Serum Neurofilament Light Levels May Reflect the Efficacy of MS Treatments

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The possibility of measuring the biomarker in blood may support treatment decisions.

PARIS—It is possible to gauge the effects of disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) for multiple sclerosis (MS) by measuring serum levels of neurofilament light (NFL), according to research presented at the Seventh Joint ECTRIMS–ACTRIMS Meeting. DMTs with greater efficacy appear to be associated with lower serum NFL concentrations.

NFL is a biomarker of axonal damage that has been measured primarily in CSF. In patients with MS, the CSF NFL concentration reflects disease activity and the efficacy of DMTs. Investigators recently developed an ultrasensitive immunoassay that can determine NFL levels in serum.

Lenka Nováková, MD
 To examine the effect of DMTs on serum NFL, Lenka Nováková, MD, a neurologist at Sahlgrenska University Hospital in Gothenburg, Sweden, and colleagues measured serum NFL concentrations in 98 patients with relapsing-remitting MS and 48 patients with progressive MS. Serum samples were obtained before and after treatment, with a median time interval of 12 months between measurements. During the interval, eight patients remained untreated, 10 initiated first-line treatment, 41 initiated second-line treatment, 67 escalated from first-line to second-line treatment, 17 switched from one second-line treatment to a different second-line treatment, two switched from a first-line treatment to a different first-line treatment, and one stopped treatment.

The investigators measured serum NFL concentrations using an in-house ultrasensitive single molecule array immunoassay. The intra-assay and inter-assay coefficient of variation was less than 10%.

Median serum NFL concentration decreased significantly in treatment-naïve patients who initiated second-line DMTs (ie, from 22.7 ng/L to 18.5 ng/L) or escalated from a first-line to a second-line DMT (ie, from 17.9 ng/L to 12.6 ng/L). The median serum NFL concentration was stable in patients who switched between second-line DMTs (14.9 ng/L before the switch and 13.7 ng/L after the switch). Similarly, the median serum NFL concentration did not change significantly in patients who stayed untreated (40.7 ng/L at first measurement and 37.1 ng/L at second measurement), initiated first-line treatment (20.6 ng/L vs 25.5 ng/L), or switched between first-line DMTs (17.3 ng/L vs 16.7 ng/L).

“The goal of DMTs in MS is to reduce axonal degeneration,” said Dr. Nováková. “Repeated analysis of serum NFL may represent a new possibility to monitor this process and may provide objective support in treatment decisions.”

 

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The possibility of measuring the biomarker in blood may support treatment decisions.
The possibility of measuring the biomarker in blood may support treatment decisions.

PARIS—It is possible to gauge the effects of disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) for multiple sclerosis (MS) by measuring serum levels of neurofilament light (NFL), according to research presented at the Seventh Joint ECTRIMS–ACTRIMS Meeting. DMTs with greater efficacy appear to be associated with lower serum NFL concentrations.

NFL is a biomarker of axonal damage that has been measured primarily in CSF. In patients with MS, the CSF NFL concentration reflects disease activity and the efficacy of DMTs. Investigators recently developed an ultrasensitive immunoassay that can determine NFL levels in serum.

Lenka Nováková, MD
 To examine the effect of DMTs on serum NFL, Lenka Nováková, MD, a neurologist at Sahlgrenska University Hospital in Gothenburg, Sweden, and colleagues measured serum NFL concentrations in 98 patients with relapsing-remitting MS and 48 patients with progressive MS. Serum samples were obtained before and after treatment, with a median time interval of 12 months between measurements. During the interval, eight patients remained untreated, 10 initiated first-line treatment, 41 initiated second-line treatment, 67 escalated from first-line to second-line treatment, 17 switched from one second-line treatment to a different second-line treatment, two switched from a first-line treatment to a different first-line treatment, and one stopped treatment.

The investigators measured serum NFL concentrations using an in-house ultrasensitive single molecule array immunoassay. The intra-assay and inter-assay coefficient of variation was less than 10%.

