| Literature DB >> 33611631 |
Dennis Walzl1, Andrew J Solomon2, Jon Stone3.
Abstract
Multiple sclerosis (MS) and functional neurological disorder (FND) are both diagnostically challenging conditions which can present with similar symptoms. We systematically reviewed the literature to identify patients with MS who were misdiagnosed with FND, patients with FND who were misdiagnosed with MS, and reports of patients with both conditions. In addition to FND, we included studies of patients with other functional and psychiatric disorders where these caused symptoms leading to investigation for or a diagnosis of MS, which in a different context would likely have been labeled as FND. Our review suggests that MS is one of the most common causes of misdiagnosis of FND and vice versa. We discuss the clinical errors that appear to result in misdiagnoses, such as over-reliance on psychiatric comorbidity when making a diagnosis of FND or over-reliance on neuroimaging for the diagnosis of MS, and practical ways to avoid them. Comorbidity between these two conditions is also likely common, has been poorly studied, and adds complexity to diagnosis and treatment in patients with both MS and FND. Misdiagnosis and comorbidity in a landscape of emerging evidence-based treatments for both MS and FND are issues not only of clinical importance to the care of these patients, but also to treatment trials, especially of MS, where FND could be a hidden confounder.Entities:
Keywords: Conversion disorder; Functional neurological disorder; Misdiagnosis; Multiple sclerosis; Psychogenic
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33611631 PMCID: PMC8782816 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-021-10436-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 4.849
Studies reporting patients with multiple sclerosis who were initially misdiagnosed with functional neurological disorder (FND), functional disorder or psychiatric disorder
| Cohort studies of multiple sclerosis | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study | Year data collected | Methodology | Misdiagnosed total | MS misdiagnoses which were: | |
| FND, functional disorder or psychiatric disorder | FND alone | ||||
| Skegg et al. [ | 1976 and 1981 | Review of the psychiatry records of 91 patients with MS in New Zealand | 8/91 (9%)a | 8/8 (100%) | 4/8 (50%) |
| Levin et al. [ | 2003 | Survey of 50 patients with MS in Israel regarding misdiagnosis before confirmation of MS | 29/50 (58%) | 9/29 (31%) | Not stated |
| Aires et al. [ | 2010–2015 | Review of causes of diagnostic delay in 285 patients with MS in Portugal | 128/285 (45%) | 30/128 (23%) | Not stated |
| Ivaniuk et al. [ | 2007–2018 | Review of records of 128 patients with MS in Ukraine for initial misdiagnosis | 53/128 (41%) | 7/53 (13%) | Not stated |
aThis study only looked at diagnostic error in patients who had attended psychiatry clinics
Studies reporting final diagnoses in patients referred for evaluation to tertiary MS centers
| Study | Year data collected | Centre where evaluation of MS took place | Patients with diagnoses other than MS | Proportion of diagnoses other than MS which were FND, functional disorder or psychiatric diagnoses |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Murray and Murray [ | 1979–1983 | Tertiary center, Canada | 52/400 (13%) | “Psychiatric conditions”: 14/52 (27%) [anxiety ( |
| Nielsen et al. [ | 1998–2001 | Tertiary center, Netherlands | 116/377 (31%) | No diagnoses of FND or psychiatric disorders “No certain diagnosis could be made”: 87/116 |
| Carmosino et al. [ | 2001–2003 | Tertiary center, United States | 186/281 (66%) | “Possible psychiatric”: 63/186 (34%) [somatoform ( |
| Rolak and Fleming [ | 2004–2007 | Tertiary center, United States | 70/142 (49%) | “Psychiatric”: 53/70 (76%) |
| Bichuetti et al. [ | 1994–2013 | Tertiary center, Brazil | 495/1599 (31%) | Not specified “Other diagnosis” 108/495 |
| Yamout et al. [ | 2011–2016 | Tertiary centers, Lebanon and Kuwait | 131/431 (30%) | “Psychogenic”: 19/131 (15%) |
| Calabrese et al. [ | 2014 | 22 tertiary centers, Italy | 163/667 (24%) | Total: 9/163 (6%) [“psychiatric” ( |
| Clarke et al. [ | 2015–2018 | Tertiary center, United Kingdom | 23/35 (66%) | FND or functional sensory symptoms: 3/23 (13%) |
Studies reporting patients with functional or psychiatric disorder misdiagnosed as MS
| Study | Year data collected | Methodology | Total misdiagnosed | Proportion misdiagnosed with FND, functional disorder or psychiatric disorder |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hankey and Stewart-Wynne [ | 1981 | Reviewed records of patients either diagnosed with or told they might have MS | 69/387 (17%) | All categories: 35/69 (51%) Functional disorder ( |
| Rudick et al. [ | 1986 | Case series of ten patients who were misdiagnosed with MS | 10 (n/a) | “Hysteria”: 1/10 (10%) |
| Poser [ | 1997 | Review of patients with MS diagnosis referred for second opinion | 130/366 (36%) | All categories: 36/130 (28%) Chronic fatigue syndrome ( |
| Walzl et al. [ | 2002–2004 | Prospective cohort study of new neurology outpatients including 209 with MS | 9/209 (4%) | All categories: 3/9 (33%) Anxiety ( |
| Solomon et al. [ | 2014–2015 | Multicenter case series comprised of patients misdiagnosed with MS | 110 (n/a) | All categories: 28/110 (25%) Fibromyalgia ( |
| De Seabra et al. [ | 2009–2016 | Retrospective study reviewing patient records at an MS clinic between 2009 and 2016 by applying 2010 McDonald criteria | 44/635 (7%) | All Categories: 2/44 (5%) Dissociative disorder ( |
| Kaisey et al. [ | 2016–2017 | Patients with a prior established diagnosis of MS were reviewed in clinic and evaluated for fulfilment of 2010 McDonald criteria | 43/241 (18%) | Fibromyalgia: 2/43 (5%) |