao, X.. 2011. Short-Term Relapse Quantitation as a Fully Surrogate Endpoint for Long-Term Sustained Progression of Disability in RRMS Patients Treated with Natalizumab. Neurology Research International،Vol. 2011, no. 2011, pp.1-6.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-453634

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Wang, Y. C.…[et al.]. Short-Term Relapse Quantitation as a Fully Surrogate Endpoint for Long-Term Sustained Progression of Disability in RRMS Patients Treated with Natalizumab. Neurology Research International No. 2011 (2011), pp.1-6.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-453634

American Medical Association (AMA)

Wang, Y. C.& Sandrock, A.& Richert, J. R.& Meyerson, L.& Miao, X.. Short-Term Relapse Quantitation as a Fully Surrogate Endpoint for Long-Term Sustained Progression of Disability in RRMS Patients Treated with Natalizumab. Neurology Research International. 2011. Vol. 2011, no. 2011, pp.1-6.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-453634

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references

Record ID

BIM-453634