Median serum NFL concentration decreased significantly in treatment-naïve patients who initiated second-line DMTs (ie, from 22.7 ng/L to 18.5 ng/L) or escalated from a first-line to a second-line DMT (ie, from 17.9 ng/L to 12.6 ng/L). The median serum NFL concentration was stable in patients who switched between second-line DMTs (14.9 ng/L before the switch and 13.7 ng/L after the switch). Similarly, the median serum NFL concentration did not change significantly in patients who stayed untreated (40.7 ng/L at first measurement and 37.1 ng/L at second measurement), initiated first-line treatment (20.6 ng/L vs 25.5 ng/L), or switched between first-line DMTs (17.3 ng/L vs 16.7 ng/L).

“The goal of DMTs in MS is to reduce axonal degeneration,” said Dr. Nováková. “Repeated analysis of serum NFL may represent a new possibility to monitor this process and may provide objective support in treatment decisions.”

 

PARIS—It is possible to gauge the effects of disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) for multiple sclerosis (MS) by measuring serum levels of neurofilament light (NFL), according to research presented at the Seventh Joint ECTRIMS–ACTRIMS Meeting. DMTs with greater efficacy appear to be associated with lower serum NFL concentrations.

NFL is a biomarker of axonal damage that has been measured primarily in CSF. In patients with MS, the CSF NFL concentration reflects disease activity and the efficacy of DMTs. Investigators recently developed an ultrasensitive immunoassay that can determine NFL levels in serum.

Lenka Nováková, MD
 To examine the effect of DMTs on serum NFL, Lenka Nováková, MD, a neurologist at Sahlgrenska University Hospital in Gothenburg, Sweden, and colleagues measured serum NFL concentrations in 98 patients with relapsing-remitting MS and 48 patients with progressive MS. Serum samples were obtained before and after treatment, with a median time interval of 12 months between measurements. During the interval, eight patients remained untreated, 10 initiated first-line treatment, 41 initiated second-line treatment, 67 escalated from first-line to second-line treatment, 17 switched from one second-line treatment to a different second-line treatment, two switched from a first-line treatment to a different first-line treatment, and one stopped treatment.

The investigators measured serum NFL concentrations using an in-house ultrasensitive single molecule array immunoassay. The intra-assay and inter-assay coefficient of variation was less than 10%.

Median serum NFL concentration decreased significantly in treatment-naïve patients who initiated second-line DMTs (ie, from 22.7 ng/L to 18.5 ng/L) or escalated from a first-line to a second-line DMT (ie, from 17.9 ng/L to 12.6 ng/L). The median serum NFL concentration was stable in patients who switched between second-line DMTs (14.9 ng/L before the switch and 13.7 ng/L after the switch). Similarly, the median serum NFL concentration did not change significantly in patients who stayed untreated (40.7 ng/L at first measurement and 37.1 ng/L at second measurement), initiated first-line treatment (20.6 ng/L vs 25.5 ng/L), or switched between first-line DMTs (17.3 ng/L vs 16.7 ng/L).

“The goal of DMTs in MS is to reduce axonal degeneration,” said Dr. Nováková. “Repeated analysis of serum NFL may represent a new possibility to monitor this process and may provide objective support in treatment decisions.”

 

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Can a Saliva Test Provide a New Biomarker for MS?

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A new tool promises to evaluate the MS disease state and response to treatment.

PARIS—A noninvasive test that assesses immunoglobulin (Ig) free light chains in saliva may detect immunopathologic changes in the multiple sclerosis (MS) disease state and evaluate response to treatment, according to research presented at the Seventh Joint ECTRIMS–ACTRIMS Meeting. The technique has a specificity of 80% and sensitivity of 89% for diagnosing active MS, said lead author Esther Ganelin-Cohen, MD, PhD, Director of the Neuro-Immunology Clinic at Schneider Children’s Medical Center of Israel, Petach Tikva, Israel, on behalf of her research colleagues.

