Background: Social distancing measures during the Covid-19 pandemic reduced access to health care and concerns were raised over the safety of immunosuppressive disease modifying treatments (DMT) for multiple sclerosis (MS).
Objective: To investigate changes in DMT prescription before and during the pandemic in a large and well-characterized real-world cohort of MS patients.
Methods: From the Vienna MS database (VMSD) we extracted MS patients who were initiated on a new DMT (both treatment-naïve and switching) between January 1st 2017 and December 31st 2021. Two time periods were defined: 1) the preCovid-19 era (January 1st 2017 to March 15th 2020, i.e. the day of the first lockdown in Austria) and the Covid-19 era (March 16th 2020 to December 31st 2021). Average annualized DMT prescription rates were descriptively compared between the two periods.
Results: The average annualized number of prescriptions in the preCovid-19 era was 90.3/year and dropped to 74.8/year (-17.2%) in the Covid-19 era, driven by a marked reduction to 41.7/year (-54%) in the first nine months of the Covid-19 era, partly offset by a rise to 101 in 2021. Use of alemtuzumab (-64%), antiCD20 (-49%), cladribine (-46%), and S1PM (-38%) was reduced, while natalizumab increased by 24%. Lower efficacy treatments remained stable.
Conclusions: The pandemic coincides with a drop in DMT prescription, most markedly for immunosuppressive high-efficacy treatments, strongly suggesting the pandemic as the causal factor. If and how much this affects long-term outcome is yet to be determined.
Keywords: COVID-19; Change; Disease-modifying treatment; Multiple sclerosis; Pandemic; SARS-CoV-2.
Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier B.V.