- Cohen, Jeffrey A;
- Comi, Giancarlo;
- Arnold, Douglas L;
- Bar-Or, Amit;
- Selmaj, Krzysztof W;
- Steinman, Lawrence;
- Havrdová, Eva K;
- Cree, Bruce AC;
- Montalbán, Xavier;
- Hartung, Hans-Peter;
- Huang, Vivian;
- Frohna, Paul;
- Skolnick, Brett E;
- Kappos, Ludwig;
- Investigators, for the RADIANCE Trial
Background
Ozanimod, an oral immunomodulator, selectively targets sphingosine 1-phosphate receptors 1 and 5.Objective
Evaluate efficacy, safety, and tolerability of ozanimod in relapsing multiple sclerosis.Methods
In the RADIANCE Part A phase II study (NCT01628393), participants with relapsing multiple sclerosis were randomized (1:1:1) to once-daily ozanimod hydrochloride (0.5 or 1 mg) or placebo. After 24 weeks, participants could enter a 2-year, dose-blinded extension. Ozanimod-treated participants continued their assigned dose; placebo participants were re-randomized (1:1) to ozanimod hydrochloride 0.5 or 1 mg (equivalent to ozanimod 0.46 and 0.92 mg).Results
A total of 223 (89.6%) of the 249 participants completed the blinded extension. At 2 years of the extension, the percentage of participants who were gadolinium-enhancing lesion-free ranged from 86.5% to 94.6%. Unadjusted annualized relapse rate during the blinded extension (week 24-end of treatment) was 0.32 for ozanimod hydrochloride 0.5 mg → ozanimod hydrochloride 0.5 mg, 0.18 for ozanimod hydrochloride 1 mg → ozanimod hydrochloride 1 mg, 0.30 for placebo → ozanimod hydrochloride 0.5 mg, and 0.18 for placebo → ozanimod hydrochloride 1 mg. No second-degree or higher atrioventricular block or serious opportunistic infection was reported.Conclusion
Ozanimod demonstrated sustained efficacy in participants continuing treatment up to 2 years and reached similar efficacy in participants who switched from placebo; no unexpected safety signals emerged.