Publications by authors named "Kappos L"

The development of disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) for the treatment of multiple sclerosis (MS) has been highly successful in recent decades. It is now widely accepted that early initiation of DMTs after disease onset is associated with a better long-term prognosis. However, the question of when and how to de-escalate or discontinue DMTs remains open and critical.

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Background And Objectives: In patients with myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) antibody-associated disease (MOGAD), acute disease activity is generally identified through medical history, neurologic examination, and imaging. However, these may be insufficient for detecting disease activity in specific conditions. This study aimed to investigate the dynamics of serum neurofilament light chain (sNfL) and serum glial fibrillary acidic protein (sGFAP) after clinical attacks and to assess their utility in discriminating attacks from remission in patients with MOGAD.

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Background: Neurostatus-Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) is the standard measure used to assess impairment and disability in multiple sclerosis (MS) trials but requires trained expert neurologists.

Objectives: This study aims to evaluate the concordance of Neurostatus-EDSS assessments from specially trained health care professionals (HCPs) and standardized trained neurologists.

Methods: A Swiss multicenter, randomized, cross-over study with 100 people with MS.

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Objective: To investigate the longitudinal dynamics of serum glial fibrillary acidic protein (sGFAP) and serum neurofilament light chain (sNfL) levels in people with multiple sclerosis (pwMS) under B-cell depleting therapy (BCDT) and their capacity to prognosticate future progression independent of relapse activity (PIRA) events.

Methods: A total of 362 pwMS (1,480 samples) starting BCDT in the Swiss Multiple Sclerosis (MS) Cohort were included. sGFAP levels in 2,861 control persons (4,943 samples) provided normative data to calculate adjusted Z scores.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Patients with multiple sclerosis (PwMS) face a higher risk of infections, especially those treated with ocrelizumab (OCR), as shown in a study involving 6,155 patients over a median period of 3.7 years.
  • - Serious infections (SIs) were reported at an incidence rate of 1.50 per 100 patient years for relapsing MS and 3.70 for progressive MS, with lower respiratory, urinary, abdominal, gastrointestinal, and skin infections being the most common.
  • - Significant risk factors for SIs included comorbidities, recent relapses, and higher disability scores, particularly in patients with progressive MS where a high EDSS score indicated a fourfold increase in
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Objectives: Daratumumab, a monoclonal antibody against CD38, is increasingly used in the treatment of multiple myeloma, other hematological malignancies and autoimmune diseases. Little is known about its CNS toxicity. We present a case of a patient with POEMS syndrome (syndrome of polyneuropathy, organomegaly, endocrinopathy, monoclonal gammopathy and skin changes) who developed an acute leukoencephalopathy shortly after initiation of therapy with daratumumab.

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Objective: Pathological studies suggest that multiple sclerosis (MS) lesions endure multiple waves of damage and repair; however, the dynamics and characteristics of these processes are poorly understood in patients living with MS.

Methods: We studied 128 MS patients (75 relapsing-remitting, 53 progressive) and 72 healthy controls who underwent advanced magnetic resonance imaging and clinical examination at baseline and 2 years later. Magnetization transfer saturation and multi-shell diffusion imaging were used to quantify longitudinal changes in myelin and axon volumes within MS lesions.

