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To print: Select File and then Print from your browser's menu Title: Copaxone (Glatiramer) Effective in Reducing Multiple Sclerosis Progression Over 10 Years, Study to be Extended: Presented at AAN |
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"Copaxone (Glatiramer) Effective in Reducing Multiple Sclerosis Progression Over 10 Years, Study to be Extended: Presented at AAN" MS Patients Who Withdrew From Therapy During Long-Term Follow Up Demonstrated Increased Disease Progression KANSAS CITY, MO -- April 28, 2004 -- Relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) patients who remained on Copaxone® (glatiramer acetate injection) therapy for an average of 10 years experienced significantly less progression of disability than patients who withdrew from the open-label, long-term follow-up study. Two hundred and thirty-two patients (92 percent of 251 originally randomized) receiving Copaxone from randomization or open-label switch were included in the long-term follow up. According to data presented late yesterday at the 56[th[/sup>] annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology, more than 90 percent of the 108 patients still on Copaxone did not show evidence of disease progression to an EDSS of 6.0 on the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS). In comparison, 50 percent of the 47 patients who withdrew from Copaxone therapy after an average of 4.5 years progressed to this score. The other 77 patients who withdrew from the study were not available for long-term follow up. "This is the longest-running continuous assessment of a drug treatment in RRMS patients, and this data continues to substantiate the long-term clinical benefits of Copaxone," said Dr. Kenneth P. Johnson, professor of neurology, University of Maryland, and director of the Maryland Center for MS. "The slowing of disability in the ongoing Copaxone group was especially pronounced at an average of 10 years on therapy." |
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