Abstract

BackgroundAlemtuzumab is an anti-CD52 antibody approved for the treatment of relapsing remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS). The summary of product characteristics (SmPC) provides recommendations on the administration of alemtuzumab to prevent or reduce the risk of serious side effects associated with alemtuzumab infusion, including myocardial ischemia, hemorrhagic stroke, arterial dissection, and pulmonary alveolar hemorrhage. However, real-world implementation of alemtuzumab infusion management recommendations has not been previously assessed. MethodsHere we provide a large-scale multi-center (in- and outpatient) observational study on alemtuzumab infusion management in daily clinical care in Germany (ALEMLL08025; INFUSE-MS; NIS-no. 364). Parameters of infusion management - including infusion administration, clinical and laboratory monitoring - were assessed, compared between study centers and the occurrence of infusion-associated reactions (IARs) was documented. Moreover, the TSQM and MSIS-29 questionnaires were used to quantify patient satisfaction and health-related quality of life. Results140 RRMS patients were enrolled in this study. Alemtuzumab infusion regimes (treatment course 1 and 2) were comparable between infusion sites and in accordance with recommendations by the SmPC. Standardization of infusion management was associated with a satisfactory safety profile. IARs were usually mild, headache (13.6%), rash (10.7%), and pyrexia (6.4%) being the most common ones. TSQM and MSIS-29 scores denoted high patient satisfaction and health-related quality of life among RRMS patients treated with alemtuzumab. ConclusionIn conclusion, our results indicate that infusion management of alemtuzumab is highly standardized and in line with the SmPC. Alemtuzumab treatment and implementation of infusion management recommendations are associated with a satisfactory safety profile regarding the occurrence of IARs, a high patient satisfaction and health-related quality of life as important indicators for the quality of MS care.

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