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Article Synopsis
  • Evobrutinib, a BTK inhibitor, was evaluated for safety and efficacy against teriflunomide in treating relapsing multiple sclerosis in two phase 3 trials involving nearly 2,300 participants across 52 countries.
  • Participants aged 18-55 with specific disability scores were randomly assigned to receive either evobrutinib or teriflunomide, with both studies designed as double-blind to avoid bias among participants and researchers.
  • The primary endpoint was the annualized relapse rate over 156 weeks, with data collected from June 2020 to October 2023, showing that 66-67% of the participants were female across the trials.
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  • The study assesses the effectiveness of large language models (LLMs) in evaluating scientific research reports and systematic reviews compared to human raters, using established criteria like PRISMA, AMSTAR, and PRECIS-2.
  • Five LLMs were tested across a total of 168 systematic reviews and clinical trials, revealing that while individual LLMs showed lower accuracy (ranging from 38% to 74%), combined LLM ratings improved that accuracy significantly.
  • The most accurate results came from human and AI collaboration, which achieved accuracies between 80% and 96%, suggesting that integrating human judgment with AI technology enhances the appraisal process more than either can do alone.
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Background And Objectives: In patients with multiple sclerosis (PwMS), thalamic atrophy occurs during the disease course. However, there is little understanding of the mechanisms leading to volume loss and of the relationship between microstructural thalamic pathology and disease progression. This cross-sectional and longitudinal study aimed to comprehensively characterize in vivo pathologic changes within thalamic microstructure in PwMS using advanced multiparametric quantitative MRI (qMRI).

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Background: Treatment decisions for persons with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) rely on clinical and radiological disease activity, the benefit-harm profile of drug therapy, and preferences of patients and physicians. However, there is limited evidence to support evidence-based personalized decision-making on how to adapt disease-modifying therapy treatments targeting no evidence of disease activity, while achieving better patient-relevant outcomes, fewer adverse events, and improved care. Serum neurofilament light chain (sNfL) is a sensitive measure of disease activity that captures and prognosticates disease worsening in RRMS.

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Myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) antibody-associated disease (MOGAD) is an immune-mediated demyelinating disease that is challenging to differentiate from multiple sclerosis (MS), as the clinical phenotypes overlap, and people with MOGAD can fulfil the current MRI-based diagnostic criteria for MS. In addition, the MOG antibody assays that are an essential component of MOGAD diagnosis are not standardized. Accurate diagnosis of MOGAD is crucial because the treatments and long-term prognosis differ from those for MS.

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Background And Objectives: Myelin and iron play essential roles in remyelination processes of multiple sclerosis (MS) lesions. χ-separation, a novel biophysical model applied to multiecho T2*-data and T2-data, estimates the contribution of myelin and iron to the obtained susceptibility signal. We used this method to investigate myelin and iron levels in lesion and nonlesion brain areas in patients with MS and healthy individuals.

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The detection of contrast-enhancing lesions (CELs) is fundamental for the diagnosis and monitoring of patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). This task is time-consuming and suffers from high intra- and inter-rater variability in clinical practice. However, only a few studies proposed automatic approaches for CEL detection.

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Progression independent of relapse activity (PIRA), a recent concept to formalize disability accrual in multiple sclerosis (MS) independent of relapses, has gained popularity as a potential clinical trial outcome. We discuss its shortcomings and appraise the challenges of implementing it in clinical settings, experimental trials, and research. The current definition of PIRA assumes that acute inflammation, which can manifest as a relapse, and neurodegeneration, manifesting as progressive disability accrual, can be disentangled by introducing specific time windows between the onset of relapses and the observed increase in disability.

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Article Synopsis
  • Early treatment with immunomodulating therapy improves short-term clinical outcomes in multiple sclerosis (MS) patients, reducing the risk of conversion to clinically definite MS (CDMS) by 30.5%.
  • In a study of patients with clinically isolated syndrome (CIS), those who received early treatment demonstrated fewer relapses and maintained stable disability over 15 years compared to a delayed treatment group.
  • By the 15-year mark, 66.3% of patients treated early remained employed, further indicating the benefits of starting treatment early in the disease course.
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Pathological data showed focal inflammation and regions of diffuse neuronal loss in the cortex of people with multiple sclerosis (MS). In this work, we applied a novel model ("soma and neurite density imaging (SANDI)") to multishell diffusion-weighted MRI data acquired in healthy subjects and people with multiple sclerosis (pwMS), in order to investigate inflammation and degeneration-related changes in the cortical tissue of pwMS. We aimed to (i) establish whether SANDI is applicable in vivo clinical data; (ii) investigate inflammatory and degenerative changes using SANDI soma fraction (f)-a marker of cellularity-in both cortical lesions and in the normal-appearing-cortex and (iii) correlate SANDI f with clinical and biological measures in pwMS.

