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A Multicenter, Randomized, Double Blind, Placebo Controlled Study to Assess the Long-Term Efficacy and Safety of Prolonged Release Fampridine (BIIB041) 10 mg, Administered Twice Daily in Subjects With Multiple Sclerosis (ENHANCE)
The primary objective is to determine whether prolonged-release fampridine (10 mg twice daily) has a clinically meaningful effect on participant-reported walking ability over a 24-week study period. The secondary objectives are: to determine whether prolonged-release fampridine 10 mg taken twice daily (BID) has a clinically meaningful effect on dynamic and static balance, physical impact of multiple sclerosis (MS), and upper extremity function over a 24-week study period; to evaluate criteria for early assessment of response to fampridine that can predict clinically meaningful benefits in walking ability and balance; to assess the safety and tolerability of prolonged-release fampridine 10 mg twice daily over a 24-week treatment period.
Details
| Lead sponsor | Biogen |
|---|---|
| Phase | Phase 3 |
| Status | COMPLETED |
| Enrolment | 646 |
| Start date | 2014-09 |
| Completion | 2016-02 |
Conditions
- Multiple Sclerosis
Interventions
- fampridine
- Placebo
Primary outcomes
- Proportion of Participants Achieving a Mean Improvement of ≥ 8 Points From Baseline on the Multiple Sclerosis Walking Scale (MSWS-12) Over 24 Weeks — Baseline to 24 weeks
MSWS-12 is a participant self-assessment of the walking limitations due to MS during the past 2 weeks. It contains 12 items that measure the impact of MS on walking. Items are summed to generate a total score and transformed to a scale with a range of 0 to 100, where higher scores indicate greater impact on walking. A responder is defined as a participant with a mean improvement of at least 8 points over 24 weeks compared to baseline. Baseline is defined as the mean at Screening and Day 1 visits. If a participant has a mean MSWS-12 score of \< 0.5 over the double-blind period, and a baseline MSWS-12 score of \< 8 points, the participant is counted as a responder. A participant who indicates they cannot walk at all on MSWS-12 during any double-blind visit, and who shows severe disability and an inability to walk on other efficacy assessments is counted as a non-responder. Estimated proportion obtained from binomial proportions.
Countries
United States, Bulgaria, Czechia, Finland, Italy, Lithuania, Netherlands, Poland, Russia, Serbia, United Kingdom