The complexity of MS requires different biomarkers to evaluate the various aspects of the disease. CSF analysis is commonly used, but the need for lumbar puncture makes CSF tests impractical for monitoring disease activity and response to treatment. In their search for noninvasive diagnostic methods, Dr. Ganelin-Cohen and colleagues hypothesized that Ig free light chain analysis in saliva may help detect immunopathologic changes in patients with MS. This assumption relied on prior reports indicating changes in mucosal immunity in patients with MS, and on a growing body of evidence for a potential diagnostic role of free light chains in MS.

A new technique based on Western blot analysis was developed to study kappa (k) and lambda (λ) free light chain monomers and dimers in saliva. Normal saliva showed high proportion of dimeric free light chains compared to that in the serum. “This finding might be explained by structural peculiarities of Ig in saliva,” Dr. Ganelin-Cohen said. “In contrast to most serum Ig, saliva IgA2 molecules incorporate the dimeric (not monomeric) light chains that may require production of larger amounts of dimeric light chains by the B cells synthesizing IgA2.”

Dr. Ganelin-Cohen and her colleagues compared free light chain monomer and dimer patterns in the saliva of patients with MS with those in healthy subjects. The intensity of the immunoreactive free light chain was measured, and the free light chain indices accounting for the total free light chain level and for monomer/dimer ratios (k monomer/dimer index and λ monomer/dimer index) were computed.

Most patients with active MS showed abnormally high free light chain levels, or a high proportion of monomeric free light chains. The reasons for such pathologic free light chain changes in patients with active MS are not clear, but they might be due to peripheral B lymphocytes penetrating oral mucosa and producing larger amounts of monomeric free light chains. Statistical analysis of these indices showed significant differences not only between patients with active MS (n = 27) and healthy subjects (n = 28), but also between patients with active MS (n = 27) and those in remission (n = 58).

Cut-off values were established to distinguish a healthy state from the pathologic conditions in MS: total free light chain level index = 17, k monomer/dimer index = 4.0, λ monomer/dimer index = 2.4. Most patients with active MS showed free light chain indices above these cut-off values.

The high specificity and sensitivity of the technique for diagnosing active MS enable this test to become a new noninvasive complementary tool to evaluate MS, Dr. Ganelin-Cohen and colleagues concluded.

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A new tool promises to evaluate the MS disease state and response to treatment.
A new tool promises to evaluate the MS disease state and response to treatment.

PARIS—A noninvasive test that assesses immunoglobulin (Ig) free light chains in saliva may detect immunopathologic changes in the multiple sclerosis (MS) disease state and evaluate response to treatment, according to research presented at the Seventh Joint ECTRIMS–ACTRIMS Meeting. The technique has a specificity of 80% and sensitivity of 89% for diagnosing active MS, said lead author Esther Ganelin-Cohen, MD, PhD, Director of the Neuro-Immunology Clinic at Schneider Children’s Medical Center of Israel, Petach Tikva, Israel, on behalf of her research colleagues.

The complexity of MS requires different biomarkers to evaluate the various aspects of the disease. CSF analysis is commonly used, but the need for lumbar puncture makes CSF tests impractical for monitoring disease activity and response to treatment. In their search for noninvasive diagnostic methods, Dr. Ganelin-Cohen and colleagues hypothesized that Ig free light chain analysis in saliva may help detect immunopathologic changes in patients with MS. This assumption relied on prior reports indicating changes in mucosal immunity in patients with MS, and on a growing body of evidence for a potential diagnostic role of free light chains in MS.

A new technique based on Western blot analysis was developed to study kappa (k) and lambda (λ) free light chain monomers and dimers in saliva. Normal saliva showed high proportion of dimeric free light chains compared to that in the serum. “This finding might be explained by structural peculiarities of Ig in saliva,” Dr. Ganelin-Cohen said. “In contrast to most serum Ig, saliva IgA2 molecules incorporate the dimeric (not monomeric) light chains that may require production of larger amounts of dimeric light chains by the B cells synthesizing IgA2.”

