| Literature DB >> 35173664 |
Helen Tremlett1, Kassandra L Munger2, Naila Makhani3.
Abstract
A growing body of work points toward the existence of a clinically symptomatic prodromal phase in multiple sclerosis (MS) that might span 5-10 years or more. A prodrome is an early set of signs or symptoms predating the onset of classical disease, which in turn predates a definitive diagnosis. Evidence for a prodromal phase in MS could have major implications for prevention, earlier recognition and treatment, as well as an improved disease course or prognosis. This Perspective provides a succinct overview of the recent advances in our understanding of the MS prodrome and current key challenges. Many of the MS prodromal features characterized thus far are non-specific and are common in the general population; no single feature alone is sufficient to identify an individual with prodromal MS. Biomarkers may increase specificity and accuracy for detecting individuals in the MS prodromal phase, but are yet to be discovered or formally validated. Progress made in the elucidation of prodromal phases in other neurological and immune-mediated diseases suggests that these barriers can be overcome. Therefore, while knowledge of a prodromal phase in MS remains nascent, how best to move from the rapidly growing evidence to research-related action is critical. Immediate implications include refining the concept of the MS continuum to include a prodromal phase. This will help inform the true "at risk" period when considering exposures that might cause MS. Major long-term implications include the earlier recognition of MS, improved prognosis, through earlier disease management, and the future possibility of MS disease prevention.Entities:
Keywords: multiple sclerosis; preclinical; prevention; prodrome; risk
Year: 2022 PMID: 35173664 PMCID: PMC8841819 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2021.761408
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.086
Figure 1The MS continuum, a proposed timeline: the at risk period, the prodrome, and potential for prevention.
Actionable evidence and the MS prodrome: from general to specific examples.
| Clinical aspects of the MS prodrome | |
| Evidence | Clinical features of the MS prodrome can be objectively measured 5–10 years before classical MS onset ( |
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| Evidence | At the population-level, specific clinical features (often derived from health administrative data or medical records) are more common for MS cases at least 5 years before MS symptom onset, and possibly up to 20 years in PP MS, relative to population controls ( |
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| Evidence | Features of the MS prodrome may differ by sex, age and disease course ( |
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| Evidence | Some clinical features captured before MS symptom onset ( |
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| Biomarkers of the MS prodrome | |
| Evidence | Many individuals with radiologically isolated syndrome have symptoms that overlap with prodromal MS and subsequently develop classical MS symptom onset ( |
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| Evidence | Serum neurofilament light is elevated up to 6 years before MS symptom onset ( |
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| Risk factor (trigger) or prodromal feature? | |
| Evidence | Many studies focus on exposures during the few years before reported MS symptoms onset or MS diagnosis |
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| Prodromal phases in other diseases and implications for MS | |
| Evidence | Criteria exist to identify other prodromal diseases; e.g., validated research criteria to identify likely prodromal Parkinson's disease ( |
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