Cargando…

Significant Long-Lasting Improvement after Switch to Incobotulinum Toxin in Cervical Dystonia Patients with Secondary Treatment Failure

Under continuous long-term treatment with abo- or onabotulinum toxin type A (BoNT/A), ~10 to 15% of patients with cervical dystonia (CD) will develop neutralizing antibodies and reduced responsiveness over an ~10-year treatment period. Among the botulinum neurotoxin type A preparations so far licens...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hefter, Harald, Ürer, Beyza, Brauns, Raphaela, Rosenthal, Dietmar, Meuth, Sven G., Lee, John-Ih, Albrecht, Philipp, Samadzadeh, Sara
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8779547/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35051021
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins14010044
_version_ 1784637604029792256
author Hefter, Harald
Ürer, Beyza
Brauns, Raphaela
Rosenthal, Dietmar
Meuth, Sven G.
Lee, John-Ih
Albrecht, Philipp
Samadzadeh, Sara
author_facet Hefter, Harald
Ürer, Beyza
Brauns, Raphaela
Rosenthal, Dietmar
Meuth, Sven G.
Lee, John-Ih
Albrecht, Philipp
Samadzadeh, Sara
author_sort Hefter, Harald
collection PubMed
description Under continuous long-term treatment with abo- or onabotulinum toxin type A (BoNT/A), ~10 to 15% of patients with cervical dystonia (CD) will develop neutralizing antibodies and reduced responsiveness over an ~10-year treatment period. Among the botulinum neurotoxin type A preparations so far licensed for CD, incobotulinum toxin A (incoBoNT/A; Xeomin(®)) is the only one without complex proteins. Whether CD patients with treatment failure under abo- or onaBoNT/A may still respond to incoBoNT/A is unknown. In this cross-sectional, retrospective study, 64 CD patients with secondary treatment failure after abo- or onaBoNT/A therapy who were switched to incoBoNT/A were compared to 34 CD patients exclusively treated with incoBoNT/A. The initial clinical severity of CD, best outcome during abo- or onaBoNT/A therapy, severity at the time of switching to incoBoNT/A and severity at recruitment, as well as all corresponding doses, were analyzed. Furthermore, the impact of neutralizing antibodies (NABs) on the long-term outcome of incoBoNT/A therapy was evaluated. Patients significantly improved after the switch to incoBoNT/A (p < 0.001) but did not reach the improvement level obtained before the development of partial secondary treatment failure or that of patients who were exclusively treated with incoBoNT/A. No difference between abo- and onaBoNT/A pretreatments or between the long-term outcomes of NAB-positive and NAB-negative patients was found. The present study demonstrates significant long-term improvement after a switch to incoBoNT/A in patients with preceding secondary treatment failure after abo- or onaBoNT/A therapy and confirms the low antigenicity of incoBoNT/A.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8779547
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-87795472022-01-22 Significant Long-Lasting Improvement after Switch to Incobotulinum Toxin in Cervical Dystonia Patients with Secondary Treatment Failure Hefter, Harald Ürer, Beyza Brauns, Raphaela Rosenthal, Dietmar Meuth, Sven G. Lee, John-Ih Albrecht, Philipp Samadzadeh, Sara Toxins (Basel) Article Under continuous long-term treatment with abo- or onabotulinum toxin type A (BoNT/A), ~10 to 15% of patients with cervical dystonia (CD) will develop neutralizing antibodies and reduced responsiveness over an ~10-year treatment period. Among the botulinum neurotoxin type A preparations so far licensed for CD, incobotulinum toxin A (incoBoNT/A; Xeomin(®)) is the only one without complex proteins. Whether CD patients with treatment failure under abo- or onaBoNT/A may still respond to incoBoNT/A is unknown. In this cross-sectional, retrospective study, 64 CD patients with secondary treatment failure after abo- or onaBoNT/A therapy who were switched to incoBoNT/A were compared to 34 CD patients exclusively treated with incoBoNT/A. The initial clinical severity of CD, best outcome during abo- or onaBoNT/A therapy, severity at the time of switching to incoBoNT/A and severity at recruitment, as well as all corresponding doses, were analyzed. Furthermore, the impact of neutralizing antibodies (NABs) on the long-term outcome of incoBoNT/A therapy was evaluated. Patients significantly improved after the switch to incoBoNT/A (p < 0.001) but did not reach the improvement level obtained before the development of partial secondary treatment failure or that of patients who were exclusively treated with incoBoNT/A. No difference between abo- and onaBoNT/A pretreatments or between the long-term outcomes of NAB-positive and NAB-negative patients was found. The present study demonstrates significant long-term improvement after a switch to incoBoNT/A in patients with preceding secondary treatment failure after abo- or onaBoNT/A therapy and confirms the low antigenicity of incoBoNT/A. MDPI 2022-01-06 /pmc/articles/PMC8779547/ /pubmed/35051021 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins14010044 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Hefter, Harald
Ürer, Beyza
Brauns, Raphaela
Rosenthal, Dietmar
Meuth, Sven G.
Lee, John-Ih
Albrecht, Philipp
Samadzadeh, Sara
Significant Long-Lasting Improvement after Switch to Incobotulinum Toxin in Cervical Dystonia Patients with Secondary Treatment Failure
title Significant Long-Lasting Improvement after Switch to Incobotulinum Toxin in Cervical Dystonia Patients with Secondary Treatment Failure
title_full Significant Long-Lasting Improvement after Switch to Incobotulinum Toxin in Cervical Dystonia Patients with Secondary Treatment Failure
title_fullStr Significant Long-Lasting Improvement after Switch to Incobotulinum Toxin in Cervical Dystonia Patients with Secondary Treatment Failure
title_full_unstemmed Significant Long-Lasting Improvement after Switch to Incobotulinum Toxin in Cervical Dystonia Patients with Secondary Treatment Failure
title_short Significant Long-Lasting Improvement after Switch to Incobotulinum Toxin in Cervical Dystonia Patients with Secondary Treatment Failure
title_sort significant long-lasting improvement after switch to incobotulinum toxin in cervical dystonia patients with secondary treatment failure
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8779547/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35051021
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins14010044
work_keys_str_mv AT hefterharald significantlonglastingimprovementafterswitchtoincobotulinumtoxinincervicaldystoniapatientswithsecondarytreatmentfailure
AT urerbeyza significantlonglastingimprovementafterswitchtoincobotulinumtoxinincervicaldystoniapatientswithsecondarytreatmentfailure
AT braunsraphaela significantlonglastingimprovementafterswitchtoincobotulinumtoxinincervicaldystoniapatientswithsecondarytreatmentfailure
AT rosenthaldietmar significantlonglastingimprovementafterswitchtoincobotulinumtoxinincervicaldystoniapatientswithsecondarytreatmentfailure
AT meuthsveng significantlonglastingimprovementafterswitchtoincobotulinumtoxinincervicaldystoniapatientswithsecondarytreatmentfailure
AT leejohnih significantlonglastingimprovementafterswitchtoincobotulinumtoxinincervicaldystoniapatientswithsecondarytreatmentfailure
AT albrechtphilipp significantlonglastingimprovementafterswitchtoincobotulinumtoxinincervicaldystoniapatientswithsecondarytreatmentfailure
AT samadzadehsara significantlonglastingimprovementafterswitchtoincobotulinumtoxinincervicaldystoniapatientswithsecondarytreatmentfailure