Jack A Reeves, Ashley Tranquille, Alexander Bartnik, Maryam Mohebbi, Fahad Salman, Dejan Jakimovski, Ferdinand Schweser, Bianca Weinstock-Guttman, Michael G Dwyer, Eleonora Tavazzi, Robert Zivadinov, Niels Bergsland
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Chronic active white matter inflammation is linked with multiple sclerosis (MS) clinical severity and is likely integral in MS progression. It has also been associated with choroid plexus (CP) inflammation in vivo, pointing to a potential pathophysiological link between the two phenomena. However, how these aspects of the disease co-evolve over time remains poorly understood nor has their relationship been specifically assessed in people with progressive MS (pwPMS).
Methods: In this retrospective analysis of a longitudinal study, 129 people with MS (pwMS; 86 people with relapsing remitting (pwRRMS) and 43 pwPMS) were imaged with 3 T MRI at baseline and after 5.4 years of follow-up. CP volume and CP pseudo-T2 (pT2) were calculated as measures reflecting CP inflammation in MS. Paramagnetic rim lesions (PRLs), a marker of chronic active white matter inflammation, were assessed at baseline for the whole cohort, and longitudinally in 96 pwMS with available data (66 pwRRMS, 32 pwPMS). Baseline and longitudinal associations between the CP and PRLs, including interactions with disease course, were assessed, adjusted for covariates including age and sex.
Results: PwMS with PRLs had significantly larger CP volume at baseline than pwMS without PRLs after correcting for age, sex, and disease duration (mean difference: 0.3 ± 1.2 mL; p = 0.042). Longitudinally, baseline PRL number was associated with increased CP volume in pwPMS (B = 0.22 mL/mL; p < 0.001), but not people with relapsing-remitting MS (B = - 0.01 mL/mL; p > 0.7).
Conclusion: Increased CP volume is related to chronic white matter inflammation, particularly in pwPMS.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Neurology is an international peer-reviewed journal which provides a source for publishing original communications and reviews on clinical neurology covering the whole field.
In addition, Letters to the Editors serve as a forum for clinical cases and the exchange of ideas which highlight important new findings. A section on Neurological progress serves to summarise the major findings in certain fields of neurology. Commentaries on new developments in clinical neuroscience, which may be commissioned or submitted, are published as editorials.
Every neurologist interested in the current diagnosis and treatment of neurological disorders needs access to the information contained in this valuable journal.