Summary:
The cytostatic mitoxanthrone is since the mid-nineties a new possible way how to treat active MS. Its
serious side-effect is cardiotoxicity. The objective of the presented work was to evalute the long-term
effect of mitoxanthrone treatment and to compare the effect in different forms of the clinical course in
93 patients with active MS who were treated with 20 mg mitoxanthrone and 1 g methylprednisolone
i.v. at one-month intervals, 6 times. The authors evaluated changes of EDSS after termination of
treatment, 1 and 2 years after termination of treatment and changes of the relapse rate in the remittent
and secondarily progressive form with relapses. The mean baseline EDSS of the whole group of patients
was 5.09. After termination of mitoxanthrone therapy it declined to 4.89, 1 year after termination of
therapy it was 4.94. 73 patients were followed up for 2 years after termination of treatment, their mean
EDSS two years after termination of treatment was 5.23. The mean relapse rate dropped in the group
of 31 patients with remittent or a secondarily progressive course with relapses during the first year
from 2.2 to 0.58. 23 patients of this group were followed up for two years, their relapse rate declined
during the second year to 0.78. The most marked effect was observed in patients with a relapse
remittent course who improved after termination of treatment by almost 0.5 EDSS and two years after
termination of treatment were in a better clinical condition than before its start. Serious side-effects
included two severe infections, otherwise only mild signs of haematotoxicity were observed,ammenorrhoea,
alopecia and gastrointestinal complaints. If the maximal dose is respected and side-effects are
regularly monitored mitoxanthrone treatment is well tolerated and long-term effective in highly active
MS, in particular in MS with a relapse-remitting course.
Key words:
active MS, mitoxanthrone, cardiotoxicity
|