Mobility trajectories in multiple sclerosis: A comparative study of timed 25-foot walk and a patient-reported outcome measure.
Background: Loss of mobility is common in persons with multiple sclerosis (PwMS), but little is known about this impairment from the patient's perspective.
Objective: The aim is to model longitudinal variation in a mobility patient-reported outcome (PRO) and compare trajectories to those observed for Timed 25-Foot Walk (T25FW) in a retrospective cohort.
Results: At the group level, PS-Mobility and T25FW linearly worsened and repeated-measures correlation was moderate. Eight latent classes with varying shapes that worsened described PS-Mobility variation, compared to six latent classes for T25FW that differed by intercept. The agreement between PS-Mobility and T25FW cluster assignment was modest. A higher proportion of individuals who were Black/African American, older, Medicaid beneficiaries, living in deprived neighborhoods, had longer disease duration, had progressive disease, and ever smokers were assigned to more impaired clusters.
Discussion: Cross-sectionally, PS-Mobility and T25FW were highly correlated, but longitudinally correlation was modest to moderate, underscoring the importance of considering both objective and subjective perspectives in evaluating mobility changes in PwMS.
期刊介绍:
Multiple Sclerosis Journal is a peer-reviewed international journal that focuses on all aspects of multiple sclerosis, neuromyelitis optica and other related autoimmune diseases of the central nervous system.
The journal for your research in the following areas:
* __Biologic basis:__ pathology, myelin biology, pathophysiology of the blood/brain barrier, axo-glial pathobiology, remyelination, virology and microbiome, immunology, proteomics
* __Epidemology and genetics:__ genetics epigenetics, epidemiology
* __Clinical and Neuroimaging:__ clinical neurology, biomarkers, neuroimaging and clinical outcome measures
* __Therapeutics and rehabilitation:__ therapeutics, rehabilitation, psychology, neuroplasticity, neuroprotection, and systematic management
Print ISSN: 1352-4585