Dr. Ganelin-Cohen and her colleagues compared free light chain monomer and dimer patterns in the saliva of patients with MS with those in healthy subjects. The intensity of the immunoreactive free light chain was measured, and the free light chain indices accounting for the total free light chain level and for monomer/dimer ratios (k monomer/dimer index and λ monomer/dimer index) were computed.

Most patients with active MS showed abnormally high free light chain levels, or a high proportion of monomeric free light chains. The reasons for such pathologic free light chain changes in patients with active MS are not clear, but they might be due to peripheral B lymphocytes penetrating oral mucosa and producing larger amounts of monomeric free light chains. Statistical analysis of these indices showed significant differences not only between patients with active MS (n = 27) and healthy subjects (n = 28), but also between patients with active MS (n = 27) and those in remission (n = 58).

Cut-off values were established to distinguish a healthy state from the pathologic conditions in MS: total free light chain level index = 17, k monomer/dimer index = 4.0, λ monomer/dimer index = 2.4. Most patients with active MS showed free light chain indices above these cut-off values.

The high specificity and sensitivity of the technique for diagnosing active MS enable this test to become a new noninvasive complementary tool to evaluate MS, Dr. Ganelin-Cohen and colleagues concluded.

PARIS—A noninvasive test that assesses immunoglobulin (Ig) free light chains in saliva may detect immunopathologic changes in the multiple sclerosis (MS) disease state and evaluate response to treatment, according to research presented at the Seventh Joint ECTRIMS–ACTRIMS Meeting. The technique has a specificity of 80% and sensitivity of 89% for diagnosing active MS, said lead author Esther Ganelin-Cohen, MD, PhD, Director of the Neuro-Immunology Clinic at Schneider Children’s Medical Center of Israel, Petach Tikva, Israel, on behalf of her research colleagues.

The complexity of MS requires different biomarkers to evaluate the various aspects of the disease. CSF analysis is commonly used, but the need for lumbar puncture makes CSF tests impractical for monitoring disease activity and response to treatment. In their search for noninvasive diagnostic methods, Dr. Ganelin-Cohen and colleagues hypothesized that Ig free light chain analysis in saliva may help detect immunopathologic changes in patients with MS. This assumption relied on prior reports indicating changes in mucosal immunity in patients with MS, and on a growing body of evidence for a potential diagnostic role of free light chains in MS.

A new technique based on Western blot analysis was developed to study kappa (k) and lambda (λ) free light chain monomers and dimers in saliva. Normal saliva showed high proportion of dimeric free light chains compared to that in the serum. “This finding might be explained by structural peculiarities of Ig in saliva,” Dr. Ganelin-Cohen said. “In contrast to most serum Ig, saliva IgA2 molecules incorporate the dimeric (not monomeric) light chains that may require production of larger amounts of dimeric light chains by the B cells synthesizing IgA2.”

Dr. Ganelin-Cohen and her colleagues compared free light chain monomer and dimer patterns in the saliva of patients with MS with those in healthy subjects. The intensity of the immunoreactive free light chain was measured, and the free light chain indices accounting for the total free light chain level and for monomer/dimer ratios (k monomer/dimer index and λ monomer/dimer index) were computed.

Most patients with active MS showed abnormally high free light chain levels, or a high proportion of monomeric free light chains. The reasons for such pathologic free light chain changes in patients with active MS are not clear, but they might be due to peripheral B lymphocytes penetrating oral mucosa and producing larger amounts of monomeric free light chains. Statistical analysis of these indices showed significant differences not only between patients with active MS (n = 27) and healthy subjects (n = 28), but also between patients with active MS (n = 27) and those in remission (n = 58).

Cut-off values were established to distinguish a healthy state from the pathologic conditions in MS: total free light chain level index = 17, k monomer/dimer index = 4.0, λ monomer/dimer index = 2.4. Most patients with active MS showed free light chain indices above these cut-off values.

The high specificity and sensitivity of the technique for diagnosing active MS enable this test to become a new noninvasive complementary tool to evaluate MS, Dr. Ganelin-Cohen and colleagues concluded.

