Paper
A randomized open label study of pain medications (naproxen, acetaminophen and ibuprofen) for controlling side effects during initiation of IFN beta-1a therapy and during its ongoing use for relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis.
Published 2004 · M. Leuschen, M. Filipi, K. Healey
Multiple sclerosis
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Abstract
Multiple sclerosis (MS) patients initiating IFN beta-1a, Avonex, therapy (Group 1, n = 30) or experiencing side effects after 6 months on therapy (Group 2, n = 30) were randomized for 5 weeks open label adjunct therapy to naproxen (Aleve), acetaminophen (Tylenol) or ibuprofen (Advil). Our hypothesis was that non-prescription pain medications are effective in decreasing or alleviating the side effects associated with IFN beta-1a therapy. Contrary to the hypothesis, most patients in both groups continued to report side effects on all pain medications. After 5 weeks, headache, fever, chills and injection site pain were low in < or = 50% of patients. Moderate to significant fatigue, muscle or joint pain continued in most patients. As a quality of life measure, the Modified Fatigue Impact Scale (mFIS) improved for Group 1 on naproxen or ibuprofen with greatest improvement in physical subset (P = 0.002 for naproxen and P<0.01 for ibuprofen). Total mFIS for Group 1 on acetaminophen improved (P = 0.04) due to improved cognitive subset rather than physical subset. Group 2, with side effects initially, reported less significant fatigue (severity 5-10) but more moderate fatigue (severity 2-4) at study end for all three medications. All medications improved cognitive subset (P = 0.05). Physical mFIS subset did not improve for Group 2 on acetaminophen, but did with naproxen (P = 0.05) or ibuprofen (P = 0.03). Naproxen and ibuprofen were more effective than acetaminophen in minimizing physical side effects of IFN beta-1a. None of the three pain medications tested were as effective as hypothesized for minimizing fatigue or muscle and joint pain.
Naproxen and ibuprofen are more effective than acetaminophen in minimizing physical side effects of IFN beta-1a therapy for multiple sclerosis, but all three medications are insufficient for minimizing fatigue or muscle and joint pain.
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