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Early MRI scans could predict multiple sclerosis disability

25 July 2019

Early MRI scans of people living with multiple sclerosis (MS) could predict how their condition will progress, including how disabled they are likely to become, finds a new 果冻影院-led study.

MRI scans

In the MS Society-funded study, published today in Brain, the researchers report that MRI scans from when individuals were first diagnosed contained signs of future progression.

鈥淲e already use MRI scans to diagnose MS and to monitor the course of the disease. These findings 鈥 which suggest existing measures, routinely available in clinical practice, can provide a long-term prognosis 鈥 are a major advance that will be welcomed by many in the MS community,鈥 said Dr Wallace Brownlee (果冻影院 Queen Square Institute of Neurology), who led the research with 果冻影院 colleague Professor Olga Ciccarelli.

鈥淢S can be relentless, painful, and disabling, but being able to predict how a person鈥檚 MS might progress will mean more certainty, better treatment choices, and hopefully better long term outcomes for everyone living with the condition,鈥 he added.

The research team followed 164 people with clinically isolated syndrome (CIS) over a 15 year period.

People with CIS have experienced one episode of neurological symptoms and often go on to be diagnosed with MS.

They found that early spinal cord damage indicated people were much more likely to go on to develop the secondary progressive form of MS, which currently has no treatment and is where disability gets steadily worse. A spinal cord MRI indicated the level of disability a person was likely to face in future.

They also found an association between lesions seen in the brain at the time of CIS, and a person鈥檚 physical and cognitive performance later in life.

Over 100,000 people live with MS in the UK, and one of the most difficult things about being diagnosed is the uncertainty of the condition. The course MS takes is highly variable with significant differences in terms of how quickly it progresses, how disabled a person may become, and how cognitive performance is affected.

Director of Research at the MS Society, Dr Susan Kohlhaas, said: 鈥淢S damages nerves in your body and makes it harder to do everyday things like walk, talk, eat and think. It鈥檚 also different for everyone and there isn鈥檛 currently a consistent way of predicting what course MS might take. This can be incredibly distressing and make decisions about treatment, family, and life in general very difficult.

鈥淏y identifying key factors that appear very early on and indicate how someone鈥檚 MS might develop, this study has proved crucial.鈥

After 15 years, all participants were followed-up with, and their disability was assessed using measures including the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS). 94 (57%) had the relapsing form of multiple sclerosis, 25 (15%) had the secondary progressive form, 45 (27%) remained CIS and two people (1%) had developed other disorders.

As well as knowing how a person鈥檚 condition might progress 鈥 and being able to plan for their future accordingly 鈥 this information will help healthcare professionals personalise treatment plans, which is particularly important for patients identified as high-risk for disease progression.

A recent study suggested early intensive treatment leads to a better MS prognosis 鈥 but without information about how a person鈥檚 disease is likely to progress it can be challenging to make such a decision.

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  • MRI scans of a study participant who developed secondary progressive multiple sclerosis

Media contact听

Chris Lane

tel: +44 20 7679 9222

E: chris.lane听[at] ucl.ac.uk