A Pragmatic Trial to Evaluate the Intermediate-term Effects of Early, Aggressive Versus Escalation Therapy in People With Multiple Sclerosis

Who is this study for? Patients with Multiple Sclerosis
What treatments are being studied? Early Aggressive Therapy or Traditional Therapy
Status: Active_not_recruiting
Location: See all (47) locations...
Intervention Type: Other
Study Type: Interventional
Study Phase: Not Applicable
SUMMARY

FDA-approved multiple sclerosis (MS) disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) target the relapsing phase of MS but have minimal impact once the progressive phase has begun. It is unclear if, in the relapsing phase, there is an advantage of early aggressive therapy with respect to preventing long-term disability. The infectious risks and other complications associated with higher-efficacy treatments highlight the need to quantify their effectiveness in preventing disability. The TRaditional versus Early Aggressive Therapy for MS (TREAT-MS) trial is a pragmatic, randomized controlled trial that has two primary aims: 1) to evaluate, jointly and independently among patients deemed at higher risk vs. lower risk for disability accumulation, whether an early aggressive therapy approach, versus starting with a traditional, first-line therapy, influences the intermediate-term risk of disability, and 2) to evaluate if, among patients deemed at lower risk for disability who start on first-line MS therapies but experience breakthrough disease, those who switch to a higher-efficacy versus a new first-line therapy have different intermediate-term risk of disability.

Eligibility
Participation Requirements
Sex: All
Minimum Age: 18
Maximum Age: 60
Healthy Volunteers: f
View:

• Aged 18-60 years

• Meets 2017 McDonald criteria for relapsing-remitting MS \[patients with clinically isolated syndrome (CIS) are not eligible\]

• Must be EITHER John Cunningham (JC) virus antibody negative or low positive (index antibody titer \<0.9), OR negative for: Hepatitis B and C, tuberculosis

• HIV negative

• No chemotherapy in past year; if patient has prior history of chemotherapy or malignancy, documentation in chart explaining why potential risks of higher-efficacy therapy are justified

Locations
United States
Alabama
University of Alabama at Birmingham
Birmingham
The University of South Alabama
Mobile
Arizona
St. Joseph's Hospital & Medical Center - Barrow Neurological Institute
Phoenix
California
CommonSpirit Health Research Institute
Carmichael
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Los Angeles
University of California, Los Angeles
Los Angeles
University of California, San Diego
San Diego
University of California, San Francisco
San Francisco
Washington, D.c.
Georgetown University
Washington
Delaware
Christiana Care Health Services, Inc.
Newark
Florida
University of Florida
Gainesville
University of Miami
Miami
University of South Florida Health
Tampa
Illinois
Rush University Medical Center
Chicago
Kansas
The University of Kansas Medical Center (KUMC)
Kansas City
Kentucky
Norton Neurology MS Services
Louisville
Massachusetts
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston
University of Massachusetts Medical School
Worcester
Maryland
The Johns Hopkins Hospital
Baltimore
University of Maryland, Baltimore
Baltimore
Michigan
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor
Wayne State University
Detroit
Minnesota
Mayo Clinic
Rochester
Montana
Billings Clinic
Billings
Advanced Neurology Specialists
Great Falls
Nebraska
University of Nebraska Medical Center
Omaha
New Jersey
Hackensack University Medical Center
Hackensack
New York
Columbia University Medical Center
New York
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
New York
New York University School of Medicine
New York
Ohio
University of Cincinnati
Cincinnati
OhioHealth Research Institute
Columbus
Oklahoma
Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation
Oklahoma City
Oregon
Providence Health and Services - Oregon
Portland
Pennsylvania
Geisinger Clinic
Danville
Allegheny Health Network Research Institute
Pittsburgh
Tennessee
Vanderbilt Comprehensive MS Center
Nashville
Texas
Baylor Scott and White Health
Dallas
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Dallas
Central Texas Neurology Consultants
Round Rock
Utah
University of Utah
Salt Lake City
Virginia
Blacksburg Neurology
Christiansburg
Neurology Consultants of Tidewater
Norfolk
Vermont
The University of Vermont and State Agricultural College
Burlington
Washington
Swedish Health Services
Seattle
University of Washington
Seattle
Wisconsin
Medical College of Wisconsin
Milwaukee
Time Frame
Start Date: 2018-05-02
Completion Date: 2026-08-01
Participants
Target number of participants: 900
Treatments
Active_comparator: Early Aggressive Therapy
Early Aggressive Therapy choices and maximum allowable doses:~* Natalizumab/natalizumab-sztn (Tysabri/Tyruko), 300 mg IV q 4 wks~* Alemtuzumab (Lemtrada), 12 mg IV daily (QD) for 5 days; 1 yr later: 12 mg IV QD for 3 days~* Ocrelizumab (Ocrevus), 300 mg IV every 2 wks (for 2 doses) at initiation; 600 mg IV q 6 mths~* Rituximab/rituximab biosimilars (Rituxan/Riabni/Truxima/Ruxience), 1000 mg IV every 2 wks (for 2 doses); may repeat q 16-24 wks~* Cladribine (Mavenclad), 3.5 mg per kg body wt orally divided into 2 yrly tmt courses (1.75 mg per kg body wt each yr); yrly tmt course divided into 2 tmt cycles; administer cycle dose as 1-2 tablets QD over 4-5 days~* Ofatumumab (Kesimpta), 20 mg SC wkly for wks 0, 1 and 2; 20 mg subcutaneously (SC) mthly starting at wk 4~* Ublituximab-xiiy (Briumvi), 150 mg IV (1st dose); 450 mg IV 2 wks after first dose; 450 mg IV q 24 wks~* Ocrelizumab and hyaluronidase-ocsq (Ocrevus Zunovo), 920 mg ocrelizumab and 23,000 U hyaluronidase SC q 6 months
Active_comparator: Traditional Therapy
Traditional Therapy choices and maximum allowable doses:~* Glatiramer acetate (Copaxone, Glatopa, and other generics), 20 mg SC daily, or 40 mg SC 3 times a wk~* Intramuscular (IM) interferon (Avonex), 30 mcg IM weekly~* SC interferon (Betaseron, Extavia, Rebif), 0.25 mg SC every other day (Betaseron, Extavia); 44 mcg SC 3 times a wk (Rebif)~* Pegylated interferon (Plegridy), 125 mcg SC every 14 days~* Teriflunomide (Aubagio), 14 mg PO QD~* Dimethyl fumarate (Tecfidera and generics), 240 mg PO twice a day (BID)~* Diroximel fumarate (Vumerity), 462 mg PO BID~* Monomethyl fumarate (Bafiertam), 190 mg PO BID~* Fingolimod (Gilenya and generics), 0.5 mg PO QD~* Siponimod (Mayzent), 1 mg PO QD or 2 mg PO QD~* Ozanimod (Zeposia), 0.92 mg PO QD~* Ponesimod (Ponvory), 20 mg PO QD~* Fingolimod ODT (Tascenso), 0.25 mg PO QD if \<=40 kg; 0.5 mg PO QD if \> 40 kg
Sponsors
Collaborators: National Multiple Sclerosis Society, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute
Leads: Johns Hopkins University

This content was sourced from clinicaltrials.gov