Institut Català de la Salut
[Cross AH] Department of Neurology, Washington University, St. Louis, USA. [Delgado S] University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, USA. [Habek M] University Hospital Center Zagreb, University of Zagreb, School of Medicine, Zagreb, Croatia. [Davydovskaya M] Moscow State Public Healthcare InsCity Clinical Hospital 24, Moscow, Russia. [Ward BJ] Infectious Diseases Division, Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre, Montreal, Canada. [Cree BAC] UCSF Weill Institute for Neurosciences, Department of Neurology, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, USA. [Montalban X] Servei de Neurologia-Neuroimmunologia, Centre d’Esclerosi Múltiple de Catalunya (CEMCAT), Barcelona, Spain. Vall d’Hebron Hospital Universitari, Barcelona, Spain
Vall d'Hebron Barcelona Hospital Campus
2022-07-25T09:29:58Z
2022-07-25T09:29:58Z
2022-06
COVID-19; Ofatumumab; Vaccination
COVID-19; Ofatumumab; Vacunación
COVID-19; Ofatumumab; Vacunació
Introduction The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic necessitated better understanding of the impact of disease-modifying therapies on COVID-19 outcomes and vaccination. We report characteristics of COVID-19 cases and vaccination status in ofatumumab-treated relapsing multiple sclerosis (RMS) patients. Methods COVID-19 data analyzed were from the ongoing, open-label, long-term extension phase 3b ALITHIOS study from December 2019 (pandemic start) and post-marketing cases from August 2020 (ofatumumab first approval) up to 25 September 2021. COVID-19 cases, severity, seriousness, outcomes, vaccination status, and breakthrough infection were evaluated. Results As of 25 September 2021, 245 of 1703 patients (14.4%) enrolled in ALITHIOS receiving ofatumumab (median exposure: 2.45 years) reported COVID-19 (confirmed: 210; suspected: 35). Most COVID-19 was of mild (44.1%) or moderate (46.5%) severity, but 9% had severe/life-threatening COVID-19. There were 24 serious cases (9.8%) with 23 patients hospitalized; 22 recovered and 2 died. At study cut-off, 241 patients (98.4%) had recovered or were recovering or had recovered with sequelae and 2 (0.8%) had not recovered. Ofatumumab was temporarily interrupted in 39 (15.9%) patients. Before COVID-19 onset, IgG levels were within the normal range in all COVID-19–affected patients, while IgM was < 0.4 g/l in 23 (9.4%) patients. No patient had a reinfection. Overall, 559 patients were vaccinated (full, 476; partial, 74; unspecified, 9). Breakthrough infection was reported in 1.5% (7/476) patients, and 11 reported COVID-19 after partial vaccination. As of 25 September 2021, the Novartis Safety Database (~ 4713 patient-treatment years) recorded 90 confirmed COVID-19 cases receiving ofatumumab. Most cases were non-serious (n = 80), and ten were serious (1 medically significant, 9 hospitalized, 0 deaths). Among 36 of 90 cases with outcomes reported, 30 recovered and 6 did not recover. Conclusion COVID-19 in RMS patients on ofatumumab was primarily of mild/moderate severity and non-serious in these observational data. Most recovered from COVID-19 without treatment interruption. Two people died with COVID-19. Breakthrough COVID-19 despite being fully/partially vaccinated was uncommon.
The study sponsor (Novartis Pharma AG, Basel, Switzerland) participated in the design and conduct of the study, data collection, data management, data analysis and data interpretation; preparation, review, and approval of the manuscript, as well as writing of the report and decision to submit the paper for publication. All authors had full access to all study data and took final responsibility for the decision to submit the manuscript for publication. The journal rapid service fee for this publication was funded by Novartis Pharma AG, Basel, Switzerland.
Article
Published version
English
COVID-19 (Malaltia) - Vacunació; Esclerosi múltiple - Tractament; Avaluació de resultats (Assistència sanitària); DISEASES::Nervous System Diseases::Autoimmune Diseases of the Nervous System::Demyelinating Autoimmune Diseases, CNS::Multiple Sclerosis::Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting; Other subheadings::Other subheadings::Other subheadings::/therapy; ENFERMEDADES::enfermedades del sistema nervioso::enfermedades autoinmunitarias del sistema nervioso::enfermedades autoinmunes desmielinizantes del SNC::esclerosis múltiple::esclerosis múltiple recurrente-remitente; Otros calificadores::Otros calificadores::Otros calificadores::/terapia
Springer
Neurology and Therapy;11
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40120-022-00341-z
Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
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