Effective Long-Term Treatment with Incobotulinum Toxin After Immunoresistance to Abo- or Ona-Botulinum Toxin in Patients with Cervical Dystonia - European Medical Journal

Effective Long-Term Treatment with Incobotulinum Toxin After Immunoresistance to Abo- or Ona-Botulinum Toxin in Patients with Cervical Dystonia

2 Mins
Neurology
Authors:
Beyza Ürer, Raphaela Brauns, Sara Samadzadeh, *Harald Hefter
Disclosure:

Prof Hefter has received a restricted grant of the private Inge-Diesbach Stiftung to cover the costs of antibody analysis. All other authors have declared no conflicts of interest.

Citation:
EMJ Neurol. ;8[1]:52-54. Abstract Review No: AR9.
Keywords:
Complex proteins, incobotulinumtoxinA (incoBoNT/A), low antigenicity, neutralising antibodies (NAB) formation, secondary treatment failure.

Each article is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial 4.0 License.

BACKGROUND AND AIMS

Popularity of the use of botulinum neurotoxin Type A (BoNT/A) is rapidly increasing.1 The production of antibodies (AB) against various parts of this BoNT/A complex can be induced, which is hard to avoid during long-term treatment.2 Some AB can reduce the biological function of BoNT/A (neutralising AB [NAB]), others cannot. NAB first reduce duration of efficacy; later, with increasing titres, complete treatment failure occurs.

The onabotulinumtoxinA (onaBoNT/A; Botox®, Coolock, Ireland) and abobotulinumtoxinA (aboBoNT/A; Dysport®, Ipsen, Paris, France) contain the entire botulinum toxin Type A complex with all its different biologically inactive complex proteins. In contrast, the more recently licensed incobotulinumtoxinA (incoBoNT/A; Xeomin®, Merz Pharma, Frankfurt, Germany) only contains the pure BoNT/A toxin. Therefore, the protein load during treatment with incoBoNT/A is very low, as is its antigenicity.3

During long-term treatment of over 10 years with aboBoNT/A or onaBoNT/A for cervical dystonia (CD), induction of NAB occurs in up to 14% of patients. It has been recommended that BoNT/A therapy should be stopped and deep brain stimulation should be performed when a secondary treatment failure has developed.

This cross-sectional study investigated the effectiveness of switching to incoBoNT/A in patients with CD who were partially resistant under treatment with aboBoNT/A or onaBoNT/A.

METHODS AND MATERIALS

In this study, 50 patients with CD with the development of a progressive, clear-cut partial secondary treatment failure (PSTF) after aboBoNT/A or onaBoNT/A treatment who had been switched to incoBoNT/A years prior were recruited. Blood samples were taken for determination of the presence of NAB using the mouse hemidiaphragm assay and demographic as well as treatment-related data were extracted from the charts. Furthermore, patients had to assess the improvement of CD since the switch to incoBoNT/A.

RESULTS

NAB were detected in 16 (32%) of the patients (AB-pos-group). In 34 (68%) patients, no NAB could be detected by means of the mouse hemidiaphragm assay (AB-neg-group). On the day of the switch, the mean severity of CD (STSUI), measured by the TSUI-score, did not differ significantly between both AB groups. However, the dose of incoBoNT/A that had been chosen years earlier to initiate incoBoNT/A was significantly lower (p<0.023) in the AB-neg- compared to the AB-pos-group. Duration of incoBoNT/A treatment did not differ between both groups (7.3 years in the AB-pos- and 7.8 years in the AB-neg-group) (Table 1).

Table 1: Comparison of demographic and treatment-related data in the AB-pos- and AB-neg-group.

AB-neg-group: patient group that were negative for neutralising antibodies; AB-pos-group: patient group that were positive for neutralising antibodies; ATSUI: TSUI-score at present; IMP: the improvement of cervical dystonia since the switch to incobotulinumtoxunA; n.s.; nonsignificant; SD: standard deviation; SDose: dose at switch; STSUI: TSUI minus the score at switch; TSATSUI: time period from switch to the present time; uDu: unit dose uniformity.

During incoBoNT/A, severity of CD scored by means of the TSUI-score was significantly improved by 21.4% (p<0.05) in the AB-pos- and by 33.9% (p<0.01) in the AB-neg-group ([STSUI minus the TSUI-score at present] divided by STSUI). Dose at switch was significantly increased by 90 mouse units incoBoNT/A in the AB-pos (p<0.05) and by 95 mouse units (p<0.01) in the AB-neg-group. The outcome (TSUI-score at present) between both groups did not differ significantly. However, the patient’s global assessment of the treatment effect was significantly better in the AB-neg- compared to the AB-pos-group.

CONCLUSION

In patients with CD and progressive PSTF after abo- or onaBoNT/A therapy, switch to incoBoNT/A can play a prominent role in the level of improvement and should have higher priority over deep brain stimulation in the treatment plan. The improvement observed after the switch to incoBoNT/A is long-lasting with a mean duration of over 7 years, in contrast to the short-lasting improvement observed after the switch to rimabotulinumtoxinB. Furthermore, persistence of NAB after the switch to incoBoNT/A appeared to have a negative influence on long-term outcome in patients with CD and PSTF after abo- or onaBoNT/A treatment.

References
Frevert J. Pharmaceutical, biological, and clinical properties of botulinum neurotoxin Type A products. Drugs R D. 2015;15(1):1-9. Dressler D, Hallett M. Immunological aspects of Botox, Dysport and Myobloc/NeuroBloc. Eur J Neurol. 2006;13(Suppl 1):11-5. Frevert J. Content of botulinum neurotoxin in Botox®/Vistabel®, Dysport®/Azzalure®, and Xeomin®/Bocouture®. Drugs R D. 2010;10(2):67-73.

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