The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Comparing immune-boosting and immune-suppressing treatments for relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis

Updated

Abstract

In a review of 50 studies involving 36,541 participants, two-year treatment with natalizumab, cladribine, or alemtuzumab significantly reduces relapses in people with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis compared to placebo.

  • Natalizumab (RR 0.52), cladribine (RR 0.53), and alemtuzumab (RR 0.57) show high-certainty evidence in decreasing the frequency of relapses at 24 months.
  • Fingolimod (RR 0.54) and dimethyl fumarate (RR 0.62) likely lead to a reduction in relapses with moderate-certainty evidence at the same time point.
  • At 12 months, fingolimod (RR 0.48) and daclizumab (RR 0.55) also indicate a probable reduction in relapses.
  • Natalizumab may slow disability progression with moderate-certainty evidence, showing a RR of 0.59 for disability worsening at 24 months.
  • Alemtuzumab is linked to fewer treatment discontinuations due to adverse events compared to placebo, with moderate-certainty evidence supporting this claim.
  • Interferon beta-1b probably leads to a slight reduction in serious adverse events compared to placebo, although confidence in this finding is moderate.

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