Therapeutic Advances in Neurological Disorders (Oct 2018)

Prolonged-release fampridine in multiple sclerosis: clinical data and real-world experience. Report of an expert meeting

  • Philipp Albrecht,
  • Ingrid Kristine Bjørnå,
  • David Brassat,
  • Rachel Farrell,
  • Peter Feys,
  • Jeremy Hobart,
  • Raymond Hupperts,
  • Michael Linnebank,
  • Jožef Magdič,
  • Celia Oreja-Guevara,
  • Carlo Pozzilli,
  • Antonio Vasco Salgado,
  • Tjalf Ziemssen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/1756286418803248
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

Read online

Prolonged-release (PR) fampridine is the only approved medication to improve walking in multiple sclerosis (MS), having been shown to produce a clinically meaningful improvement in walking ability in the subset of MS patients with Expanded Disability Status Scale 4–7. Recent responder subgroup analyses in the phase III ENHANCE study show a large effect size in terms of an increase of 20.58 points on the patient-reported 12-item MS Walking Scale in the 43% of patients classified as responders to PR-fampridine, corresponding to a standardized response mean of 1.68. Use of PR-fampridine in clinical practice varies across Europe, depending partly on whether it is reimbursed. A group of European MS experts met in June 2017 to discuss their experience with using PR-fampridine, including their views on the patient population for treatment, assessment of treatment response, re-testing and re-treatment, and stopping criteria. This article summarizes the experts’ opinions on how PR-fampridine can be used in real-world clinical practice to optimize the benefits to people with MS with impaired walking ability.