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    clinical trial: stopping DMT after a long period of no disease activity

    A clinical trial that was testing if treatments for multiple sclerosis (MS) could be discontinued in people with stable disease was terminated early after several patients who stopped treatment saw new disease activity.

    The findings support the continued use of disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) even by those who haven’t had substantial disease activity for a long time.

    Eline Coerver, a PhD student at MS Center Amsterdam in the Netherlands, discussed the results in the presentation “Discontinuation of first-line disease-modifying therapy in stable multiple sclerosis (DOT-MS): an early-terminated multicenter randomized controlled trial.” The findings were shared at this year’s joint meeting of the European European Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ECTRIMS) and the Americas Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ACTRIMS), held Oct. 11-13 in Milan.​

    In the modern era of MS treatment, it’s fairly common for patients on long-term stable treatment to not have any new disease activity for years at a time.

    Is it safe to stop MS treatment?

    Since continuing these treatments is costly and can cause side effects, it’s been proposed that some patients with stable disease may benefit from stopping them, but only if doing so won’t cause substantial worsening.​

    To know more, Amsterdam UMC sponsored the DOT-MS (NCT04260711) clinical trial to see if DMTs could be safely discontinued in patients with stable disease.

    The trial enrolled adults with relapsing-remitting MS or active secondary progressive disease who hadn’t had any relapses or substantial MRI activity — two or more new lesions — in the five years before entering the study while being treated with a first-line DMT.

    First-line DMTs in the study were Tecfidera (dimethyl fumarate), glatiramer acetate (sold as Copaxone and generics), Aubagio (teriflunomide), and interferon-based medicines.​

    "The aim of our trial was to investigate whether first-line disease-modifying therapies can be discontinued in relapse-onset MS patients that are inflammatory stable,” Coerver said.

    The participants were randomly assigned to continue using their DMT or stop treatment. To ensure their safety, those who stopped were routinely analyzed to see if they were having substantial new disease activity.

    “If the number of participants with disease activity in the discontinuation group was higher than the number in the continuation group, and this number exceeded our predefined threshold, we had to discuss premature termination of the trial,” Coerver said.​

    The findings support the continued use of disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) even by those who haven’t had substantial disease activity for a long time.

    Eline Coerver, a PhD student at MS Center Amsterdam in the Netherlands, discussed the results in the presentation “Discontinuation of first-line disease-modifying therapy in stable multiple sclerosis (DOT-MS): an early-terminated multicenter randomized controlled trial.” The findings were shared at this year’s joint meeting of the European European Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ECTRIMS) and the Americas Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ACTRIMS), held Oct. 11-13 in Milan.

    In the modern era of MS treatment, it’s fairly common for patients on long-term stable treatment to not have any new disease activity for years at a time.


    RECOMMENDED READING
    DMTs
    November 7, 2017 Columns by Ed Tobias
    Thinking About Stopping Your MS Treatments?
    Is it safe to stop MS treatment?
    Since continuing these treatments is costly and can cause side effects, it’s been proposed that some patients with stable disease may benefit from stopping them, but only if doing so won’t cause substantial worsening.

    Advertisement

    To know more, Amsterdam UMC sponsored the DOT-MS (NCT04260711) clinical trial to see if DMTs could be safely discontinued in patients with stable disease.

    The trial enrolled adults with relapsing-remitting MS or active secondary progressive disease who hadn’t had any relapses or substantial MRI activity — two or more new lesions — in the five years before entering the study while being treated with a first-line DMT.

    First-line DMTs in the study were Tecfidera (dimethyl fumarate), glatiramer acetate (sold as Copaxone and generics), Aubagio (teriflunomide), and interferon-based medicines.

    Advertisement

    “The aim of our trial was to investigate whether first-line disease-modifying therapies can be discontinued in relapse-onset MS patients that are inflammatory stable,” Coerver said.

    The participants were randomly assigned to continue using their DMT or stop treatment. To ensure their safety, those who stopped were routinely analyzed to see if they were having substantial new disease activity.

    “If the number of participants with disease activity in the discontinuation group was higher than the number in the continuation group, and this number exceeded our predefined threshold, we had to discuss premature termination of the trial,” Coerver said.

    Advertisement

    Discontinued treatment leads to trial termination
    The trial was terminated in March after an interim analysis showed increased disease activity in the discontinuation group that exceeded the predefined thresholds.

    At the time the trial was ended, 89 participants had been randomly assigned to one treatment arm — 45 had stopped their DMT and 44 had continued it. About two-thirds of these patients were female, the average age was in the early 50s. At the trial’s termination, most patients had been followed for at least 1.5 years.​

    In the discontinuation group, eight (17.8%) patients saw notable new disease activity. The median time from stopping their DMT to having new disease activity after was about a year.

    Two patients in this group had a relapse and seven had new signs of substantial MRI activity, defined as three or more new total lesions or two or more new lesions with active inflammation.

