35 research outputs found

    The Swiss Multiple Sclerosis Cohort-Study (SMSC): A Prospective Swiss Wide Investigation of Key Phases in Disease Evolution and New Treatment Options.

    Get PDF
    The mechanisms leading to disability and the long-term efficacy and safety of disease modifying drugs (DMDs) in multiple sclerosis (MS) are unclear. We aimed at building a prospective cohort of MS patients with standardized collection of demographic, clinical, MRI data and body fluids that can be used to develop prognostic indicators and biomarkers of disease evolution and therapeutic response. The Swiss MS Cohort (SMSC) is a prospective observational study performed across seven Swiss MS centers including patients with MS, clinically isolated syndrome (CIS), radiologically isolated syndrome or neuromyelitis optica. Neurological and radiological assessments and biological samples are collected every 6-12 months. We recruited 872 patients (clinically isolated syndrome [CIS] 5.5%, relapsing-remitting MS [RRMS] 85.8%, primary progressive MS [PPMS] 3.5%, secondary progressive MS [SPMS] 5.2%) between June 2012 and July 2015. We performed 2,286 visits (median follow-up 398 days) and collected 2,274 serum, plasma and blood samples, 152 cerebrospinal fluid samples and 1,276 brain MRI scans. 158 relapses occurred and expanded disability status scale (EDSS) scores increased in PPMS, SPMS and RRMS patients experiencing relapses. Most RRMS patients were treated with fingolimod (33.4%), natalizumab (24.5%) or injectable DMDs (13.6%). The SMSC will provide relevant information regarding DMDs efficacy and safety and will serve as a comprehensive infrastructure available for nested research projects

    Serum neurofilament light chain for individual prognostication of disease activity in people with multiple sclerosis: a retrospective modelling and validation study

    Get PDF
    Background: Serum neurofilament light chain (sNfL) is a biomarker of neuronal damage that is used not only to monitor disease activity and response to drugs and to prognosticate disease course in people with multiple sclerosis on the group level. The absence of representative reference values to correct for physiological age-dependent increases in sNfL has limited the diagnostic use of this biomarker at an individual level. We aimed to assess the applicability of sNfL for identification of people at risk for future disease activity by establishing a reference database to derive reference values corrected for age and body-mass index (BMI). Furthermore, we used the reference database to test the suitability of sNfL as an endpoint for group-level comparison of effectiveness across disease-modifying therapies. Methods: For derivation of a reference database of sNfL values, a control group was created, comprising participants with no evidence of CNS disease taking part in four cohort studies in Europe and North America. We modelled the distribution of sNfL concentrations in function of physiological age-related increase and BMI-dependent modulation, to derive percentile and Z score values from this reference database, via a generalised additive model for location, scale, and shape. We tested the reference database in participants with multiple sclerosis in the Swiss Multiple Sclerosis Cohort (SMSC). We compared the association of sNfL Z scores with clinical and MRI characteristics recorded longitudinally to ascertain their respective disease prognostic capacity. We validated these findings in an independent sample of individuals with multiple sclerosis who were followed up in the Swedish Multiple Sclerosis registry. Findings: We obtained 10 133 blood samples from 5390 people (median samples per patient 1 [IQR 1–2] in the control group). In the control group, sNfL concentrations rose exponentially with age and at a steeper increased rate after approximately 50 years of age. We obtained 7769 samples from 1313 people (median samples per person 6·0 [IQR 3·0–8·0]). In people with multiple sclerosis from the SMSC, sNfL percentiles and Z scores indicated a gradually increased risk for future acute (eg, relapse and lesion formation) and chronic (disability worsening) disease activity. A sNfL Z score above 1·5 was associated with an increased risk of future clinical or MRI disease activity in all people with multiple sclerosis (odds ratio 3·15, 95% CI 2·35–4·23; p<0·0001) and in people considered stable with no evidence of disease activity (2·66, 1·08–6·55; p=0·034). Increased Z scores outperformed absolute raw sNfL cutoff values for diagnostic accuracy. At the group level, the longitudinal course of sNfL Z score values in people with multiple sclerosis from the SMSC decreased to those seen in the control group with use of monoclonal antibodies (ie, alemtuzumab, natalizumab, ocrelizumab, and rituximab) and, to a lesser extent, oral therapies (ie, dimethyl fumarate, fingolimod, siponimod, and teriflunomide). However, longitudinal sNfL Z scores remained elevated with platform compounds (interferons and glatiramer acetate; p<0·0001 for the interaction term between treatment category and treatment duration). Results were fully supported in the validation cohort (n=4341) from the Swedish Multiple Sclerosis registry. Interpretation: The use of sNfL percentiles and Z scores allows for identification of individual people with multiple sclerosis at risk for a detrimental disease course and suboptimal therapy response beyond clinical and MRI measures, specifically in people with disease activity-free status. Additionally, sNfL might be used as an endpoint for comparing effectiveness across drug classes in pragmatic trials. Funding: Swiss National Science Foundation, Progressive Multiple Sclerosis Alliance, Biogen, Celgene, Novartis, Roche

