| Literature DB >> 25355373 |
Jeffrey L Bennett1, Molly Nickerson2, Fiona Costello3, Robert C Sergott4, Jonathan C Calkwood5, Steven L Galetta6, Laura J Balcer6, Clyde E Markowitz7, Timothy Vartanian8, Mark Morrow9, Mark L Moster4, Andrew W Taylor10, Thaddeus W W Pace11, Teresa Frohman12, Elliot M Frohman13.
Abstract
Clinical case reports and prospective trials have demonstrated a reproducible benefit of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis modulation on the rate of recovery from acute inflammatory central nervous system (CNS) demyelination. As a result, corticosteroid preparations and adrenocorticotrophic hormones are the current mainstays of therapy for the treatment of acute optic neuritis (AON) and acute demyelination in multiple sclerosis.Despite facilitating the pace of recovery, HPA axis modulation and corticosteroids have failed to demonstrate long-term benefit on functional recovery. After AON, patients frequently report visual problems, motion perception difficulties and abnormal depth perception despite 'normal' (20/20) vision. In light of this disparity, the efficacy of these and other therapies for acute demyelination require re-evaluation using modern, high-precision paraclinical tools capable of monitoring tissue injury.In no arena is this more amenable than AON, where a new array of tools in retinal imaging and electrophysiology has advanced our ability to measure the anatomic and functional consequences of optic nerve injury. As a result, AON provides a unique clinical model for evaluating the treatment response of the derivative elements of acute inflammatory CNS injury: demyelination, axonal injury and neuronal degeneration.In this article, we examine current thinking on the mechanisms of immune injury in AON, discuss novel technologies for the assessment of optic nerve structure and function, and assess current and future treatment modalities. The primary aim is to develop a framework for rigorously evaluating interventions in AON and to assess their ability to preserve tissue architecture, re-establish normal physiology and restore optimal neurological function. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions.Entities:
Keywords: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS; NEUROOPHTHALMOLOGY; VISION
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25355373 PMCID: PMC4414747 DOI: 10.1136/jnnp-2014-308185
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry ISSN: 0022-3050 Impact factor: 10.154
Investigations into the early treatment for AON
| Intervention | Participants | Outcome | Side effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ACTH 40 IU/day×30 days (n=25) | 50 patients with acute retrobulbar neuritis | Patients treated with ACTH recovered ‘more quickly and more completely’ (high-contrast visual acuity) | Facial or ankle oedema | |
| ACTH 40 IU/day×30 days (n=27) | 54 patients with acute optic neuritis (4 patients with MS in ACTH group and 5 in placebo group) | No differences in high-contrast visual acuity, visual field, macular threshold or colour vision | Weight gain, facial oedema, ankle oedema, acne, depression, rash | |
| EPO 33 000 IU/day×3 days+IVMP 1000 mg/day×3 days (n=21) | 40 patients with first episode optic neuritis | EPO-treated patients had less RNFL thinning, smaller reduction in retrobulbar diameter of optic nerve and shorter VEP latencies; differences in visual function did not reach significance | IVMP—hot flashes, facial flushing, mood changes and hyperglycaemia attributed to IVMP | |
| IVMP 1000 mg/day×3 days+oral prednisone 1 mg/kg×11 days (n=151) | 457 patients with acute optic neuritis across 15 clinical centres | The group receiving IVMP recovered visual function faster than the group receiving oral prednisone only; at 6 months the IVMP group had better contrast sensitivity, colour vision, a trend towards better visual field, but not better visual acuity | IVMP—transient depression, acute pancreatitis | |
| IVMP 1000 mg /day×3 days (n=33) | 66 patients with first episode acute unilateral optic neuritis | Optic nerve atrophy at 6 months was similar for placebo and IVMP-treated groups | Not reported | |
| Plasma exchange×5 cycles (n=23) | 10 patients with RRMS, 1 patient with NMO, 12 patients with optic neuritis as a clinically isolated syndrome | 70% of patients responded to plasma exchange on measures of visual acuity; no control group was included in the study | Hypofibrinogenaemia | |
| IVIg 400 mg/kg/day×5 days+IVIg 400 mg/kg/day once monthly for 5 months (n=23) | 47 patients with steroid-refractory optic neuritis in MS | A greater proportion of the IVIg-treated patients demonstrated improvement in their visual acuity compared with untreated control participant | Generalised headaches, infusion reactions | |
| Case report of 23 patients treated with 5 cycles of plasma exchange | 23 patients with steroid-unresponsive optic neuritis associated with other conditions (NMO, MS, CIS) in some cases | 70% of patients showed some improvement | ||
| IVMP 250 mg every 6 h×3 days+oral prednisone 1 mg/kg×11 days+memantine (n=29) | 60 patients with first attack of AON; visual symptoms <8 days | Greater RNFL thickness (overall, nasal, inferior, and superior quadrants) in memantine-treated group; no difference in visual function | None reported |
ACTH, adrenocorticotropic hormone; AON, acute optic neuritis; EPO, erythropoietin; IVIg, intravenous immunoglobulin; IVMP, intravenous methylprednisolone; MS, multiple sclerosis; NMO, neuromyelitis optica; RNFL, retinal nerve fibre layer; RRMS, relapsing remitting MS.
