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Measurement of neurofilaments improves stratification of future disease activity in early multiple sclerosis

Tomáš Uher, Eva Havrdová, Pascal Benkert, Niels Bergsland, Jan Krásenský, Barbora Srpová, Michael G. Dwyer, Michaela Týblová, Stéphanie Meier, Manuela Vaněčková, Dana Horáková, Robert Zivadinov, David Leppert, Tomáš Kalinčík, Jens Kühle

2021Multiple Sclerosis Journal18 citationsDOI

Abstract

Background: The added value of neurofilament light chain levels in serum (sNfL) to the concept of no evidence of disease activity-3 (NEDA-3) has not yet been investigated in detail. Objective: To assess whether combination of sNfL with NEDA-3 status improves identification of patients at higher risk of disease activity during the following year. Methods: We analyzed 369 blood samples from 155 early relapsing-remitting MS patients on interferon beta-1a. We compared disease activity, including the rate of brain volume loss in subgroups defined by NEDA-3 status and high or low sNfL (> 90th or < 90th percentile). Results: In patients with disease activity (EDA-3), those with higher sNFL had higher odds of EDA-3 in the following year than those with low sNFL (86.5% vs 57.9%; OR = 4.25, 95% CI: [2.02, 8.95]; p = 0.0001) and greater whole brain volume loss during the following year (β = −0.36%; 95% CI = [−0.60, −0.13]; p = 0.002). Accordingly, NEDA-3 patients with high sNfL showed numerically higher disease activity (EDA-3) in the following year compared with those with low sNfL (57.1% vs 31.1%). Conclusion: sNfL improves the ability to identify patients at higher risk of future disease activity, beyond their NEDA-3 status. Measurement of sNfL may assist clinicians in decision-making by providing more sensitive prognostic information.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineMultiple sclerosisInternal medicinePercentileGastroenterologyImmunologyStatisticsMathematicsMultiple Sclerosis Research StudiesSkin and Cellular Biology ResearchAmyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Research