AI Article Synopsis

  • Early treatment for multiple sclerosis (MS) is essential to prevent long-term damage and disability, but current assessments mainly focus on relapse rates and MRI lesions, missing other important early indicators of the disease.
  • Early signs of MS, such as cognitive issues, brain atrophy, and fatigue, often go unnoticed in routine monitoring, meaning some patients may be experiencing worsening conditions without traditional markers indicating disease activity.
  • There is a pressing need to rethink how MS is monitored and managed, incorporating hidden indicators and biomarkers to detect silent disease progression, which could lead to earlier and more effective treatment strategies with high-efficacy therapies.

Article Abstract

Importance: Early treatment initiation in multiple sclerosis (MS) is crucial in preventing irreversible neurological damage and disability progression. The current assessment of disease activity relies on relapse rates and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) lesion activity, but inclusion of other early, often "hidden," indicators of disease activity may describe a more comprehensive picture of MS.

Observations: Early indicators of MS disease activity other than relapses and MRI activity, such as cognitive impairment, brain atrophy, and fatigue, are not typically captured by routine disease monitoring. Furthermore, silent progression (neurological decline not clearly captured by standard methods) may occur undetected by relapse and MRI lesion activity monitoring. Consequently, patients considered to have no disease activity actually may have worsening disease, suggesting a need to revise MS management strategies with respect to timely initiation and escalation of disease-modifying therapy (DMT). Traditionally, first-line MS treatment starts with low- or moderate-efficacy therapies, before escalating to high-efficacy therapies (HETs) after evidence of breakthrough disease activity. However, multiple observational studies have shown that early initiation of HETs can prevent or reduce disability progression. Ongoing randomized clinical trials are comparing escalation and early HET approaches.

Conclusions And Relevance: There is an urgent need to reassess how MS disease activity and worsening are measured. A greater awareness of "hidden" indicators, potentially combined with biomarkers to reveal silent disease activity and neurodegeneration underlying MS, would provide a more complete picture of MS and allow for timely therapeutic intervention with HET or switching DMTs to address suboptimal treatment responses.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10972995PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00415-023-12021-5DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

disease activity
32
activity
11
disease
10
multiple sclerosis
8
disability progression
8
mri lesion
8
lesion activity
8
"hidden" indicators
8
indicators disease
8
activity worsening
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!