February 25, 2010  
- More than 80 percent  of patients were able to walk unassisted following 15 years of treatment and  average disease duration of 22 years 
 - The majority of  patients experienced either stable or improved disability rates, as well as a 78  percent reduction in annualized relapse rate (ARR) from baseline  
 
JERUSALEM–(BUSINESS  WIRE)–Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. (NASDAQ: TEVA) today announced  the publication of data from the 15-year clinical study with  Copaxone® (glatiramer acetate injection), which is the longest  prospective and continuous evaluation ever conducted in relapsing-remitting  multiple sclerosis (RRMS) patients. The data were published in the February  issue of the journal Multiple Sclerosis.  
“The longest term  study extension further demonstrates Teva’s investment in Copaxone® and our  ongoing commitment to improve the disease course of MS.”
The  15-year clinical study demonstrated that more than 80 percent of patients were  still walking without assistance despite a mean MS disease duration of 22 years,  and two-thirds of patients have not transitioned to secondary progressive MS.  Patients who remained in the study over a mean of 15 years showed a reduction in  annualized relapse rate (ARR) from baseline as well as minimal increase in  Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS). On average, the ARR in the ongoing  cohort declined from 1.12 ± 0.82 to 0.25 ± 0.34 at the 15-year analysis.  
Additionally,  the study reinforces the established long-term safety profile associated with  Copaxone®. The most common adverse events associated with  Copaxone® were local injection-site reactions and immediate  post-injection reactions. No other immune-mediated disorders, infections or  malignancies were reported. 
“This  study is important for the MS community as it further confirms the benefits of  continuous long-term use of Copaxone® and its ability to effectively  slow the natural progression of this disease,” said Corey Ford, M.D.,  Ph.D., primary investigator in the study and Professor of Neurology, Director of  the Multiple Sclerosis Specialty Clinic and Assistant Dean for Research at the  University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center. “It is encouraging to see such  long-term results that further support the well-established benefit-to-risk  profile of this treatment relevant to a life-long disease.”  
“We  are pleased to see that results from this study reinforce the long term efficacy  and safety of Copaxone®,” said Moshe Manor, Teva’s Group Vice  President, Global Branded Products. “The longest term study extension further  demonstrates Teva’s investment in Copaxone® and our ongoing  commitment to improve the disease course of MS.” 
This  study represents the only prospective, open-label follow-up study designed to  evaluate continuous immunomodulatory therapy in RRMS patients. The study,  currently in its 19th year, was extended to 20 years based on the  positive results seen thus far and the interest of the MS community in the long  term outcomes of treatments for this life-long disease. 
About  the Study  
The  study “Continuous Long-Term Immunomodulatory Therapy in Relapsing Multiple  Sclerosis: Results from the 15-Year Analysis of the U.S. Prospective Open-label  Study of Glatiramer Acetate,” a follow-up to the pivotal, Phase III trial,  followed 100 ongoing Copaxone® (glatiramer acetate injection)  patients starting in 1991. Patients’ EDSS scores were evaluated every six  months. Confirmed disability progression was defined as ≥1.0 EDSS point increase  sustained for six months. Patients were classified as “stable/improved” if EDSS  score changes were less or equal to 0.5 points. Proportions of patients who  reached confirmed thresholds of EDSS 4, 6, or 8 while on Copaxone®,  and Kaplan-Meier (KM) estimates of median times to these thresholds, were  obtained. 
Fifty-seven  percent of patients experienced either stabilized or improved EDSS scores, while  65 percent has not yet transitioned to Secondary-Progressive Multiple Sclerosis  (SPMS). While being treated with Copaxone®, the mITT patients’ ARR  declined from 1.18+/-0.82 to 0.43+/-0.58/year. 
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