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Ocrelizumab in Early-Stage Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis: The Phase IIIb ENSEMBLE 4-Year, Single-Arm, Open-Label Trial

  • Hans Peter Hartung
  • , Ralph H.B. Benedict
  • , Thomas Berger
  • , Robert A. Bermel
  • , Bruno Brochet
  • , William M. Carroll
  • , Mark S. Freedman
  • , Trygve Holmøy
  • , Rana Karabudak
  • , Carlos Nos
  • , Francesco Patti
  • , Amy Perrin Ross
  • , Ludo Vanopdenbosch
  • , Timothy Vollmer
  • , Jens Wuerfel
  • , Susanne Clinch
  • , Karen Kadner
  • , Thomas Kuenzel
  • , Inessa Kulyk
  • , Catarina Raposo
  • Gian Andrea Thanei, Joep Killestein
  • Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf
  • The University of Sydney
  • Palacký University Olomouc
  • Medical University of Vienna
  • Cleveland Clinic Foundation
  • Neurocentre Magendie
  • University of Western Australia
  • University of Ottawa
  • University of Oslo
  • Hacettepe University
  • Vall d'Hebron University Hospital
  • University of Catania
  • Loyola University Chicago
  • AZ Sint-Jan Brugge-Oostende AV
  • University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
  • University of Basel
  • F. Hoffmann-La Roche AG
  • VU University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background and ObjectivesEarly treatment of multiple sclerosis (MS) reduces disease activity and the risk of long-term disease progression. Effectiveness of ocrelizumab is established in relapsing MS (RMS); however, data in early RMS are lacking. We evaluated the 4-year effectiveness and safety of ocrelizumab as a first-line therapy in treatment-naive patients with recently diagnosed relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS).MethodsENSEMBLE was a prospective, 4-year, international, multicenter, single-arm, open-label, phase IIIb study. Patients were treatment naive, aged 18-55 years, had early-stage RRMS with a disease duration ≤3 years, Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) score ≤3.5, and ≥1 clinically reported relapse(s) or ≥1 signs of brain inflammatory activity on MRI in the prior 12 months. Patients received IV ocrelizumab 600 mg every 24 weeks. Effectiveness endpoints over 192 weeks were proportion of patients with no evidence of disease activity (NEDA-3; defined as absence of relapses, 24-week confirmed disability progression [CDP], and MRI measures, with prespecified MRI rebaselining at week 8), 24-week/48-week CDP and 24-week confirmed disability improvement, annualized relapse rate (ARR), mean change in EDSS score from baseline, and safety. Cognitive status, patient-reported outcomes, and serum neurofilament light chain (NfL) were assessed. Descriptive analysis was performed on the intention-to-treat population.ResultsBaseline characteristics (N = 678) were consistent with early-stage RRMS (n = 539 patients, 64.6% female, age 40 years and younger; median age: 31.0 years; duration since: MS symptom onset 0.78 years, RRMS diagnosis 0.24 years; mean baseline EDSS score [SD] 1.71 [0.95]). At week 192, most of the patients had NEDA-3 (n = 394/593, 66.4%), 85.0% had no MRI activity, 90.9% had no relapses, and 81.8% had no 24-week CDP over the study duration. Adjusted ARR at week 192 was low (0.020, 95% CI 0.015-0.027). NfL levels were reduced to and remained within the healthy donor range, by week 48 and week 192, respectively. No new or unexpected safety signals were observed.DiscussionDisease activity based on clinical and MRI measures was absent in most of the patients treated with ocrelizumab over 4 years in the ENSEMBLE study. Safety was consistent with the known profile of ocrelizumab. Although this single-arm study was limited by lack of a parallel group for comparison of outcome measures, the positive benefit-risk profile observed may provide confidence to adopt ocrelizumab as a first-line treatment in newly diagnosed patients with early RMS.Classification of EvidenceThis study provides Class IV evidence that adult patients with early-stage MS who were treatment naive maintained low disease activity (NEDA-3) over 4 years with ocrelizumab treatment; no new safety signals were detected.Trial Registration InformationClinicalTrials.gov Identifier NCT03085810; first submitted March 16, 2017; first patient enrolled: March 27, 2017; available at clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03085810.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere210049
JournalNeurology
Volume103
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 3 2024

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