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. 2007 Jul;187(1-2):159-65.
doi: 10.1016/j.jneuroim.2007.04.008. Epub 2007 May 18.

Clinical and MRI correlates of autoreactive antibodies in multiple sclerosis patients

Affiliations

Clinical and MRI correlates of autoreactive antibodies in multiple sclerosis patients

Neeta Garg et al. J Neuroimmunol. 2007 Jul.

Abstract

Background: Autoreactive antibodies (ARAB) occur more frequently in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) than in general population and the presence of these antibodies often causes uncertainty regarding the disease course, response to therapy and the diagnosis of MS.

Methods: Retrospective analyses of the ARAB, clinical and MRI data of a consecutive patient cohort of MS and clinically isolated syndrome (CIS) patients were conducted. The patients were evaluated for an extensive panel that included various subtypes of antiphospholipid antibody (APLA) including anti-phosphatidylethanolamine (APE), anti-phosphatidylserine (APS), anti-beta-2-glycoprotein-1 (ABGP), anti-cardiolipin (ACA), and several other ARAB such as antinuclear antibody (ANA), anti-neutrophilic cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA), anti-thyroid peroxidase antibodies (ATA), anti-SS-A, and anti-SS-B antibodies. Quantitative MRI analysis was performed in a subgroup of MS patients measuring T2-lesion volume (LV), T1 black hole LV and brain parenchymal fraction (BPF).

Results: A total of 137 patients (mean age 44.7, 84% female) with either MS (n=111; age: mean 46.5+/-S.D. 10.3 years; disease duration: mean 13.0+/-S.D. 10.4 years; EDSS: mean 3.2+/-S.D. 1.9) or CIS (n=26; age: mean 37.7+/-S.D. 7.8 years; disease duration: mean 1.3+/-S.D. 1.1 years; EDSS: mean 1.0+/-S.D. 0.7) were enrolled. Among MS patients, 82 were RRMS, 26 SPMS, and 3 had PPMS. Seventy-seven (69%) of MS patients showed presence of one or more ARAB. The proportion of MS patients with APLA was 55% (61 patients); IgM subtype was most frequent. Co-occurrence of ACA and APE was more frequent in SPMS as compared to RRMS (15.4% vs. 1.2%, p=0.012). The proportion of CIS patients with ARAB was 75% with IgM subtype being the most frequent. However, the ARAB in majority of CIS patients (9 out of 14, 64%) were transient on repeated testing. In a subgroup of 62 MS patients, quantitative MRI analysis showed significantly higher T2-LV in patients with positive APLA (15.1 ml for APLA positive vs. 6.75 ml for APLA negative) after correcting for the disease duration (p=0.048). The patients with ATA also had significantly higher T2-LV after correction for disease duration (19.0 ml vs.8.5, p=0.044).

Conclusions: ARAB were present in more than two thirds of MS and CIS patients although most of APLA in CIS were transient. The presence of APLA in MS patients was associated with higher T2-LV.

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