Siponimod Stabilizes Physical Disability Scores in People Living With Secondary Progressive Multiple Sclerosis After 2 Years of Treatment: Analysis From the Novartis Global Managed Access Program
Gina Mavrikis Cox1, Virginia De Las Heras2, Suzannah Ryan2, Roxana Oana Istrate2, Soudeh Ansari2, Sophie Arnould2, Daniela Piani-Meier2
1Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation, 2Novartis Pharma AG
Objective:
To describe demographic and clinical characteristics and characterize change in Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) score in people living with secondary progressive multiple sclerosis (plwSPMS) receiving siponimod under the managed access program (MAP; Global Siponimod MAP cohort [BAF2001M cohort]).
Background:
Siponimod significantly reduced the risk of confirmed disability progression and worsening of cognitive processing speed vs placebo in the phase 3 EXPAND trial (NCT01665144). However, real-world effectiveness data for siponimod remain scarce.
Design/Methods:

The BAF2001M cohort is an umbrella program to facilitate access to siponimod when marketing authorization is pending (under physician request) in the absence of acceptable alternative treatments. The program started in March 2019 and is ongoing. The target population included adult patients with SPMS and an EDSS score <7 from March 2019 to January 2021. After January 2021, access to the MAP required SPMS with active disease. Treatment selection and patient monitoring were based on physician assessment. Baseline characteristics included country, age, sex, relapse, MRI activity in the last 2 years, EDSS, and cognition evaluation.

Results:

A total of 632 cases were analyzed (153 excluded from analysis due to local country restrictions). Mean (SD) age was 52.3 (8.7) years, 60% of patients were female, and median (IQR) EDSS was 5.5 (4.5-6.5). Prior to siponimod start, ~51% experienced a relapse in the last 2 years, 54% had previous cognitive evaluation, and 52% had an MRI scan in the last 2 years (48% showed activity). Mean change in EDSS from baseline was approximately -0.02/-0.03 at Months 6, 12, 18, and 24 (not significantly different vs baseline). Approximately 94% (140/149) of patients improved or were stable at Month 24.

Conclusions:
Most plwSPMS demonstrated improved or stabilized EDSS scores over 2 years. This population was older than the EXPAND study population and around half demonstrated relapse/MRI activity. Results support the effectiveness of siponimod in SPMS.
10.1212/WNL.0000000000203773