| Literature DB >> 25921037 |
L Pandit1, N Asgari2, M Apiwattanakul3, J Palace4, F Paul5, M I Leite4, I Kleiter6, T Chitnis7.
Abstract
The comparative clinical and demographic features of neuromyelitis optica (NMO) are not well known. In this review we analyzed peer-reviewed publications for incidence and prevalence, clinical phenotypes, and demographic features of NMO. Population-based studies from Europe, South East and Southern Asia, the Caribbean, and Cuba suggest that the incidence and prevalence of NMO ranges from 0.05-0.4 and 0.52-4.4 per 100,000, respectively. Mean age at onset (32.6-45.7) and median time to first relapse (8-12 months) was similar. Most studies reported an excess of disease in women and a relapsing course, particularly in anti-aquaporin 4 antibody (anti AQP4-IgG)-positive patients. Ethnicity may have a bearing on disease phenotype and clinical outcome. Despite limitations inherent to the review process, themes noted in clinical and demographic features of NMO among different populations promote a more global understanding of NMO and strategies to address it.Entities:
Keywords: NMO; demographics; epidemiology; incidence; prevalence
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25921037 PMCID: PMC4463026 DOI: 10.1177/1352458515572406
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mult Scler ISSN: 1352-4585 Impact factor: 6.312
Comparative Incidence and prevalence of NMO from recently published studies.
| Country | Diagnostic criteria | Source of data | No of cases/population at risk | Ethnicity | Crude incidence/100,000 | Crude prevalence/100,000 | F/M |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| French West Indies Cabre et al.,[ | Wingerchuk 1999, 2006 | Hospitals, clinics, neurologists, other specialists, registry, patient association | 20/ 683,000 | Afro-Caribbean Hispanic | 0.19 (0.15–0.23) | 2.53 | All female |
| Cuba Cabrera Gomez et al.,[ | Wingerchuk 1999 | Hospitals, clinics, other specialists, neurologists, clinical trial data, MS data base, media | 11/11,177,743 | Caucasian Afro-Caribbean | 0.053 (0.04–0.07) | 0.54 (0.39–0.69) | 7.3:1 |
| Denmark Asgari et al.,[ | Wingerchuk 2006 | National Registry, Hospitals, MS-clinics, neurologists, other specialists, administrative databases | 42/952,000 NMO=36, NMOSD=6 | 99% Caucasian | 0.04 | 4 (3.1–5.7) | 2.8:1 |
| Wales Cossburn et al.,[ | Wingerchuk 2006 | Hospital records, Neurologists, Regional database, Lab records | 14/717,572 NMO=11, NMOSD=3 | 100% Caucasian | – | 1.96 (1.22–2.97) | 6:1 |
| Japan Houzen et al.,[ | Wingerchuk 2006 | Inpatient and outpatient records of MS-related institutions | 3/352,353 | Japanese | NA | 0.9 (0.2–2.5) | All female |
| UK Jacob et al.,[ | Wingerchuk 2006 | Hospital records, regional general hospital records, lab records | 8/1,145,322 NMO=5 NMOSD=3 | Caucasian 7 (88%) African 1(12%) | 0.08 (0.03–0.16) | 0.72 (0.3–0.16) | 3.5:1 |
| India Pandit et al.,[ | Wingerchuk 2006 | Disease registry, inpatient and outpatient records of teaching hospitals and clinics, MRI centers | 11/ 419,306 | South Indians | NA | 2.6 | 1.2:1 |
Clinical and demographic features of NMO[#].
| Country/ study | Wingerchuk diagnostic criteria | Cases selected | Total cases & gender (F/M) | Ethnicity | Mean Age at onset & range | Median time to 1st relapse (months) | First attack | AQP4 | Median follow-up | Median EDSS | Mortality disease related |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| French West Indies Cabre et al.,[ | Wingerchuk 1999, 2006 | NMO | 96 (88F/8M) | Hispanic Afro-Caribbean | 29.5 (11–74) | 11.5 (1–300) | NA | 32% | 9.5 (1–40) years | NA | 24 (25%) |
| Brazil Bichuetti,[ | 1999, 2006 | NMO relapsing | 41 (29F/ 12M) | NA | 32.6 (20–60) | NA | TM 41% ON34%ON+TM 24% | 41% | 52 (7–200) months | NA | 4 (14.3%) |
| France Collongues et a1.,[ | 2006 | NMO, NMOSD | 125 (94F/31M) | White=87% other=13% | 34.7 (4–66) | 12 (30.8–43.1) | TM 45.6% ON 36.8% | 54% | 8.7 (0.1–39.5) years | NA | 4 (3.2%) |
| Denmark Asgari et al.,[ | 2006 | NMO NMOSD | 42 (31F/11M) | White=99% | 35.6 (15–64) | NA | TM 59.5% ON 35.7% | 62.0% | 6.5 (2–10) years | 6.5 (1.0–9) | 3 (7.1%) |
| Germany Jarius et al.,[ | 2006 | NMO, NMOSD | 175 (150F/25M) | White =100% | 39 (10-81) | 8.5 (1–216) | ON 58% ON+TM 8 % | 78.3% | 4.8 (0–390) months | 6.5 (1.5–10) | 5 (2.9%) |
| USA Mealy et al.,[ | 2006 | NMO, NMOSD | 187(162F/25M) | White=89 AA=69 other=29 | 40 | NA | TM 50.2% ON 35.3% | 66.6% | 5.5 (0.2–38) months | NA | NA |
| Korea Kim et al.,[ | 2006 | NMO, NMOSD | 106 (97F/9M) | Korean=100% | NA | 5 (1–74) | NA | 100% | 7.0 (1–24) years | NA | NA |
| India Pandit et al.,[ | 2006 | NMO, NMOSD | 70(30F/40M | South Indians-100% | 37.5 (12–65) | 12 (4–96) | NA | 39% | 4.5 (1–13) years | 5.5 (1.5–10) | 12 (17%) |
| Austria Aboul-Enein et al.,[ | 1999, 2006 (all seropositive ) | NMO, NMOSD | 73 (63/10) | White=100% | 45.7 (12.3–79.6) | NA | ON 54.2% TM 41.7% ON+TM 4.2% | 97% (71/73) | NA | NA | NA |
| Spain Höftberger et al.,[ | 2006 | NMO | 48 (41F/7M) | White=94% Other=6% | 38 (18–73.5) | 8.3 (1–144) | TM 36%; ON 29%; ON+TM 33% | 81% | 69 (1–415) months | 3.8 (0–10) | 2 (4.2%) |
AF: African; AS: Asian; AA: African American; ON: optic neuritis; TM: transverse myelitis; ARR: annualized relapse rate; NA: not available.
percentage of patients who were AQP4-IgG positive among those tested.
Used either Wingerchuk 1999 or 2006 criteria, all others used Wingerchuk 2006 alone.