Therapeutics and Clinical Risk Management (Mar 2014)
Pharmacology and clinical efficacy of dimethyl fumarate (BG-12) for treatment of relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis
Abstract
Serena Ruggieri,1 Carla Tortorella,2 Claudio Gasperini31Department of Neurology and Psychiatry, Sapienza University of Rome “Sapienza”, Rome, Italy; 2Department of Basic Sciences, Neurosciences and Sense Organs, University of Bari, Bari, Italy; 3Department of Neurosciences, S Camillo Forlanini Hospital, Rome, ItalyAbstract: The last two decades have seen the introduction of several therapies for multiple sclerosis (MS). These therapies are intended to work at different levels of the disease, typically targeting direct symptom management, brief corticosteroid administration for acute exacerbations, and the regular use of disease-modifying drugs. Nevertheless, in clinical practice, disease-modifying drugs or immunosuppressive treatments are frequently associated with suboptimal response in terms of efficacy and several side effects leading to poor patient adherence, so the proportion of relapsing–remitting MS patients not adequately responding to disease-modifying therapy have been reported to range from 7% to 49%. Natalizumab and fingolimod are the newest US Food and Drug Administration-approved agents that have been added to the MS treatment armamentarium, but their use is limited by a less known safety profile and recognized specific risk. Thus, there is an important need for new therapeutic strategies, especially those that may offer greater patient satisfaction and safer risk profile in order to optimize therapeutic outcomes. A number of potential therapies for MS are now in late-stage development. Effective, safe, and well-tolerated therapies may improve compliance and empower patients with a level of independence not presently possible. To meet these characteristics, most of these therapies are oral compounds. Herein, we review the pharmacology and efficacy of dimethyl fumarate (BG-12) to date and its role in the evolving marketplace.Keywords: disease-modifying drugs, nuclear factor erythroid-derived 2 (E2)-related factor, Nrf2, oxidative stress, neuroprotection, oral treatment