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| | | ![]() Betaferon (Interferon Beta-1b) Approved in Europe as a First-Line Treatment for the Earliest Stages of Multiple Sclerosis BERLIN, GERMANY -- June 7, 2006 -- Schering AG, Germany (FSE: SCH, NYSE: SHR) announced today that Betaferon(R) (interferon beta-1b) has been granted marketing authorization by the European Commission for an extension of its indication to include the treatment of patients with a first clinical event suggestive of multiple sclerosis (MS) in all 25 European member states, as well as Iceland and Norway. With this approval, Betaferon becomes the only high-dose high-frequency therapy approved for the treatment of the earliest stages of MS. The approval provides an important treatment option for patients to reduce the risk of developing clinically definite MS (CDMS), and the chance to delay the progression of the disease. The new label now allows for treatment of the majority of patients at risk for MS (i.e., those with a first clinical event suggestive of MS). "Effective treatment early in the course of the disease is important since studies have shown that irreversible nerve damage and brain atrophy can occur in the earliest stages of MS. We now have the ability to treat patients from the earliest sign of MS with therapy that has an excellent safety profile over 16 years," said David Bates, Professor of Clinical Neurology at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, UK, and Chairman of the MS Forum. The label extension is based on results from the BENEFIT(a) study which showed that Betaferon(R) 250 mcg treatment in the early phase of the disease reduced the risk of developing CDMS by 50% compared with placebo(1,b). Furthermore, patients in the Betaferon(R) group were two times better protected(c) than placebo-treated patients against developing MS as defined by the McDonald diagnostic criteria(2). Left untreated in the placebo group, 85% of people who experienced a first clinical event went on to be diagnosed with MS within two years. "The results of the BENEFIT trial show that Betaferon can substantially slow down the course of MS in early patients, especially those at the earliest stage of the disease, when it has the greatest impact," said Darlene Jody, MD, Head of Specialized Therapeutics Global Business Unit at Schering Group. A supplemental biologics license application (sBLA) requesting an expanded label for Betaferon (marketed as Betaseron(R) in the U.S.) was filed with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration by Berlex, Inc., a U.S. affiliate of Schering AG, in February 2006 and is pending review. The Betaferon(R) extended indication is for the treatment of patients with a single demyelinating event with an active inflammatory process, if it is severe enough to warrant treatment with intravenous corticosteroids, if alternative diagnoses have been excluded, and if they are determined to be at high risk of developing clinically definite multiple sclerosis. The results of the BENEFIT study were used to define the high risk criteria for identifying patients appropriate for Betaferon(R) treatment. The criteria reflect the differences in disease dissemination among patients with monofocal(d) and multifocal(d) onset of disease with a first clinical event suggestive of MS. Betaferon is also indicated for the treatment of: About BENEFIT Treatment continued for up to 24 months unless patients experienced a second attack and were diagnosed with clinically definite MS. The two co-primary efficacy outcomes were time to CDMS, based on a second clinical demyelinating event or an Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) progression >=1.5 points, and time to MS according to the McDonald criteria. All study participants completing the double blind study were then invited to participate in a separate open-label follow-up study with Betaferon(R) which will prospectively assess the impact of such early treatment with Betaferon(R) on the long-term course of the disease for a total observation time of five years, including the impact of early treatment on the formation of new brain lesions as measured by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). BENEFIT patients included those who had a first clinical demyelinating event either monofocal (i.e. clinical evidence of a single lesion) or multifocal (i.e. clinical evidence of more than one lesion). Inclusion of both patient groups is important because this is representative for the patient population with a single event. About Betaferon
Footnotes (a) Betaferon(R)/Betaseron(R) in Newly Emerging MS For Initial Treatment.
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SOURCE: Schering AG
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