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BENEFIT 11: No new safety signals with interferon beta-1b

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BENEFIT 11: No new safety signals with interferon beta-1b

NEW ORLEANS – The long-term safety of interferon beta-1b for the treatment of multiple sclerosis is well established, and 11-year outcomes from the randomized, placebo-controlled BENEFIT trial (BENEFIT 11) provide further support for the existing data.

Eleven years after patients with clinically isolated syndrome were randomized to receive 250 mcg every other day or placebo (with an option at 2 years to switch to active treatment), no new safety signals were found, and the safety profile remained favorable, Dr. Mark S. Freedman of the University of Ottawa and his colleagues reported in a poster at the meeting sponsored by the Americas Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis.

©Eraxion/thinkstockphotos.com

In the 278 of the 468 patients originally enrolled in BENEFIT who were evaluated at 11 years, 107 (38.5%) reported one or more safety events (total, 278). Interferon beta-1b was used continuously during the 2 years prior to the 11-year evaluation in 82 patients (29.5%), and 28 (34.1%) of those reported an adverse event or medical history event (total, 72 events). Of 196 patients not treated continuously with interferon beta-1b in the 2 years prior to BENEFIT 11, 79 (40.3%) reported an adverse event or medical history event (total, 206 events), the investigators said.

The events reported in BENEFIT 11 were consistent with those seen previously in interferon beta-1b–treated patients; back pain was the most commonly reported musculoskeletal/connective tissue adverse event (reported by 2.4% of patients in the continuous treatment group and 2.6% in the remaining patients, and headache was the most common neurologic adverse event (reported by 1.2% and 2.0% of patients in the groups, respectively).

Neoplasms occurred in 3.7% and 3.6%; most were benign.

“Overall, the safety results from BENEFIT 11 supported the already well-established long-term safety profile of interferon beta-1b,” the investigators wrote.

The higher rates of some events in patients without continuous interferon beta-1b treatment may be due to escalation to second-line therapy in some patients who required agents that may be associated with greater frequency of safety events, they explained.

This study was supported by Bayer. Dr. Freedman has received compensation from Actelion, Bayer, Biogen Idec, Chugai, EMD Canada, Genzyme, Merck Serono, Novartis, Roche Canada, Sanofi-Aventis, and Teva Canada Innovation for consulting services. He also participates in a Genzyme-sponsored speakers bureau.

sworcester@frontlinemedcom.com

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NEW ORLEANS – The long-term safety of interferon beta-1b for the treatment of multiple sclerosis is well established, and 11-year outcomes from the randomized, placebo-controlled BENEFIT trial (BENEFIT 11) provide further support for the existing data.

Eleven years after patients with clinically isolated syndrome were randomized to receive 250 mcg every other day or placebo (with an option at 2 years to switch to active treatment), no new safety signals were found, and the safety profile remained favorable, Dr. Mark S. Freedman of the University of Ottawa and his colleagues reported in a poster at the meeting sponsored by the Americas Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis.

©Eraxion/thinkstockphotos.com

In the 278 of the 468 patients originally enrolled in BENEFIT who were evaluated at 11 years, 107 (38.5%) reported one or more safety events (total, 278). Interferon beta-1b was used continuously during the 2 years prior to the 11-year evaluation in 82 patients (29.5%), and 28 (34.1%) of those reported an adverse event or medical history event (total, 72 events). Of 196 patients not treated continuously with interferon beta-1b in the 2 years prior to BENEFIT 11, 79 (40.3%) reported an adverse event or medical history event (total, 206 events), the investigators said.

The events reported in BENEFIT 11 were consistent with those seen previously in interferon beta-1b–treated patients; back pain was the most commonly reported musculoskeletal/connective tissue adverse event (reported by 2.4% of patients in the continuous treatment group and 2.6% in the remaining patients, and headache was the most common neurologic adverse event (reported by 1.2% and 2.0% of patients in the groups, respectively).

