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Background:
While substantial progress has been made in the development of disease-modifying medications for multiple sclerosis (MS), a high percentage of treated patients still show progression and persistent inflammatory activity. Autologous haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (AHSCT) aims at eliminating a pathogenic immune repertoire through intense short-term immunosuppression that enables subsequent regeneration of a new and healthy immune system to re-establish immune tolerance for a long period of time. A number of mostly open-label, uncontrolled studies conducted over the past 20 years collected about 4000 cases. They uniformly reported high efficacy of AHSCT in controlling MS inflammatory disease activity, more markedly beneficial in relapsing-remitting MS. Immunological studies provided evidence for qualitative immune resetting following AHSCT. These data and improved safety profiles of transplantation procedures spurred interest in using AHSCT as a treatment option for MS.
Objective:
To develop expert consensus recommendations on AHSCT in Germany and outline a registry study project.
Methods:
An open call among MS neurologists as well as among experts in stem cell transplantation in Germany started in December 2021 to join a series of virtual meetings.
Results:
We provide a consensus-based opinion paper authored by 25 experts on the up-to-date optimal use of AHSCT in managing MS based on the Swiss criteria. Current data indicate that patients who are most likely to benefit from AHSCT have relapsing-remitting MS and are young, ambulatory and have high disease activity. Treatment data with AHSCT will be collected within the German REgistry Cohort of autologous haematopoietic stem CeLl trAnsplantation In MS (RECLAIM).
Conclusion:
Further clinical trials, including registry-based analyses, are urgently needed to better define the patient characteristics, efficacy and safety profile of AHSCT compared with other high-efficacy therapies and to optimally position it as a treatment option in different MS disease stages.
Keywords: Autologous haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (AHSCT), multiple sclerosis, registry study, treatment recommendation.
Background: Glatiramer acetate (GA) is a well-tolerated treatment for multiple sclerosis (MS) and comparable in its efficacy to high-dose interferon beta (IFN). As a lack of validated treatment response biomarkers for MS hampers progress in personalised treatment, the study goal was to search for biomarkers of a successful treatment response utilising the known observation of T-cell expansions after GA treatment.
Methods: T-cell receptor beta chain (TRB) sequencing was performed in 3021 patients with MS: a discovery cohort of 1627 patients with MS, 204 of whom had previously been treated with GA, and then validated in 1394 patients with MS, 424 of whom had previously been treated with GA. Clinical data from 1987 patients with MS treated with GA or IFN and available HLA information from the NationMS, ACP, EPIC, BIONAT, and CombiRx trial cohorts were used for a subsequent analysis.
Findings: Common GA-associated TRB expansions were exclusively detected in HLA-A∗03:01 or in HLA-DRB1∗15:01 backgrounds, within CD8+ effector- or CD4+ central-memory T cells. Both sets of common sequences clonally expanded after GA treatment in a first validation cohort and predicted GA exposure in two further validation cohorts. To evaluate whether restriction of public TRBs to only two HLA alleles is also associated with GA's clinical efficacy, we analysed five cohorts of patients with MS for a potential benefit of the two HLAs concerning the GA response compared to IFN. We consistently found positive interactions with HLA-A∗03:01. This included a relative reduction in relapse risk compared to IFN in HLA-A∗03:01 carriers of 33% (CombiRx: GA + IFN arm: HR 0.67 [95% CI: 0.47-0.96], p = 0.0269) and 34% (CombiRx: GA arm: HR 0.66 [95% CI: 0.45-0.98], p = 0.0377), and in risk to first relapse of 63% (NationMS: HR 0.37 [95% CI: 0.16-0.88], p = 0.0246), but no positive association with DRB1∗15:01.
Interpretation: HLA-A∗03:01 carrying patients with MS specifically benefit from GA treatment and GA significantly outperforms IFN in these patients. Therefore, determining HLA-A∗03:01 status before choosing a platform treatment for MS, would allow for a personalised treatment decision between GA and IFN.