Authors
Ludwig Kappos, Mark S Freedman, Chris H Polman, Gilles Edan, Hans-Peter Hartung, David H Miller, Xavier Montalbán, Frederik Barkhof, Ernst-Wilhelm Radü, Lars Bauer, Susanne Dahms, Vivian Lanius, Christoph Pohl, Rupert Sandbrink
Publication date
2007/8/4
Journal
The Lancet
Volume
370
Issue
9585
Pages
389-397
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Background
Several controlled studies provide evidence that treatment with interferon beta in patients with a first event suggestive of multiple sclerosis (MS) delays conversion to clinically definite MS (CDMS). Our aim was to determine whether early initiation of treatment with interferon beta prevents development of confirmed disability in MS.
Methods
In the initial placebo-controlled phase of the double-blinded BENEFIT study, patients with a first event suggestive of MS and a minimum of two clinically silent lesions in MRI were randomised to receive either interferon beta-1b 250 μg (n=292) or placebo (n=176) subcutaneously every other day for 2 years, or until diagnosis of CDMS. Patients were then eligible to enter the follow-up phase with open-label interferon beta-1b. In the current prospectively planned analysis 3 years after randomisation, the effects of early interferon beta-1b treatment were compared with those …
Total citations
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