Assessing brain atrophy rates in a large population of untreated multiple sclerosis subtypes

N De Stefano, A Giorgio, M Battaglini, M Rovaris… - Neurology, 2010 - AAN Enterprises
N De Stefano, A Giorgio, M Battaglini, M Rovaris, MP Sormani, F Barkhof, T Korteweg…
Neurology, 2010AAN Enterprises
Objective: To assess the time course of brain atrophy and the difference across clinical
subtypes in multiple sclerosis (MS). Methods: The percent brain volume change (PBVC) was
computed on existing longitudinal (2 time points) T1-weighted MRI from untreated (trial and
nontrial) patients with MS. Patients (n= 963) were classified as clinically isolated syndromes
suggestive of MS (CIS, 16%), relapsing-remitting (RR, 60%), secondary progressive (SP,
15%), and primary progressive (9%) MS. The median length of follow-up was 14 months …
Objective: To assess the time course of brain atrophy and the difference across clinical subtypes in multiple sclerosis (MS).
Methods: The percent brain volume change (PBVC) was computed on existing longitudinal (2 time points) T1-weighted MRI from untreated (trial and nontrial) patients with MS. Patients (n = 963) were classified as clinically isolated syndromes suggestive of MS (CIS, 16%), relapsing-remitting (RR, 60%), secondary progressive (SP, 15%), and primary progressive (9%) MS. The median length of follow-up was 14 months (range 12–68).
Results: There was marked heterogeneity of the annualized PBVC (PBVC/y) across MS subtypes (p = 0.003), with higher PBVC/y in SP than in CIS (p = 0.003). However, this heterogeneity disappeared when data were corrected for the baseline normalized brain volume. When the MS population was divided into trial and nontrial subjects, the heterogeneity of PBVC/y across MS subtypes was present only in the second group, due to the higher PBVC/y values found in trial data in CIS (p = 0.01) and RR (p < 0.001). The estimation of the sample sizes required for demonstrating a reduction of brain atrophy in patients in a placebo-controlled trial showed that this was larger in patients with early MS than in those with the progressive forms of the disease.
Conclusions: This first large study in untreated patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) with different disease subtypes shows that brain atrophy proceeds relentlessly throughout the course of MS, with a rate that seems largely independent of the MS subtype, when adjusting for baseline brain volume.
American Academy of Neurology