Abstract

As disease-modifying treatment options for multiple sclerosis increase, comparisons of the options based on real-world evidence may guide clinical decision-making. To compare the relapse outcomes between 2 pairs of disease-modifying treatments: dimethyl fumarate vs fingolimod and natalizumab vs rituximab. This comparative effectiveness study integrated data from a clinic-based multiple sclerosis research registry and its linked electronic health records (EHR) system between January 1, 2006, and December 31, 2016, and built treatment groups for each pairwise disease-modifying treatment comparison according to both registry records and electronic prescriptions. Parallel analyses were conducted from October 11, 2019, to July 7, 2021. The main outcomes were the 1-year and 2-year relapse rates as well as the time to relapse. To compare relapse outcomes, the study adjusted for covariates from 2 sources (registry and EHR) and corrected for confounding biases among the covariates by the doubly robust estimation. The study included 4 treatment groups: dimethyl fumarate (n = 260; 198 women [76.2%]; 227 non-Hispanic White individuals [87.3%]; mean [SD] age at diagnosis, 41.7 [10.4] years), fingolimod (n = 267; 190 women [71.2%]; 222 non-Hispanic White individuals [83.1%]; mean [SD] age at diagnosis, 37.9 [9.9] years), natalizumab (n = 204; 160 women [78.4%]; 172 non-Hispanic White individuals [84.3%]; mean [SD] age at diagnosis, 37.2 [10.6] years), and rituximab (n = 115; 83 women [72.2%]; 99 non-Hispanic White individuals [86.1%]; mean [SD] age at diagnosis, 44.1 [11.1] years). No significant differences were found in the relapse outcomes between dimethyl fumarate and fingolimod after correcting for confounding biases and multiple testing (difference in 1-year relapse rate, 0.028 [95% CI, -0.031 to 0.084]; difference in 2-year relapse rate, 0.071 [95% CI, 0.008-0.128]; relative risk of 2-year non-relapse, 0.957 [95% CI, 0.884-1.035] with dimethyl fumarate as reference). When compared with rituximab, natalizumab was associated with a higher relapse rate for all 3 outcomes after bias correction and multiple testing (difference in 1-year relapse rate, 0.080 [95% CI, 0.013-0.137]; difference in 2-year relapse rate, 0.132 [95% CI, 0.043-0.189]; relative risk of 2-year non-relapse, 0.903 [95% CI, 0.822-0.944]). Confounders were identified from EHR data not recorded in the registry data through data-driven feature selection. This study reports real-world evidence of equivalent relapse outcomes between dimethyl fumarate and fingolimod and relapse reduction in favor of rituximab relative to natalizumab. This approach illustrates the value of incorporating EHR data as high-dimensional covariates in real-world treatment comparison.

Highlights

  • IntroductionStandard-efficacy diseasemodifying therapy (DMT) (eg, dimethyl fumarate and fingolimod) and higher-efficacy disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) (eg, natalizumab and rituximab) are commonly prescribed DMTs in the United States, but, to our knowledge, there is no randomized clinical trial and limited real-world evidence for head-to-head comparison between these DMT pairs.[3]

  • The multiple sclerosis (MS) treatment landscape has changed considerably because of the growing number of approved disease-modifying therapies (DMTs).[1,2] Standard-efficacy diseasemodifying therapy (DMT) and higher-efficacy DMTs are commonly prescribed DMTs in the United States, but, to our knowledge, there is no randomized clinical trial and limited real-world evidence for head-to-head comparison between these DMT pairs.[3]Prior observational studies comparing dimethyl fumarate and fingolimod mostly reported similar clinical outcomes,[4-8] 1 study reported a better relapse rate associated with fingolimod.[9]

  • No significant differences were found in the relapse outcomes between dimethyl fumarate and fingolimod after correcting for confounding biases and multiple testing

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Summary

Introduction

Standard-efficacy DMTs (eg, dimethyl fumarate and fingolimod) and higher-efficacy DMTs (eg, natalizumab and rituximab) are commonly prescribed DMTs in the United States, but, to our knowledge, there is no randomized clinical trial and limited real-world evidence for head-to-head comparison between these DMT pairs.[3]. Prior observational studies comparing dimethyl fumarate and fingolimod mostly reported similar clinical outcomes,[4-8] 1 study reported a better relapse rate associated with fingolimod.[9]. Prior studies comparing natalizumab[10-15] and rituximab[16-18] with standard-efficacy DMTs (eg, dimethyl fumarate and fingolimod) reported both natalizumab and rituximab as associated with better relapse outcomes. We compared 2 DMT pairs using registry-annotated MS relapse as the outcome and high-dimensional EHR features and doubly robust (DR) estimation strategies to extensively correct for confounding biases

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