    None of the patients who continued their DMT saw substantial disease activity, relapses, or significant MRI activity during the trial.​

    Four patients in the discontinuation group had mild, nonsignificant new signs of MS activity on MRI scans, compared to one patient who continued treatment.

    Those who had substantial new disease activity after stopping their DMT didn’t have any clear distinctions regarding demographic features such as age and sex nor clinical features like the duration of stable disease or what DMT they’d been on.

    The researchers will continue to examine data from the trial to learn how stopping treatment affected disability progression, MRI outcomes, and certain disease-related biomarkers.​

    Multiple Sclerosis News Today logoToggle navigation
    ECTRIMS 2023: More disease activity when treatment stopped
    DOT-MS was testing if DMTs could be discontinued when disease was stable

    Marisa Wexler, MS avatar
    by Marisa Wexler, MS | October 16, 2023

    An illustration of several medicine bottles.




    A clinical trial that was testing if treatments for multiple sclerosis (MS) could be discontinued in people with stable disease was terminated early after several patients who stopped treatment saw new disease activity.

    Advertisement

    The findings support the continued use of disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) even by those who haven’t had substantial disease activity for a long time.

    Eline Coerver, a PhD student at MS Center Amsterdam in the Netherlands, discussed the results in the presentation “Discontinuation of first-line disease-modifying therapy in stable multiple sclerosis (DOT-MS): an early-terminated multicenter randomized controlled trial.” The findings were shared at this year’s joint meeting of the European European Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ECTRIMS) and the Americas Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ACTRIMS), held Oct. 11-13 in Milan.

    DMTs are medications that slow the progression of MS, decreasing the likelihood of relapses and reducing the risk of worsening disability. Nearly two dozen DMTs are approved to treat relapsing forms of MS and all work by decreasing the inflammation that drives the disease.

    Advertisement

    In the modern era of MS treatment, it’s fairly common for patients on long-term stable treatment to not have any new disease activity for years at a time.


    RECOMMENDED READING
    DMTs
    November 7, 2017 Columns by Ed Tobias
    Thinking About Stopping Your MS Treatments?
    Is it safe to stop MS treatment?
    Since continuing these treatments is costly and can cause side effects, it’s been proposed that some patients with stable disease may benefit from stopping them, but only if doing so won’t cause substantial worsening.

    Advertisement

    To know more, Amsterdam UMC sponsored the DOT-MS (NCT04260711) clinical trial to see if DMTs could be safely discontinued in patients with stable disease.

    The trial enrolled adults with relapsing-remitting MS or active secondary progressive disease who hadn’t had any relapses or substantial MRI activity — two or more new lesions — in the five years before entering the study while being treated with a first-line DMT.

    First-line DMTs in the study were Tecfidera (dimethyl fumarate), glatiramer acetate (sold as Copaxone and generics), Aubagio (teriflunomide), and interferon-based medicines.

    Advertisement

    “The aim of our trial was to investigate whether first-line disease-modifying therapies can be discontinued in relapse-onset MS patients that are inflammatory stable,” Coerver said.

    The participants were randomly assigned to continue using their DMT or stop treatment. To ensure their safety, those who stopped were routinely analyzed to see if they were having substantial new disease activity.

    “If the number of participants with disease activity in the discontinuation group was higher than the number in the continuation group, and this number exceeded our predefined threshold, we had to discuss premature termination of the trial,” Coerver said.

    Advertisement

    Discontinued treatment leads to trial termination
    The trial was terminated in March after an interim analysis showed increased disease activity in the discontinuation group that exceeded the predefined thresholds.

    At the time the trial was ended, 89 participants had been randomly assigned to one treatment arm — 45 had stopped their DMT and 44 had continued it. About two-thirds of these patients were female, the average age was in the early 50s. At the trial’s termination, most patients had been followed for at least 1.5 years.

    In the discontinuation group, eight (17.8%) patients saw notable new disease activity. The median time from stopping their DMT to having new disease activity after was about a year.

    Two patients in this group had a relapse and seven had new signs of substantial MRI activity, defined as three or more new total lesions or two or more new lesions with active inflammation.

    None of the patients who continued their DMT saw substantial disease activity, relapses, or significant MRI activity during the trial.

    Four patients in the discontinuation group had mild, nonsignificant new signs of MS activity on MRI scans, compared to one patient who continued treatment.

    Those who had substantial new disease activity after stopping their DMT didn’t have any clear distinctions regarding demographic features such as age and sex nor clinical features like the duration of stable disease or what DMT they’d been on.

    The researchers will continue to examine data from the trial to learn how stopping treatment affected disability progression, MRI outcomes, and certain disease-related biomarkers.

    The participants are being followed in an observation that will last two years and were able to restart their previous DMT. Following them may help understand the long-term effects of discontinuing treatment, even if for a short time.