    A Comparison of Neuroimaging Abnormalities in Multiple Sclerosis, Major Depression and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (Myalgic Encephalomyelitis): is There a Common Cause?

    Get PDF

    ["Numb chin syndrome": first presenting syndrome of multiple sclerosis?]

    No full text
    HISTORY AND CLINICAL FINDINGS: A 34-year-old previously healthy woman presented with a five-day history of subacute onset of a numb chin. Examination on admission revealed isolated hypesthesia on the left side of the chin and lower lip. INVESTIGATIONS: Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) demonstrated a lesion involving the pontine trigeminal fibers and multiple periventricular T2-hyperintense white matter lesions suggestive of inflammatory /demyelinating disease. Cerebrospinal fluid analysis revealed oligoclonal IgG bands (only in cerebrospinal fluid) and an increased IgG index. A follow-up MRI after four months demonstrated new supratentorial brain lesions, confirming a syndrome, highly suggestive of multiple sclerosis as the likely underlying diagnosis. TREATMENT AND FOLLOW-UP: The facial sensory disturbance resolved spontaneously. Prophylactic treatment with interferon-beta was started. CONCLUSION: The numb chin syndrome may be the initial presentation of a clinically isolated syndrome suggestive of multiple sclerosis. Prophylactic immunomodulatory treatment may be started after the suspicion of inflammatory/demyelinating activity is confirmed

    Natalizumab alters transcriptional expression profiles of blood cell subpopulations of multiple sclerosis patients

    No full text
    Natalizumab, the most recently approved treatment for relapsing multiple sclerosis (MS) exerts its action through binding to alpha4 integrins. We studied longitudinally gene expression profiles in peripheral blood of MS patients, treated with natalizumab for more than 2 years. The majority of altered genes relates to immune response, signal transduction, adhesion and metabolism. Not only gene expression relevant for T lymphocytes was altered, but also genes regulating B-lymphocyte, neutrophil and erythrocyte functions. Understanding these different gene effects and their interrelationships will provide more insights into additional mechanisms of action of natalizumab and possibly allow better prediction of adverse events

    Factors influencing patient satisfaction with the first diagnostic consultation in multiple sclerosis: a Swiss Multiple Sclerosis Registry (SMSR) study.

    No full text
    Patient satisfaction is predictive of adherence, malpractice litigation and doctor-switching. To investigate which factors of the first diagnostic consultation (FDC) influence patient satisfaction and which topics persons with multiple sclerosis (PwMS) thought were missing. Using retrospective patient-reported data of the Swiss Multiple Sclerosis Registry from PwMS with relapsing disease onset, we fitted ordered logistic regression models on satisfaction with FDC, with socio-demographic and FDC features as explanatory factors. 386 PwMS diagnosed after 1995 were included. Good satisfaction with the FDC was associated with a conversation more than 20 min [multivariable odds ratio, 95% confidence interval 3.9 (2.42; 6.27)], covering many topics [1.35 (1.19; 1.54) per additional topic], the presence of a significant others [1.74 (1.03; 2.94) ], and shared decision making [3.39 (1.74; 6.59)]. Not receiving a specific diagnosis was main driver for low satisfaction [0.29 (0.15; 0.55)]. Main missing topics concerned long-term consequences (reported by 6.7%), psychological aspects (6.2%) and how to obtain support and further information (5.2%). A conversation of more than 20 min covering many MS relevant topics, a clear communication of the diagnosis, the presence of a close relative or significant other, as well as shared decision making enhanced patient satisfaction with the FDC. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02980640

