Ibudilast metabolomics in progressive multiple sclerosis brain atrophy trial
This analysis used data from the 96-week SPRINT-MS randomized trial involving 244 participants with progressive multiple sclerosis. The intervention was oral ibudilast, up to 100 mg daily, compared to placebo. The primary outcome was the rate of whole-brain atrophy measured by brain parenchymal fraction (BPF).
Higher baseline levels of 1-palmityl-2-stearoyl-GPC (O-16:0/18:0) were associated with slower BPF decline (beta = 0.016, 95% CI: 0.008, 0.024; p = 4.35 x 10^-5). Higher baseline levels of glycerophospholipids and sphingomyelins were also associated with slower decline in BPF. Metabolites associated with gray matter fraction preservation were enriched in androgenic steroids and steroid sulfates.
Ibudilast treatment was associated with increased sphingomyelin species (beta = 0.185, FDR = 1.79 x 10^-2) and decreased anthranilate levels (beta = -0.270, FDR = 3.87 x 10^-2). Safety and tolerability data were not reported. The study was observational in its metabolomic analysis within a trial framework.
Key limitations include the lack of reported safety data and the exploratory, hypothesis-generating nature of the metabolomic findings. The practice relevance is that metabolomics may provide prognostic and pharmacodynamic biomarkers for progressive MS, but causality cannot be inferred.