Neoplasms occurred in 3.7% and 3.6%; most were benign.

“Overall, the safety results from BENEFIT 11 supported the already well-established long-term safety profile of interferon beta-1b,” the investigators wrote.

The higher rates of some events in patients without continuous interferon beta-1b treatment may be due to escalation to second-line therapy in some patients who required agents that may be associated with greater frequency of safety events, they explained.

This study was supported by Bayer. Dr. Freedman has received compensation from Actelion, Bayer, Biogen Idec, Chugai, EMD Canada, Genzyme, Merck Serono, Novartis, Roche Canada, Sanofi-Aventis, and Teva Canada Innovation for consulting services. He also participates in a Genzyme-sponsored speakers bureau.

sworcester@frontlinemedcom.com

NEW ORLEANS – The long-term safety of interferon beta-1b for the treatment of multiple sclerosis is well established, and 11-year outcomes from the randomized, placebo-controlled BENEFIT trial (BENEFIT 11) provide further support for the existing data.

Eleven years after patients with clinically isolated syndrome were randomized to receive 250 mcg every other day or placebo (with an option at 2 years to switch to active treatment), no new safety signals were found, and the safety profile remained favorable, Dr. Mark S. Freedman of the University of Ottawa and his colleagues reported in a poster at the meeting sponsored by the Americas Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis.

©Eraxion/thinkstockphotos.com

In the 278 of the 468 patients originally enrolled in BENEFIT who were evaluated at 11 years, 107 (38.5%) reported one or more safety events (total, 278). Interferon beta-1b was used continuously during the 2 years prior to the 11-year evaluation in 82 patients (29.5%), and 28 (34.1%) of those reported an adverse event or medical history event (total, 72 events). Of 196 patients not treated continuously with interferon beta-1b in the 2 years prior to BENEFIT 11, 79 (40.3%) reported an adverse event or medical history event (total, 206 events), the investigators said.

The events reported in BENEFIT 11 were consistent with those seen previously in interferon beta-1b–treated patients; back pain was the most commonly reported musculoskeletal/connective tissue adverse event (reported by 2.4% of patients in the continuous treatment group and 2.6% in the remaining patients, and headache was the most common neurologic adverse event (reported by 1.2% and 2.0% of patients in the groups, respectively).

Neoplasms occurred in 3.7% and 3.6%; most were benign.

“Overall, the safety results from BENEFIT 11 supported the already well-established long-term safety profile of interferon beta-1b,” the investigators wrote.

The higher rates of some events in patients without continuous interferon beta-1b treatment may be due to escalation to second-line therapy in some patients who required agents that may be associated with greater frequency of safety events, they explained.

This study was supported by Bayer. Dr. Freedman has received compensation from Actelion, Bayer, Biogen Idec, Chugai, EMD Canada, Genzyme, Merck Serono, Novartis, Roche Canada, Sanofi-Aventis, and Teva Canada Innovation for consulting services. He also participates in a Genzyme-sponsored speakers bureau.

sworcester@frontlinemedcom.com

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Key clinical point: The long-term safety of interferon beta-1b for the treatment of multiple sclerosis is well established, and 11-year outcomes from the randomized, placebo-controlled BENEFIT trial (BENEFIT 11) provide further support for the existing data.

Major finding: 107 of 278 patients reported at least one safety event; no new safety signals were found.

Data source: The 11-year follow-up of 278 patients from the randomized controlled BENEFIT Trial.

Disclosures: This study was supported by Bayer. Dr. Freedman has received compensation from Actelion, Bayer, Biogen Idec, Chugai, EMD Canada, Genzyme, Merck Serono, Novartis, Roche Canada, Sanofi-Aventis, and Teva Canada Innovation for consulting services. He also participates in a Genzyme-sponsored speakers bureau.

Triage MS-related ED visits to reduce unnecessary treatment

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NEW ORLEANS – The majority of multiple sclerosis–related emergency department visits in a recent chart review were related to pseudoflares or MS-related complications, rather than to true MS relapse.

