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NASHVILLE, TENN. – Pediatric multiple sclerosis is a confirmed clinical entity, which virtually always presents as relapsing-remitting disease, Brenda Banwell, MD, said at the at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.
“MS in children is the same disease as MS in adults,” said Dr. Banwell, chief of neurology at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and the Grace R. Loeb Endowed Chair in Neurosciences there. And although she is unaware of a single case of childhood MS presenting as primary progressive disease, the impact of relapsing-remitting childhood MS may ultimately be progressive damage.
Pediatric MS is also quite rare, a characteristic that makes therapeutic progress challenging. Recruiting sufficient patients for a definitive phase 3 trial is incredibly difficult, especially when multiple trials are commencing simultaneously, not only in the United States but around the world.
Nevertheless, there has been excellent news, Dr. Banwell said in a video interview. Fingolimod (Gilenya), the immunomodulator approved for adult relapsing-remitting MS, gained a pediatric approval under the breakthrough therapy designation on May 11, 2018, on the basis of the successful phase 3 PARADIGMS study.
Compared with intramuscular interferon beta-1a, fingolimod cut the annualized relapse rate by 82%. It also was associated with a 53% annualized reduction in new or newly enlarged T2 lesions and 66% decrease in gadolinium-enhancing T1 lesions.
This big win is prompting researchers and clinicians to rethink the pediatric MS treatment paradigm, Dr. Banwell said. Traditional thinking falls along a dose-escalation pattern that follows relapses. However, “we may take a cue from our rheumatology colleagues, who have seen the benefit of starting with more aggressive treatment and higher doses, getting disease control, and then slowly tapering off.”
Whether this option could actually modify disease progression, as it seems to do in some other inflammatory disorders, is an intriguing – but unproven – possibility, she said.
Dr. Banwell disclosed that she received financial remuneration as a central MRI reviewer for the Novartis-sponsored PARADIGMS study.
NASHVILLE, TENN. – Pediatric multiple sclerosis is a confirmed clinical entity, which virtually always presents as relapsing-remitting disease, Brenda Banwell, MD, said at the at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.
“MS in children is the same disease as MS in adults,” said Dr. Banwell, chief of neurology at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and the Grace R. Loeb Endowed Chair in Neurosciences there. And although she is unaware of a single case of childhood MS presenting as primary progressive disease, the impact of relapsing-remitting childhood MS may ultimately be progressive damage.
Pediatric MS is also quite rare, a characteristic that makes therapeutic progress challenging. Recruiting sufficient patients for a definitive phase 3 trial is incredibly difficult, especially when multiple trials are commencing simultaneously, not only in the United States but around the world.
Nevertheless, there has been excellent news, Dr. Banwell said in a video interview. Fingolimod (Gilenya), the immunomodulator approved for adult relapsing-remitting MS, gained a pediatric approval under the breakthrough therapy designation on May 11, 2018, on the basis of the successful phase 3 PARADIGMS study.
Compared with intramuscular interferon beta-1a, fingolimod cut the annualized relapse rate by 82%. It also was associated with a 53% annualized reduction in new or newly enlarged T2 lesions and 66% decrease in gadolinium-enhancing T1 lesions.
This big win is prompting researchers and clinicians to rethink the pediatric MS treatment paradigm, Dr. Banwell said. Traditional thinking falls along a dose-escalation pattern that follows relapses. However, “we may take a cue from our rheumatology colleagues, who have seen the benefit of starting with more aggressive treatment and higher doses, getting disease control, and then slowly tapering off.”
Whether this option could actually modify disease progression, as it seems to do in some other inflammatory disorders, is an intriguing – but unproven – possibility, she said.
Dr. Banwell disclosed that she received financial remuneration as a central MRI reviewer for the Novartis-sponsored PARADIGMS study.
NASHVILLE, TENN. – Pediatric multiple sclerosis is a confirmed clinical entity, which virtually always presents as relapsing-remitting disease, Brenda Banwell, MD, said at the at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers.
“MS in children is the same disease as MS in adults,” said Dr. Banwell, chief of neurology at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and the Grace R. Loeb Endowed Chair in Neurosciences there. And although she is unaware of a single case of childhood MS presenting as primary progressive disease, the impact of relapsing-remitting childhood MS may ultimately be progressive damage.
Pediatric MS is also quite rare, a characteristic that makes therapeutic progress challenging. Recruiting sufficient patients for a definitive phase 3 trial is incredibly difficult, especially when multiple trials are commencing simultaneously, not only in the United States but around the world.
Nevertheless, there has been excellent news, Dr. Banwell said in a video interview. Fingolimod (Gilenya), the immunomodulator approved for adult relapsing-remitting MS, gained a pediatric approval under the breakthrough therapy designation on May 11, 2018, on the basis of the successful phase 3 PARADIGMS study.
Compared with intramuscular interferon beta-1a, fingolimod cut the annualized relapse rate by 82%. It also was associated with a 53% annualized reduction in new or newly enlarged T2 lesions and 66% decrease in gadolinium-enhancing T1 lesions.
This big win is prompting researchers and clinicians to rethink the pediatric MS treatment paradigm, Dr. Banwell said. Traditional thinking falls along a dose-escalation pattern that follows relapses. However, “we may take a cue from our rheumatology colleagues, who have seen the benefit of starting with more aggressive treatment and higher doses, getting disease control, and then slowly tapering off.”
Whether this option could actually modify disease progression, as it seems to do in some other inflammatory disorders, is an intriguing – but unproven – possibility, she said.
Dr. Banwell disclosed that she received financial remuneration as a central MRI reviewer for the Novartis-sponsored PARADIGMS study.
REPORTING FROM THE CMSC ANNUAL MEETING