    Results from a similar clinical trial called DISCOMS (NCT03073603) that was testing if DMTs can be safely stopped in MS patients older than 55 were published this year. Like DOT-MS, DISCOMS showed higher levels of disease activity in those who discontinued. Another similarly designed trial in SPMS patients older than 50, called STOP-I-SEP (NCT03653273), is underway in France, Coerver said.​

    https://multiplesclerosisnewstoday.c...tment-stopped/

    #2

    ECTRIMS 2023: More disease activity when treatment stopped







    DOT-MS was testing if DMTs could be discontinued when disease was stable







    A clinical trial that was testing if treatments for multiple sclerosis (MS) could be discontinued in people with stable disease was terminated early after several patients who stopped treatment saw new disease activity.







    The findings support the continued use of disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) even by those who haven’t had substantial disease activity for a long time.




    Eline Coerver, a PhD student at MS Center Amsterdam in the Netherlands, discussed the results in the presentation “Discontinuation of first-line disease-modifying therapy in stable multiple sclerosis (DOT-MS): an early-terminated multicenter randomized controlled trial.” The findings were shared at this year’s joint meeting of the European European Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ECTRIMS) and the Americas Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ACTRIMS), held Oct. 11-13 in Milan.







    In the modern era of MS treatment, it’s fairly common for patients on long-term stable treatment to not have any new disease activity for years at a time.







    Thinking About Stopping Your MS Treatments?

    Is it safe to stop MS treatment?

    Since continuing these treatments is costly and can cause side effects, it’s been proposed that some patients with stable disease may benefit from stopping them, but only if doing so won’t cause substantial worsening.







    To know more, Amsterdam UMC sponsored the DOT-MS (NCT04260711) clinical trial to see if DMTs could be safely discontinued in patients with stable disease.




    The trial enrolled adults with relapsing-remitting MS or active secondary progressive disease who hadn’t had any relapses or substantial MRI activity — two or more new lesions — in the five years before entering the study while being treated with a first-line DMT.




    First-line DMTs in the study were Tecfidera (dimethyl fumarate), glatiramer acetate (sold as Copaxone and generics), Aubagio (teriflunomide), and interferon-based medicines.







    “The aim of our trial was to investigate whether first-line disease-modifying therapies can be discontinued in relapse-onset MS patients that are inflammatory stable,” Coerver said.




    The participants were randomly assigned to continue using their DMT or stop treatment. To ensure their safety, those who stopped were routinely analyzed to see if they were having substantial new disease activity.




    “If the number of participants with disease activity in the discontinuation group was higher than the number in the continuation group, and this number exceeded our predefined threshold, we had to discuss premature termination of the trial,” Coerver said.







    Discontinued treatment leads to trial termination




    The trial was terminated in March after an interim analysis showed increased disease activity in the discontinuation group that exceeded the predefined thresholds.




    At the time the trial was ended, 89 participants had been randomly assigned to one treatment arm — 45 had stopped their DMT and 44 had continued it. About two-thirds of these patients were female, the average age was in the early 50s. At the trial’s termination, most patients had been followed for at least 1.5 years.




    In the discontinuation group, eight (17.8%) patients saw notable new disease activity. The median time from stopping their DMT to having new disease activity after was about a year.




    Two patients in this group had a relapse and seven had new signs of substantial MRI activity, defined as three or more new total lesions or two or more new lesions with active inflammation.




    None of the patients who continued their DMT saw substantial disease activity, relapses, or significant MRI activity during the trial.




    Four patients in the discontinuation group had mild, nonsignificant new signs of MS activity on MRI scans, compared to one patient who continued treatment.




    Those who had substantial new disease activity after stopping their DMT didn’t have any clear distinctions regarding demographic features such as age and sex nor clinical features like the duration of stable disease or what DMT they’d been on.




    The researchers will continue to examine data from the trial to learn how stopping treatment affected disability progression, MRI outcomes, and certain disease-related biomarkers.




    The participants are being followed in an observation that will last two years and were able to restart their previous DMT. Following them may help understand the long-term effects of discontinuing treatment, even if for a short time.




    Results from a similar clinical trial called DISCOMS (NCT03073603) that was testing if DMTs can be safely stopped in MS patients older than 55 were published this year. Like DOT-MS, DISCOMS showed higher levels of disease activity in those who discontinued. Another similarly designed trial in SPMS patients older than 50, called STOP-I-SEP (NCT03653273), is underway in France, Coerver said.

    https://multiplesclerosisnewstoday.c...tment-stopped/

    Comment


      #3
      Thanks for sharing this, Marco
      Kimba

      “When you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change.” ― Max Planck

      Comment


        #4
        My neuro told me he did not recommend stopping my DMT. I'm glad that a study has be done. I will follow my neuro's recommendation and I will keep on keeping on. So Sad

        Again, thank you Marco
        God Bless Us All

        Comment


          #5
          A conversation I will have the end of the month with my neuro.