The findings suggest that many diagnostic tests, treatments, and hospital admissions are unnecessary, Dr. Hesham Abboud of the Cleveland Clinic and his colleagues reported in a poster at the meeting held by the Americas Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis.

©EyeMark/thinkstockphotos.com

Of 97 MS-related visits among 75 patients, 33 were for new neurologic symptoms, 29 were for worsening of preexisting symptoms, and 36 were for MS-related complications. New relapse was diagnosed in only 27 visits (27.8%), and urinary tract infections were found in about one-third of patients presenting with either urinary or neurologic symptoms, the investigators said.

New MRIs were ordered in 37 patients (38.1%); 89 emergency department visits (91.7%) resulted in hospital admissions and 40.4% were related to neurology; and steroid treatment was used in 24 visits (24.7%), 7 of which were for worsening of preexisting symptoms, the investigators said.

Of the visits involving new neurologic symptoms, one-third were not from relapse; 59% of the MRIs done in those situations were positive for enhancing or new lesions. Of the visits with worsening preexisting symptoms, only 16.6% were associated with a new relapse, and 28.5% of MRIs done in those situations were positive, the investigators said.

Although many ED visits among MS patients are driven by neurologic complaints, true relapse is rarely present, and not all those with true relapse require hospital admission and steroid treatment, they noted, concluding that developing a care path and triaging system for MS patients in the ED could prevent unnecessary MRIs, steroid treatment, and hospital admissions.

The investigators reported having no disclosures.

sworcester@frontlinemedcom.com

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NEW ORLEANS – The majority of multiple sclerosis–related emergency department visits in a recent chart review were related to pseudoflares or MS-related complications, rather than to true MS relapse.

The findings suggest that many diagnostic tests, treatments, and hospital admissions are unnecessary, Dr. Hesham Abboud of the Cleveland Clinic and his colleagues reported in a poster at the meeting held by the Americas Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis.

©EyeMark/thinkstockphotos.com

Of 97 MS-related visits among 75 patients, 33 were for new neurologic symptoms, 29 were for worsening of preexisting symptoms, and 36 were for MS-related complications. New relapse was diagnosed in only 27 visits (27.8%), and urinary tract infections were found in about one-third of patients presenting with either urinary or neurologic symptoms, the investigators said.

New MRIs were ordered in 37 patients (38.1%); 89 emergency department visits (91.7%) resulted in hospital admissions and 40.4% were related to neurology; and steroid treatment was used in 24 visits (24.7%), 7 of which were for worsening of preexisting symptoms, the investigators said.

Of the visits involving new neurologic symptoms, one-third were not from relapse; 59% of the MRIs done in those situations were positive for enhancing or new lesions. Of the visits with worsening preexisting symptoms, only 16.6% were associated with a new relapse, and 28.5% of MRIs done in those situations were positive, the investigators said.

Although many ED visits among MS patients are driven by neurologic complaints, true relapse is rarely present, and not all those with true relapse require hospital admission and steroid treatment, they noted, concluding that developing a care path and triaging system for MS patients in the ED could prevent unnecessary MRIs, steroid treatment, and hospital admissions.

The investigators reported having no disclosures.

sworcester@frontlinemedcom.com

NEW ORLEANS – The majority of multiple sclerosis–related emergency department visits in a recent chart review were related to pseudoflares or MS-related complications, rather than to true MS relapse.

The findings suggest that many diagnostic tests, treatments, and hospital admissions are unnecessary, Dr. Hesham Abboud of the Cleveland Clinic and his colleagues reported in a poster at the meeting held by the Americas Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis.

©EyeMark/thinkstockphotos.com

Of 97 MS-related visits among 75 patients, 33 were for new neurologic symptoms, 29 were for worsening of preexisting symptoms, and 36 were for MS-related complications. New relapse was diagnosed in only 27 visits (27.8%), and urinary tract infections were found in about one-third of patients presenting with either urinary or neurologic symptoms, the investigators said.