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Background And Objectives: Serum neurofilament light chain (sNfL) levels correlate with multiple sclerosis (MS) disease activity, but the dynamics of this correlation are unknown. We evaluated the relationship between sNfL levels and radiologic MS disease activity through monthly assessments during the 24-week natalizumab treatment interruption period in RESTORE (NCT01071083).

Methods: In the RESTORE trial, participants with relapsing forms of MS who had received natalizumab for ≥12 months were randomized to either continue or stop natalizumab and followed with MRI and blood draws every 4 weeks to week 28 and again at week 52 The sNfL was measured, and its dynamics were correlated with the development of gadolinium-enhancing (Gd+) lesions.

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Background: Increasingly, patients, clinicians, and regulators call for more evidence on the impact of innovative medicines on quality of life (QoL). We assessed the effects of disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) on QoL in people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS).

Methods: Randomized trials assessing approved DMTs in PwMS with results for at least one outcome referred to as "quality of life" were searched in PubMed and ClinicalTrials.

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Background: The double-blind TERIKIDS study demonstrated the efficacy and safety of teriflunomide.

Objective: To evaluate the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of continuous teriflunomide treatment in the TERIKIDS open-label extension.

Methods: In the double-blind period, children with relapsing MS were randomized to placebo or teriflunomide (14 mg adult-equivalent dose) for ⩽ 96 weeks.

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Neurofilament proteins have been validated as specific body fluid biomarkers of neuro-axonal injury. The advent of highly sensitive analytical platforms that enable reliable quantification of neurofilaments in blood samples and simplify longitudinal follow-up has paved the way for the development of neurofilaments as a biomarker in clinical practice. Potential applications include assessment of disease activity, monitoring of treatment responses, and determining prognosis in many acute and chronic neurological disorders as well as their use as an outcome measure in trials of novel therapies.

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Background: In REFLEX, subcutaneous interferon beta-1a (sc IFN β-1a) delayed the onset of multiple sclerosis (MS) in patients with a first clinical demyelinating event (FCDE).

Objectives: This analysis aimed to determine whether baseline serum neurofilament light (sNfL) chain can predict conversion to MS and whether correlations exist between baseline sNfL and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) metrics.

Methods: sNfL was measured for 494 patients who received sc IFN β-1a 44 μg once weekly (qw;  = 168), three times weekly (tiw;  = 161), or placebo ( = 165) over 24 months.

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Background And Purpose: In amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), there is an unmet need for more precise patient characterization through quantitative, ideally operator-independent, assessments of disease extent and severity. Radially sampled averaged magnetization inversion recovery acquisitions (rAMIRA) magnetic resonance imaging enables gray matter (GM) and white matter (WM) area quantitation in the cervical and thoracic spinal cord (SC) with optimized contrast. We aimed to investigate rAMIRA-derived SC GM and SC WM areas and their association with clinical phenotype and disability in ALS.

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Objective: To explore associations of the main component (P100) of visual evoked potentials (VEP) to pre- and postchiasmatic damage in multiple sclerosis (MS).

Methods: 31 patients (median EDSS: 2.5), 13 with previous optic neuritis (ON), and 31 healthy controls had VEP, optical coherence tomography and magnetic resonance imaging.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the role of complement components (CCs) and activation products (CAPs) in multiple sclerosis (MS), particularly focusing on how their levels are affected by the presence of intrathecal IgM synthesis, which is linked to higher disease severity.
  • By analyzing samples from 112 clinically isolated syndrome (CIS) patients and 127 MS patients, it was found that specific complement levels in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) were significantly higher in those with MS compared to control groups.
  • Key findings indicate that increased levels of complement components like C3a and C4a in the CSF correlate with worse disability and disease progression in MS patients, emphasizing the relationship between complement activation and neurodegeneration in
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