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Silent progression in disease activity–free relapsing multiple sclerosis

Authors :
Gina Kirkish
Jorge R. Oksenberg
Alyssa H. Zhu
Jill A. Hollenbach
Ari J. Green
Nicholas R Ragan
Jeffrey M. Gelfand
Patrick Barba
Roland G. Henry
Stephen L. Hauser
Simone Sacco
Gillian Rush
Scott S. Zamvil
Antje Bischof
Adam Santaniello
Douglas S. Goodin
Michael R. Wilson
Refujia Gomez
Tristan Gundel
Sergio E. Baranzini
Andrew R Romeo
Chao Zhao
Bruce A.C. Cree
Eduardo Caverzasi
Jennifer Graves
Nico Papinutto
Riley Bove
William A. Stern
Carolyn Bevan
Source :
Annals of Neurology
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

Author(s): University of California, San Francisco MS-EPIC Team; Cree, Bruce AC; Hollenbach, Jill A; Bove, Riley; Kirkish, Gina; Sacco, Simone; Caverzasi, Eduardo; Bischof, Antje; Gundel, Tristan; Zhu, Alyssa H; Papinutto, Nico; Stern, William A; Bevan, Carolyn; Romeo, Andrew; Goodin, Douglas S; Gelfand, Jeffrey M; Graves, Jennifer; Green, Ari J; Wilson, Michael R; Zamvil, Scott S; Zhao, Chao; Gomez, Refujia; Ragan, Nicholas R; Rush, Gillian Q; Barba, Patrick; Santaniello, Adam; Baranzini, Sergio E; Oksenberg, Jorge R; Henry, Roland G; Hauser, Stephen L | Abstract: ObjectiveRates of worsening and evolution to secondary progressive multiple sclerosis (MS) may be substantially lower in actively treated patients compared to natural history studies from the pretreatment era. Nonetheless, in our recently reported prospective cohort, more than half of patients with relapsing MS accumulated significant new disability by the 10th year of follow-up. Notably, "no evidence of disease activity" at 2 years did not predict long-term stability. Here, we determined to what extent clinical relapses and radiographic evidence of disease activity contribute to long-term disability accumulation.MethodsDisability progression was defined as an increase in Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) of 1.5, 1.0, or 0.5 (or greater) from baseline EDSS = 0, 1.0-5.0, and 5.5 or higher, respectively, assessed from baseline to year 5 (±1 year) and sustained to year 10 (±1 year). Longitudinal analysis of relative brain volume loss used a linear mixed model with sex, age, disease duration, and HLA-DRB1*15:01 as covariates.ResultsRelapses were associated with a transient increase in disability over 1-year intervals (p = 0.012) but not with confirmed disability progression (p = 0.551). Relative brain volume declined at a greater rate among individuals with disability progression compared to those who remained stable (p l 0.05).InterpretationLong-term worsening is common in relapsing MS patients, is largely independent of relapse activity, and is associated with accelerated brain atrophy. We propose the term silent progression to describe the insidious disability that accrues in many patients who satisfy traditional criteria for relapsing-remitting MS. Ann Neurol 2019;85:653-666.

Details

ISSN :
15318249 and 03645134
Volume :
85
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....622a6275f08f7003e140d78c0ddd29e1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ana.25463