Publication:
A real-world evidence study of nabiximols in multiple sclerosis patients with resistant spasticity: Analysis in relation to the newly described 'spasticity-plus syndrome'.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2022-04-29

Authors

Patti, Francesco
Grazia-Chisari, Clara
Fernandez, Oscar
Sarroca, Jorge
Ferrer-Picon, Elena
Hernandez-Vicente, Francisco
Vila-Silvan, Carlos

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

John Wiley & Sons
Metrics
Google Scholar
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Nabiximols is a therapeutic option for patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) spasticity whose symptoms are poorly controlled by conventional oral first-line medications. This study aimed to assess the relationship between changes in spasticity severity (measured on the 0-10 numeric rating scale [NRS]) and the presence of associated symptoms in patients treated with nabiximols, and to investigate the presence of the newly described 'spasticity-plus syndrome'. We analyzed real-world data from the Italian Medicines Agency e-Registry on 1138 patients with MS spasticity who began treatment with nabiximols. Evaluation time points were baseline, 4 weeks, and 3, 6, 12 and 18 months after treatment start. Common symptoms associated with MS spasticity in this cohort were pain (38.4% at baseline), sleep disturbances (32.7%), and spasms/cramps (28.5%). Pain was frequently clustered with sleep disturbances (57.2% of pain cases) and spasms/cramps (43.9%). Approximately one-third of patients with data at all evaluation time points maintained treatment at 18 months. Nabiximols reduced the baseline mean spasticity 0-10 NRS score by 24.6% at Week 4, and by 33.9% at 18 months in treatment continuers. Nabiximols resolved a range of MS spasticity-associated symptoms at Week 4, and after 18 months in treatment continuers. This real-world analysis supports the concept of a spasticity-plus syndrome and suggests that nabiximols can favorably impact a range of spasticity-associated symptoms.

Description

MeSH Terms

Cannabidiol
Central Nervous System Diseases
Dronabinol
Drug Combinations
Humans
Multiple Sclerosis
Muscle Cramp
Muscle Spasticity
Pain
Spasm
Treatment Outcome

DeCS Terms

Espasmo
Calambre muscular
Sueño
Sistema de registros
Esclerosis múltiple
Cuidados posteriores

CIE Terms

Keywords

e-Registry analysis, Multiple sclerosis, Nabiximols, Spasticity-plus syndrome, Spasticity-related symptoms

Citation

Patti F, Chisari CG, Fernández Ó, Sarroca J, Ferrer-Picón E, Hernández Vicente F, et al. A real-world evidence study of nabiximols in multiple sclerosis patients with resistant spasticity: Analysis in relation to the newly described 'spasticity-plus syndrome'. Eur J Neurol. 2022 Sep;29(9):2744-2753