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Response to Interferon-Beta Treatment in Afro-Caribbeans with Multiple Sclerosis
Author(s) -
S. Jeannin,
Romain Deschamps,
Nicolas Chausson,
P. Cabré
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
multiple sclerosis international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.125
H-Index - 6
eISSN - 2090-2662
pISSN - 2090-2654
DOI - 10.1155/2011/950126
Subject(s) - multiple sclerosis , medicine , interferon beta , beta (programming language) , interferon , neuroscience , computational biology , immunology , bioinformatics , biology , computer science , programming language
Background . Multiple sclerosis (MS) patients of African ancestry have a more aggressive disease course than white patients and could be resistant to interferon-beta (INFB). Methods . We studied the impact of INFB in treatment-naive Afro-Caribbean (AC) with clinically definite MS using our European Database for Multiple Sclerosis (EDMUS) (2003–2010). Main outcome measures were annual relapse rate after 2 years of treatment, proportion of exacerbation-free subjects 48 weeks after initiating INFB, and time to first relapse. Results . 76 AC-MS (59F/17M) were identified. Annual relapse rate of 1.29 decreased to 0.83 (−35.6%) after 2 years of treatment. The proportion of relapse-free patients at 48 weeks was 46.2%. Median time to first relapse was 52 weeks. Conclusion . INFB is not strong enough to control AC-MS patients in many cases which is problematic in a population of worse MS prognosis.

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