Management of patients with active relapsing-remitting or secondary progressive multiple sclerosis: A French real-world study based on claims data linked to a phase IV study
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
PRO-MSactive is a French phase-IV study evaluating ocrelizumab efficacy in active relapsing-remitting or secondary progressive multiple sclerosis (RRMS or SPMS). By linking clinical data to the national claims database (SNDS), the objective of this study was to obtain an overview of RRMS and SPMS burden.
Methods
All RRMS and SPMS patients included in the PRO-MSactive study between July 2018 and July 2019 and followed for 48 weeks were linked to MS patients from SNDS. Healthcare Resource Utilization and costs were described in RRMS patients, in the two years prior to ocrelizumab initiation, by 12 months period (n-1 and n-2), according to EDSS score (< 4 versus ≥4).
Results
291/371 patients (78.7 %) were included: 257 RRMS and 34 SPMS patients. Different costs according to disability status (year n-2: 9,103€ versus 16,441€; year n-1: 9,813€ versus 19,999€, for patients with score EDSS <4 versus ≥4, respectively) and relapse activity (+1,358€ between year n-2 and n-1) were observed.
Conclusion
This study is the first to combine clinical data from a phase-IV study with a claims database allowing to distinguish costs according to disease type. We objectified a greater economic burden in RRMS patients with higher levels of disability and showed an increase in costs associated with relapse activity in the 2 years before enrolling in the phase IV study.
期刊介绍:
Multiple Sclerosis is an area of ever expanding research and escalating publications. Multiple Sclerosis and Related Disorders is a wide ranging international journal supported by key researchers from all neuroscience domains that focus on MS and associated disease of the central nervous system. The primary aim of this new journal is the rapid publication of high quality original research in the field. Important secondary aims will be timely updates and editorials on important scientific and clinical care advances, controversies in the field, and invited opinion articles from current thought leaders on topical issues. One section of the journal will focus on teaching, written to enhance the practice of community and academic neurologists involved in the care of MS patients. Summaries of key articles written for a lay audience will be provided as an on-line resource.
A team of four chief editors is supported by leading section editors who will commission and appraise original and review articles concerning: clinical neurology, neuroimaging, neuropathology, neuroepidemiology, therapeutics, genetics / transcriptomics, experimental models, neuroimmunology, biomarkers, neuropsychology, neurorehabilitation, measurement scales, teaching, neuroethics and lay communication.