Current US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) for multiple sclerosis (MS) require either self-injection (the interferon-β products and glatiramer acetate) or intravenous infusion (natalizumab and mitoxantrone). MS patients and their physicians have long wanted an effective oral DMT. That wait soon may be over. Earlier this year, the results of phase 3 clinical trials of two oral immunosuppressants for MS, fingolimod (AKA FTY720) and cladribine, were published, and both agents were found to be effective [1-3]. FDA approval of these oral agents for the treatment of MS will be a historic landmark in MS therapeutics. This review focuses on fingolimod. Fingolimod has a novel mechanism of action. It is a sphingosine 1-phosphate receptor modulator and inhibits lymphocyte egress from lymph nodes [4]. Previously, fingolimod showed beneficial effects on clinical and MRI parameters in a 3-year phase 2 study involving patients with relapsing MS [5]. This report reviews the results from the two phase 3 clinical trials of fingolimod in MS, one comparing two different doses of fingolimod with placebo [1] and the other comparing two different doses of fingolimod with interferon-β-1a [2]. First we discuss the results of the double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 3 trial of fingolimod called FREEDOMS (FTY720 Research Evaluating Effects of Daily Oral Therapy in Multiple Sclerosis) that compared two different doses of fingolimod with placebo [1]. We then discuss the 12-month double-blind, double-dummy study called TRANSFORMS (Trial Assessing Injectable Interferon Versus FTY720 Oral in Relapsing–Remitting Multiple Sclerosis) [2].
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