New MRIs were ordered in 37 patients (38.1%); 89 emergency department visits (91.7%) resulted in hospital admissions and 40.4% were related to neurology; and steroid treatment was used in 24 visits (24.7%), 7 of which were for worsening of preexisting symptoms, the investigators said.

Of the visits involving new neurologic symptoms, one-third were not from relapse; 59% of the MRIs done in those situations were positive for enhancing or new lesions. Of the visits with worsening preexisting symptoms, only 16.6% were associated with a new relapse, and 28.5% of MRIs done in those situations were positive, the investigators said.

Although many ED visits among MS patients are driven by neurologic complaints, true relapse is rarely present, and not all those with true relapse require hospital admission and steroid treatment, they noted, concluding that developing a care path and triaging system for MS patients in the ED could prevent unnecessary MRIs, steroid treatment, and hospital admissions.

The investigators reported having no disclosures.

sworcester@frontlinemedcom.com

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Key clinical point: The majority of multiple sclerosis–related emergency department visits in a recent chart review were related to pseudoflares or MS-related complications, rather than true MS relapse.

Major finding: New relapse was diagnosed in only 27 visits (27.8%).

Data source: A retrospective chart review of 75 patients with 97 MS-related ED visits.

Disclosures: The investigators reported having no disclosures.

VIDEO: ACTRIMS Forum focuses on progressive MS

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VIDEO: ACTRIMS Forum focuses on progressive MS

NEW ORLEANS – A focus of the 2016 Americas Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ACTRIMS) Forum is the pathogenic mechanisms involved in progressive forms of MS, including the genetic and environmental underpinnings and the immunopathologic processes involved, according to ACTRIMS president, Dr. Suhayl Dhib-Jalbut.

In particular, the role of B cells in the pathogenesis of progressive disease will be addressed as recent studies targeting B lymphocytes are providing important new information about the importance of B cells in the pathogenesis of progressive MS.

In this video interview, Dr. Dhib-Jalbut, professor and chair of the department of neurology at the Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, N.J., notes that it is hypothesized that in progressive MS, there is a depletion of energy in the central nervous system. Studies of medications that can restore mitochondrial function and energy pools and perhaps have an impact on disease progression will be presented during the forum, he said.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel

sworcester@frontlinemedcom.com

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NEW ORLEANS – A focus of the 2016 Americas Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ACTRIMS) Forum is the pathogenic mechanisms involved in progressive forms of MS, including the genetic and environmental underpinnings and the immunopathologic processes involved, according to ACTRIMS president, Dr. Suhayl Dhib-Jalbut.

In particular, the role of B cells in the pathogenesis of progressive disease will be addressed as recent studies targeting B lymphocytes are providing important new information about the importance of B cells in the pathogenesis of progressive MS.

In this video interview, Dr. Dhib-Jalbut, professor and chair of the department of neurology at the Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, N.J., notes that it is hypothesized that in progressive MS, there is a depletion of energy in the central nervous system. Studies of medications that can restore mitochondrial function and energy pools and perhaps have an impact on disease progression will be presented during the forum, he said.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel

sworcester@frontlinemedcom.com

NEW ORLEANS – A focus of the 2016 Americas Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ACTRIMS) Forum is the pathogenic mechanisms involved in progressive forms of MS, including the genetic and environmental underpinnings and the immunopathologic processes involved, according to ACTRIMS president, Dr. Suhayl Dhib-Jalbut.

In particular, the role of B cells in the pathogenesis of progressive disease will be addressed as recent studies targeting B lymphocytes are providing important new information about the importance of B cells in the pathogenesis of progressive MS.

In this video interview, Dr. Dhib-Jalbut, professor and chair of the department of neurology at the Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, N.J., notes that it is hypothesized that in progressive MS, there is a depletion of energy in the central nervous system. Studies of medications that can restore mitochondrial function and energy pools and perhaps have an impact on disease progression will be presented during the forum, he said.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel

sworcester@frontlinemedcom.com

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EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM THE ACTRIMS 2016 FORUM

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