19 min

Exploring Dimethyl Fumarate to Treat Friedreich Ataxia NeurologyLive® Mind Moments®

    • Medicine

Welcome to the NeurologyLive® Mind Moments® podcast. Tune in to hear leaders in neurology sound off on topics that impact your clinical practice.

In this episode, Francesco Saccà, MD, PhD, an associate professor of neurology at the University of Naples, discussed an ongoing study assessing the use of dimethyl fumarate, an approved therapy for relapsing multiple sclerosis, in patients with Friedreich ataxia (FA). He spoke on the mechanism of action of the agent and why it can be beneficial in this patient population, as well as how it differs from omaveloxolone (Skyclarys; Biogen), the first approved treatment for FA. In addition, he outlined the study design, the primary end point of frataxin decrease, and what would be considered a "successful" study. Furthermore, he spoke on the reasons behind the trial and what led investigators to this point.


Looking for more ataxia discussion? Check out the NeurologyLive® ataxia clinical focus page.

Episode Breakdown:



1:05 – Origin of the study

3:00 – Conduct of the study, end points, goals 

5:10 – Promising mechanism of action of dimethyl fumarate to treat Friedreich ataxia

7:30 – Questions in clinical impact of changes in frataxin

10:00 – Neurology News Minute

12:40 – What is considered a successful study?

14:55 – Patient inclusion, demographic makeup of the study

16:35 – Timeline of the trial and data readout



The stories featured in this week's Neurology News Minute, which will give you quick updates on the following developments in neurology, are further detailed here:





FDA Approves Alexion's Ravulizumab-cwvz for Neuromyelitis Optica Spectrum Disorder
Epilepsy Agent STK-001 Demonstrates Disease-Modifying Effects in Early Phase Studies of Dravet Syndrome
Eisai Submits sBLA for Monthly Intravenous Maintenance Dosing of Alzheimer Therapy Lecanemab



Thanks for listening to the NeurologyLive® Mind Moments® podcast. To support the show, be sure to rate, review, and subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts. For more neurology news and expert-driven content, visit neurologylive.com.

Welcome to the NeurologyLive® Mind Moments® podcast. Tune in to hear leaders in neurology sound off on topics that impact your clinical practice.

In this episode, Francesco Saccà, MD, PhD, an associate professor of neurology at the University of Naples, discussed an ongoing study assessing the use of dimethyl fumarate, an approved therapy for relapsing multiple sclerosis, in patients with Friedreich ataxia (FA). He spoke on the mechanism of action of the agent and why it can be beneficial in this patient population, as well as how it differs from omaveloxolone (Skyclarys; Biogen), the first approved treatment for FA. In addition, he outlined the study design, the primary end point of frataxin decrease, and what would be considered a "successful" study. Furthermore, he spoke on the reasons behind the trial and what led investigators to this point.


Looking for more ataxia discussion? Check out the NeurologyLive® ataxia clinical focus page.

Episode Breakdown:



1:05 – Origin of the study

3:00 – Conduct of the study, end points, goals 

5:10 – Promising mechanism of action of dimethyl fumarate to treat Friedreich ataxia

7:30 – Questions in clinical impact of changes in frataxin

10:00 – Neurology News Minute

12:40 – What is considered a successful study?

14:55 – Patient inclusion, demographic makeup of the study

16:35 – Timeline of the trial and data readout



The stories featured in this week's Neurology News Minute, which will give you quick updates on the following developments in neurology, are further detailed here:





FDA Approves Alexion's Ravulizumab-cwvz for Neuromyelitis Optica Spectrum Disorder
Epilepsy Agent STK-001 Demonstrates Disease-Modifying Effects in Early Phase Studies of Dravet Syndrome
Eisai Submits sBLA for Monthly Intravenous Maintenance Dosing of Alzheimer Therapy Lecanemab



Thanks for listening to the NeurologyLive® Mind Moments® podcast. To support the show, be sure to rate, review, and subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts. For more neurology news and expert-driven content, visit neurologylive.com.

19 min