Delays in treatment initiation for patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis—A nationwide population-based study




Savolainen, Maiju; Viitala, Matias; Kuutti, Katariina; Kuusisto, Hanna; Rauma, Ilkka; Ryytty, Mervi; Krüger, Johanna; Hartikainen, Päivi; Niiranen, Marja; Saarinen, Jukka; Soilu-Hänninen, Merja; Laakso, Sini M

PublisherSAGE Publications

2025

Multiple Sclerosis Journal - Experimental, Translational and Clinical

Multiple Sclerosis Journal – Experimental, Translational and Clinical

20552173251360358

11

2055-2173

2055-2173

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1177/20552173251360358

https://doi.org/10.1177/20552173251360358

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/499951166



Background

Early disease-modifying therapy (DMT) improves outcomes in patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (pwRRMS), but reasons for delayed or absent initiation are unclear.

Objective

To investigate reasons and trends for delayed or absent DMT initiation among Finnish pwRRMS.

Methods

A nationwide retrospective study using the Finnish MS Registry identified 2363 pwRRMS diagnosed between 2010 and 2019 in the participating centers. Patients never receiving DMT or starting >2 years post-diagnosis were compared to those initiating DMT within a year of diagnosis.

Results

We identified 193 pwRRMS who never started DMT, 88 had delayed initiation over 2 years, and 1944 started within a year. The no/delayed DMT group was older at diagnosis (mean 38.7 vs 35.2 years, p < 0.001). Corticosteroid-treated relapses were more frequent among early initiators. Optic neuritis was more common in patients with delayed or no DMT. Treatment refusal was the primary reason for delayed/no DMT (35.6%), with 68% of refusers never starting. From 2010to 2019, delayed/no DMT initiation (p = 0.007) and treatment refusal (p = 0.004) decreased significantly.

Conclusion

Delayed or absent DMT initiation is linked to older age, optic neuritis, disease inactivity, and treatment refusal, which declined over time, likely due to expanded DMT options.


This study was supported by a grant from Finnish MS Foundation (to SML).


Last updated on 2025-19-09 at 13:36