The benefits and risks of escalation versus early highly effective treatment in patients with multiple sclerosis.
Annalisa MorganEmma TallantyreDaniel OntanedaPublished in: Expert review of neurotherapeutics (2023)
There is growing support for using early highly effective treatment as the initial therapeutic approach in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis. However, much of this support stems from observational real-world studies that use historic data and lack safety outcomes or randomized control trials that compare individual high versus low-moderate efficacy therapies, instead of the approaches themselves. Randomized control trials (DELIVER-MS, TREAT-MS) are needed to systemically and prospectively compare contemporary escalation versus early highly effective treatment approaches.
Keyphrases
- multiple sclerosis
- open label
- mass spectrometry
- double blind
- clinical trial
- ms ms
- type diabetes
- phase ii
- adipose tissue
- risk assessment
- systemic lupus erythematosus
- combination therapy
- insulin resistance
- rheumatoid arthritis
- skeletal muscle
- disease activity
- randomized controlled trial
- artificial intelligence
- weight loss
- study protocol