          Wish the results were stratified more on age. I know the DiscoMS study said stopping raised the risk 7% of progression detected by enhanced lesions on MRI for those stopping after 55, and most of the participants were on injectables, so older meds.

          Thanks for posting.
          Kathy
          DX 01/06, currently on Tysabri

          Comment


            #6
            It was really good to see this confirmed. I’ve had a hunch about this all along. Going to get my Tysabri infusion today. Over 14 years. I believe it’s a miracle that I am still walking.

            Thank you, Marco, for the wonderful research.

            Comment


              #7
              Had my neuro appt. He is now recommending I stay on my DMT next year. He said with latest study, uncomfortable with me stopping at 60 or 61. He is only recommending for older patients who have been diagnosed for years with no activity. Feels 60 is too young to risk it, regardless of how long I have had MS. Also discussed that really not much testing data on those stopping infusion based DMTs.

              So guess staying the course.
              Kathy
              DX 01/06, currently on Tysabri

              Comment


                #8
                I follow this, with fingers crossed. As those of you who have followed my story know, I quit DMT's in 2019 at the age of 57 following 5 years of no flares or disease activity, and following one year of major dietary and lifestyle changes.

                So far, I've remained stable.

                - Faith
                ~ Faith
                MSWorld Volunteer -- Moderator since JUN2012
                (now a Mimibug)

                Symptoms began in JAN02
                - Dx with RRMS in OCT03, following 21 months of limbo, ruling out lots of other dx, and some "probable stroke" and "probable CNS" dx for awhile.
                - In 2008, I was back in limbo briefly, then re-dx w/ MS: JUL08
                .

                - Betaseron NOV03-AUG08; Copaxone20 SEPT08-APR15; Copaxone40 APR15-present
                - Began receiving SSDI / LTD NOV08. Not employed. I volunteer in my church and community.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Hello everyone,

                  i hope this find you in good, stable health!

                  Thanks for this Marco! Very timely as just had apt with Neuro who said sine my last relapse was 2007, she thinks i can sop med earlier (i.e. at 55) than the original 60 years she had said was, before, was the recommended norm. We’ll review study and revaluate in next year or so (as will turn 54 next summer).

                  Fyi, have been been on meds for 24 yrs since diagnosis and been blessed to be stable (couple minor relapses, no diability, stable lesion progression in bain & spinal cord). But been worried of side effects of meds (Rebif, Tysabri, Gileny, & Aubagio (current meds)a; plan to switch to Copaxone in spring as they say safest and as good as Aubagio) over yrs.

                  wishing you all good health!
                  Irene

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by pennstater View Post
                    Had my neuro appt. He is now recommending I stay on my DMT next year. He said with latest study, uncomfortable with me stopping at 60 or 61. He is only recommending for older patients who have been diagnosed for years with no activity. Feels 60 is too young to risk it, regardless of how long I have had MS. Also discussed that really not much testing data on those stopping infusion based DMTs.

                    So guess staying the course.
                    This is what my neuro said based on those results.
                    He is your friend, your partner, your defender, your dog. You are his life, his love, his leader. He will be yours, faithful and true to the last beat of his heart. You owe it to him to be worthy of such devotion.
                    Anonymous

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by Irenex View Post
                      Hello everyone,

                      i hope this find you in good, stable health!

                      Thanks for this Marco! Very timely as just had apt with Neuro who said sine my last relapse was 2007, she thinks i can sop med earlier (i.e. at 55) than the original 60 years she had said was, before, was the recommended norm. We’ll review study and revaluate in next year or so (as will turn 54 next summer).

                      Fyi, have been been on meds for 24 yrs since diagnosis and been blessed to be stable (couple minor relapses, no diability, stable lesion progression in bain & spinal cord). But been worried of side effects of meds (Rebif, Tysabri, Gileny, & Aubagio (current meds)a; plan to switch to Copaxone in spring as they say safest and as good as Aubagio) over yrs.

                      wishing you all good health!
                      Irene
                      Hi Irene, I hope your experience with Copaxone is a good one. I have been on it since diagnosis almost 20 years ago and based on two flares in 6 months prior to starting it with none after and essentially no progression I feel it has been helpful.

                      Each year when I see my MS specialist we discuss if I should consider one of the latest and greatest but based on the low side effect profile and my history on Copaxone I continue it. If something changes I will definitely try a new med but in the meantime now at 60yo it is getting to be more about the guessing game of what is MS vs what is natural aging. Ugh.
                      He is your friend, your partner, your defender, your dog. You are his life, his love, his leader. He will be yours, faithful and true to the last beat of his heart. You owe it to him to be worthy of such devotion.
                      Anonymous

                      Comment

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