    Multiple Sclerosis Severity Scale and whole-brain N-acetylaspartate concentration for patients' assessment

    No full text
    BACKGROUND: Predicting multiple sclerosis (MS) course is highly desirable but lacking. OBJECTIVE: To test whether the MS Severity Scale (MSSS) and global neuronal viability, assessed through the quantification of the whole-brain N-acetylaspartate concentration, (WBNAA) concur or complement the assessment of individual patient's disease course. METHODS: The MSSS and average WBNAA loss rate (ΔWBNAA, extrapolated based on one current measurement and assumption that at disease onset neural sparing was similar to healthy controls, obtained with proton magnetic resonance (MR) spectroscopy and MRI) from 61 MS patients (18 male and 43 female) with long (15 years or more) disease duration were retrospectively examined. Twenty seven patients exhibited a “benign” disease course, characterized by an Expanded Disease Status Scale score (EDSS) of less than 3.0; and 34 were “non-benign:” EDSS score higher than 3.0. RESULTS: The two cohorts were indistinguishable in age and disease duration. Benign patients' EDSS and MSSS (2.1±0.7, 1.15±0.60) were significantly lower than non-benign (4.6±1.0, 3.6±1.2; both p<10(−4)). Their respective average ΔWBNAA, 0.10±0.16 and 0.11±0.12 mM/year, however, were not significantly different (p>0.7). While MSSS is both sensitive to (92.6%) and specific for (97.0%) benign MS, ΔWBNAA is only sensitive (92.6%) but not specific (2.9%). CONCLUSION: Since the WBNAA loss rate is similar in both phenotypes, the only difference between them is their clinical classification, characterized by MSSS and EDSS. This may indicate that “benign” MS probably reflects fortuitous sparing of clinically eloquent brain regions and better utilization of brain plasticity

    Factors influencing patient satisfaction with the first diagnostic consultation in multiple sclerosis: a Swiss Multiple Sclerosis Registry (SMSR) study

    Full text link
    BACKGROUND: Patient satisfaction is predictive of adherence, malpractice litigation and doctor-switching. OBJECTIVE: To investigate which factors of the first diagnostic consultation (FDC) influence patient satisfaction and which topics persons with multiple sclerosis (PwMS) thought were missing. METHODS: Using retrospective patient-reported data of the Swiss Multiple Sclerosis Registry from PwMS with relapsing disease onset, we fitted ordered logistic regression models on satisfaction with FDC, with socio-demographic and FDC features as explanatory factors. RESULTS: 386 PwMS diagnosed after 1995 were included. Good satisfaction with the FDC was associated with a conversation more than 20 min [multivariable odds ratio, 95% confidence interval 3.9 (2.42; 6.27)], covering many topics [1.35 (1.19; 1.54) per additional topic], the presence of a significant others [1.74 (1.03; 2.94) ], and shared decision making [3.39 (1.74; 6.59)]. Not receiving a specific diagnosis was main driver for low satisfaction [0.29 (0.15; 0.55)]. Main missing topics concerned long-term consequences (reported by 6.7%), psychological aspects (6.2%) and how to obtain support and further information (5.2%). CONCLUSIONS: A conversation of more than 20 min covering many MS relevant topics, a clear communication of the diagnosis, the presence of a close relative or significant other, as well as shared decision making enhanced patient satisfaction with the FDC. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02980640
    corecore