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The Acute Optic Neuritis Network (ACON): Study protocol of a non-interventional prospective multicenter study on diagnosis and treatment of acute optic neuritis

Authors :
Susanna Asseyer
Nasrin Asgari
Jeffrey Bennett
Omer Bialer
Yolanda Blanco
Francesca Bosello
Anna Camos-Carreras
Edgar Carnero Contentti
Sara Carta
John Chen
Claudia Chien
Mashina Chomba
Russell C. Dale
Josep Dalmau
Kristina Feldmann
Eoin P. Flanagan
Caroline Froment Tilikete
Carolina Garcia-Alfonso
Joachim Havla
Mark Hellmann
Ho Jin Kim
Philipp Klyscz
Frank Konietschke
Chiara La Morgia
Marco Lana-Peixoto
Maria Isabel Leite
Netta Levin
Michael Levy
Sara Llufriu
Pablo Lopez
Itay Lotan
Alessandra Lugaresi
Romain Marignier
Sara Mariotto
Susan P. Mollan
Cassandra Ocampo
Frederike Cosima Oertel
Maja Olszewska
Jacqueline Palace
Lekha Pandit
José Luis Peralta Uribe
Sean Pittock
Sudarshini Ramanathan
Natthapon Rattanathamsakul
Albert Saiz
Sara Samadzadeh
Bernardo Sanchez-Dalmau
Deanna Saylor
Michael Scheel
Tanja Schmitz-Hübsch
Jemal Shifa
Sasitorn Siritho
Pia S. Sperber
Prem S. Subramanian
Alon Tiosano
Adi Vaknin-Dembinsky
Alvaro Jose Mejia Vergara
Adi Wilf-Yarkoni
Luis Alfonso Zarco
Hanna G. Zimmermann
Friedemann Paul
Hadas Stiebel-Kalish
Source :
Frontiers in Neurology, Vol 14 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2023.

Abstract

Optic neuritis (ON) often occurs at the presentation of multiple sclerosis (MS), neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders (NMOSD), and myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) antibody-associated disease (MOGAD). The recommended treatment of high-dose corticosteroids for ON is based on a North American study population, which did not address treatment timing or antibody serostatus. The Acute Optic Neuritis Network (ACON) presents a global, prospective, observational study protocol primarily designed to investigate the effect of time to high-dose corticosteroid treatment on 6-month visual outcomes in ON. Patients presenting within 30 days of the inaugural ON will be enrolled. For the primary analysis, patients will subsequently be assigned into the MS-ON group, the aquapotin-4-IgG positive ON (AQP4-IgG+ON) group or the MOG-IgG positive ON (MOG-IgG+ON) group and then further sub-stratified according to the number of days from the onset of visual loss to high-dose corticosteroids (days-to-Rx). The primary outcome measure will be high-contrast best-corrected visual acuity (HC-BCVA) at 6 months. In addition, multimodal data will be collected in subjects with any ON (CIS-ON, MS-ON, AQP4-IgG+ON or MOG-IgG+ON, and seronegative non-MS-ON), excluding infectious and granulomatous ON. Secondary outcomes include low-contrast best-corrected visual acuity (LC-BCVA), optical coherence tomography (OCT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) measurements, serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarkers (AQP4-IgG and MOG-IgG levels, neurofilament, and glial fibrillary protein), and patient reported outcome measures (headache, visual function in daily routine, depression, and quality of life questionnaires) at presentation at 6-month and 12-month follow-up visits. Data will be collected from 28 academic hospitals from Africa, Asia, the Middle East, Europe, North America, South America, and Australia. Planned recruitment consists of 100 MS-ON, 50 AQP4-IgG+ON, and 50 MOG-IgG+ON. This prospective, multimodal data collection will assess the potential value of early high-dose corticosteroid treatment, investigate the interrelations between functional impairments and structural changes, and evaluate the diagnostic yield of laboratory biomarkers. This analysis has the ability to substantially improve treatment strategies and the accuracy of diagnostic stratification in acute demyelinating ON.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov, identifier: NCT05605951.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16642295
Volume :
14
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Frontiers in Neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.5f9ad39795f54fbf9171a0e0c490d165
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2023.1102353