Clinical measures of optic nerve function and structure
| Structure/ function | Investigational technique | Measurement | Change in optic neuritis affected eyes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Function | High-contrast visual acuity | High-contrast resolution | Worsens acutely and improves over time |
| Function | Low-contrast visual acuity | Low-contrast resolution | Worsens acutely and improves over time |
| Function | Colour vision | Blue-yellow and red-green defects discrimination | Abnormalities in colour discrimination that correlate with RNFL thickness |
| Function | ERG | Physiological integrity of cone and rod responses | No difference in full field ERG. |
| Function | VEP | Demyelination of the visual pathway | Latency delay that improves in a fraction of affected individuals over time |
| Structure | Fundus photography | Shows structure of inner surface of the eye (retina, optic disc, macula and fundus) | Optic disc pallor, atrophy |
| Structure | MRI | Optic nerve atrophy, tissue injury, blood-brain barrier breakdown | |
| Structure | DTI | Imaging of white matter damage and integrity of visual white matter tracts | Axonal and demyelinating injury to optic nerve and postgeniculate white matter |
| Structure | MTR | Myelination status and axonal content of the optic nerve | Demyelinating injury |
| Structure | SLP | Measure RNFL thickness | Shows a decrease in retardance in eyes with axonal injury associated with visual field loss |
| Structure | OCT | Measure RNFL thickness | RNFL thickness decreases with MS and decreases further with MS-related ON |
| Function | mfERG | Measures the transformation of slow membrane conduction in unmyelinated ganglion cell axons to fast saltatory conduction in myelinated axons | |
| Function | ONHC of the mfERG | Transient effects of conduction block due to reversible demyelination | Loss of this response signifies loss of myelination at the lamina cribosa and disrupted transition from membrane to saltatory transmission |
| Function | mfVEP | Sensitive measure of axonal damage | Abnormal latency |
| Function | Pupillometry | Measurement of pupil diameter as an indicator of neural inhibitory mechanisms | Pupillary reflex metrics impaired |
DTI, diffusion tensor imaging; ERG, electroretinogram; mfERG, multifocal ERG; mfVEP, multifocal VEP; MS, multiple sclerosis; MTR, magnetisation transfer imaging ratios; OCT, optical coherence tomography; ONHC, optic nerve head component; RNFL, retinal nerve fibre layer; MTR, magnetisation transfer imaging ratios; SLP, scanning laster polarimetry; VEP, visual evoked potential.
Figure 1Schematic of the retina, optic nerve and postchiasmal afferent visual system. Potential therapeutic targets (blue text) and measures of visual function (green text) are illustrated above and below the diagram, respectively (RNFL, retinal nerve fibre layer; ERG, electroretinogram; OCT, optical coherence tomography; ONHC, optic nerve head component; SLP, scanning laster polarimetry; VEP, visual evoked potential; DTI, diffusion tensor imaging; MTR, magnetisation transfer imaging ratios).