| Literature DB >> 32386427 |
Charles B Malpas1,2, Ali Manouchehrinia3, Sifat Sharmin1,2, Izanne Roos1,2, Dana Horakova4, Eva Kubala Havrdova4, Maria Trojano5, Guillermo Izquierdo6, Sara Eichau6, Roberto Bergamaschi7, Patrizia Sola8, Diana Ferraro8,9, Alessandra Lugaresi10,11, Alexandre Prat12, Marc Girard12, Pierre Duquette12, Pierre Grammond13, Francois Grand'Maison14, Serkan Ozakbas15, Vincent Van Pesch16,17, Franco Granella18, Raymond Hupperts19, Eugenio Pucci20, Cavit Boz21, Youssef Sidhom22, Riadh Gouider23, Daniele Spitaleri24, Aysun Soysal25, Thor Petersen26, Freek Verheul27, Rana Karabudak28, Recai Turkoglu29, Cristina Ramo-Tello30, Murat Terzi31, Edgardo Cristiano32, Mark Slee33, Pamela McCombe34,35, Richard Macdonell36, Yara Fragoso37, Javier Olascoaga38, Ayse Altintas39, Tomas Olsson40, Helmut Butzkueven41,42,43, Jan Hillert40, Tomas Kalincik1,2.
Abstract
Patients with the 'aggressive' form of multiple sclerosis accrue disability at an accelerated rate, typically reaching Expanded Disability Status Score (EDSS) ≥ 6 within 10 years of symptom onset. Several clinicodemographic factors have been associated with aggressive multiple sclerosis, but less research has focused on clinical markers that are present in the first year of disease. The development of early predictive models of aggressive multiple sclerosis is essential to optimize treatment in this multiple sclerosis subtype. We evaluated whether patients who will develop aggressive multiple sclerosis can be identified based on early clinical markers. We then replicated this analysis in an independent cohort. Patient data were obtained from the MSBase observational study. Inclusion criteria were (i) first recorded disability score (EDSS) within 12 months of symptom onset; (ii) at least two recorded EDSS scores; and (iii) at least 10 years of observation time, based on time of last recorded EDSS score. Patients were classified as having 'aggressive multiple sclerosis' if all of the following criteria were met: (i) EDSS ≥ 6 reached within 10 years of symptom onset; (ii) EDSS ≥ 6 confirmed and sustained over ≥6 months; and (iii) EDSS ≥ 6 sustained until the end of follow-up. Clinical predictors included patient variables (sex, age at onset, baseline EDSS, disease duration at first visit) and recorded relapses in the first 12 months since disease onset (count, pyramidal signs, bowel-bladder symptoms, cerebellar signs, incomplete relapse recovery, steroid administration, hospitalization). Predictors were evaluated using Bayesian model averaging. Independent validation was performed using data from the Swedish Multiple Sclerosis Registry. Of the 2403 patients identified, 145 were classified as having aggressive multiple sclerosis (6%). Bayesian model averaging identified three statistical predictors: age > 35 at symptom onset, EDSS ≥ 3 in the first year, and the presence of pyramidal signs in the first year. This model significantly predicted aggressive multiple sclerosis [area under the curve (AUC) = 0.80, 95% confidence intervals (CIs): 0.75, 0.84, positive predictive value = 0.15, negative predictive value = 0.98]. The presence of all three signs was strongly predictive, with 32% of such patients meeting aggressive disease criteria. The absence of all three signs was associated with a 1.4% risk. Of the 556 eligible patients in the Swedish Multiple Sclerosis Registry cohort, 34 (6%) met criteria for aggressive multiple sclerosis. The combination of all three signs was also predictive in this cohort (AUC = 0.75, 95% CIs: 0.66, 0.84, positive predictive value = 0.15, negative predictive value = 0.97). Taken together, these findings suggest that older age at symptom onset, greater disability during the first year, and pyramidal signs in the first year are early indicators of aggressive multiple sclerosis.Entities:
Keywords: aggressive disease; disability; multiple sclerosis; precision medicine; prediction
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32386427 DOI: 10.1093/brain/awaa081
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain ISSN: 0006-8950 Impact factor: 13.501