A randomized clinical trial of autologous T-cell therapy in multiple sclerosis: subset analysis and implications for trial design

Edward Fox, Daniel Wynn, Stanley Cohan, Donna Rill, Dawn McGuire, Clyde Markowitz, Edward Fox, Daniel Wynn, Stanley Cohan, Donna Rill, Dawn McGuire, Clyde Markowitz

Abstract

Background: Tovaxin is an autologous T-cell immunotherapy under investigation for the treatment of MS. The product consists of in vitro expanded myelin-reactive T-cells manufactured against up to six immunodominant peptides derived from three myelin antigens.

Methods: A Phase 2b placebo controlled study (TERMS) was conducted in 150 subjects to gather safety and efficacy data in relapsing-remitting MS and clinically isolated syndrome subjects.

Results: Tovaxin had a favorable safety profile. Although no statistically significant clinical or radiological benefit of Tovaxin immunotherapy was identified in the modified intent-to-treat population, a prospective analysis of subjects with more active disease favored Tovaxin in terms of annualized relapse rate (ARR) and disability progression. An analysis also found a possible legacy effect of prior disease-modifying treatment (DMT) which may have contributed to a lowered ARR in the placebo group. DMT-naïve subjects treated with Tovaxin had a lower ARR compared to the placebo group, particularly in those with active baseline disease (ARR ≥ 1, ARR>1). However, clinical benefit was not was accompanied by a treatment-dependent improvement in MRI measures.

Conclusions: Previous DMT exposure may reduce effect size and study power. Limiting subject selection to DMT-treatment-naïve individuals may be a reasonable approach to phase 2 or proof-of-concept studies of limited duration.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00245622.

Source: PubMed

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