Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10609/147533
Title: Cortical involvement determines impairment 30 years after a clinically isolated syndrome
Author: Haider, Lukas  
Prados Carrasco, Ferran  
Chung, Karen
Goodkin, Olivia  
Kanber, Baris  
Sudre, Carole  
Yiannakas, Marios  
Samson, Rebecca  
Mangesius, Stephanie  
Thompson, Alan  
Gandini Wheeler-Kingshott, Claudia A.M.  
Ciccarelli, Olga  
Chard, Declan  
Barkhof, Frederik  
Others: University College London (UCL)
Medical University of Vienna
Universitat Oberta de Catalunya (UOC)
King’s College London
Medical University of Innsbruck
University of Pavia
IRCCS Mondino Foundation
VU University Medical Centre
Citation: Haider, L., Prados, F., Chung, K., Goodkin, O., Kanber, B., Sudre, C. H., Yiannakas, M.C., Samson, R. S., Mangesius, S., Thompson, A.J., Wheeler-Kingshott, C., Ciccarelli, O., Chard, D. T. & Barkhof, F. (2021). Cortical involvement determines impairment 30 years after a clinically isolated syndrome. Brain: A journal of neurology, 144(5), 1384-1395. doi: 10.1093/brain/awab033
Abstract: Many studies report an overlap of MRI and clinical findings between patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) and secondary progressive multiple sclerosis (SPMS), which in part is reflective of inclusion of subjects with variable disease duration and short periods of follow-up. To overcome these limitations, we examined the differences between RRMS and SPMS and the relationship between MRI measures and clinical outcomes 30 years after first presentation with clinically isolated syndrome suggestive of multiple sclerosis. Sixty-three patients were studied 30 years after their initial presentation with a clinically isolated syndrome; only 14% received a disease modifying treatment at any time point. Twenty-seven patients developed RRMS, 15 SPMS and 21 experienced no further neurological events; these groups were comparable in terms of age and disease duration. Clinical assessment included the Expanded Disability Status Scale, 9-Hole Peg Test and Timed 25-Foot Walk and the Brief International Cognitive Assessment For Multiple Sclerosis. All subjects underwent a comprehensive MRI protocol at 3 T measuring brain white and grey matter (lesions, volumes and magnetization transfer ratio) and cervical cord involvement. Linear regression models were used to estimate age- and gender-adjusted group differences between clinical phenotypes after 30 years, and stepwise selection to determine associations between a large sets of MRI predictor variables and physical and cognitive outcome measures. At the 30-year follow-up, the greatest differences in MRI measures between SPMS and RRMS were the number of cortical lesions, which were higher in SPMS (the presence of cortical lesions had 100% sensitivity and 88% specificity), and grey matter volume, which was lower in SPMS. Across all subjects, cortical lesions, grey matter volume and cervical cord volume explained 60% of the variance of the Expanded Disability Status Scale; cortical lesions alone explained 43%. Grey matter volume, cortical lesions and gender explained 43% of the variance of Timed 25-Foot Walk. Reduced cortical magnetization transfer ratios emerged as the only significant explanatory variable for the symbol digit modality test and explained 52% of its variance. Cortical involvement, both in terms of lesions and atrophy, appears to be the main correlate of progressive disease and disability in a cohort of individuals with very long follow-up and homogeneous disease duration, indicating that this should be the target of therapeutic interventions.
Keywords: multiple sclerosis
clinically isolated syndrome
atrophy
magnetic resonance imaging
cortex
DOI: http://hdl.handle.net/10609/147533
Document type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Version: info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Issue Date: 21-Apr-2021
Publication license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/  
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