Author:
Pfeuffer Steffen,Rolfes Leoni,Wirth Timo,Steffen Falk,Pawlitzki Marc,Schulte-Mecklenbeck Andreas,Gross Catharina C.,Brand Marcus,Bittner Stefan,Ruck Tobias,Klotz Luisa,Wiendl Heinz,Meuth Sven G.
Abstract
Abstract
Objective
Intravenous methylprednisolone is the standard treatment for a multiple sclerosis relapse; however, this fails to improve symptoms in up to one quarter of patients. Immunoadsorption is an accepted treatment for refractory relapses, but prospective comparator-controlled studies are missing.
Methods
In this observational study, patients with steroid-refractory acute multiple sclerosis relapses receiving either six courses of tryptophan-immunoadsorption or double-dose methylprednisolone therapy were analysed. Outcomes were evaluated at discharge and three months later. Immune profiling of blood lymphocytes and proteomic analysis were performed by multi-parameter flow cytometry and Olink analysis, respectively (NCT04450030).
Results
42 patients were enrolled (methylprednisolone: 26 patients; immunoadsorption: 16 patients). For determination of the primary outcome, treatment response was stratified according to relative function system score changes (“full/best” vs. “average” vs. “worse/none”). Upon discharge, the adjusted odds ratio for any treatment response (“full/best” + ”average” vs. “worse/none”) was 10.697 favouring immunoadsorption (p = 0.005 compared to methylprednisolone). At follow-up, the adjusted odds ratio for the best treatment response (“full/best” vs. “average” + ”worse/none”) was 103.236 favouring IA patients (p = 0.001 compared to methylprednisolone). Similar results were observed regarding evoked potentials and quality of life outcomes, as well as serum neurofilament light-chain levels. Flow cytometry revealed a profound reduction of B cell subsets following immunoadsorption, which was closely correlated to clinical outcomes, whereas methylprednisolone had a minimal effect on B cell populations. Immunoadsorption treatment skewed the blood cytokine network, reduced levels of B cell-related cytokines and reduced immunoglobulin levels as well as levels of certain coagulation factors.
Interpretation
Immunoadsorption demonstrated favourable outcomes compared to double-dose methylprednisolone. Outcome differences were significant at discharge and follow-up. Further analyses identified modulation of B cell function as a potential mechanism of action for immunoadsorption, as reduction of B cell subsets correlated with clinical improvement.
Funder
DIAMED Cologne
Universitätsklinikum Münster
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Neurology,Immunology,General Neuroscience
Reference39 articles.
1. Berkovich RR. Acute multiple sclerosis relapse. Continuum (Minneap Minn). 2016;22(3):799–814.
2. V. DGfrNDe. S2k-leitlinie, diagnose und therapie der multiplen sklerose, neuromyelitis optica spektrum und MOG-IgG- assoziierte Erkrankungen. 2020.
https://dgn.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/200902_MS-LL_Hauptteil_Konsultationsfassung_KKNMS_202008_final.pdf. Acessed 21 June 2022.
3. Sellebjerg F, Barnes D, Filippini G, Midgard R, Montalban X, Rieckmann P, et al. EFNS guideline on treatment of multiple sclerosis relapses: report of an EFNS task force on treatment of multiple sclerosis relapses. Eur J Neurol. 2005;12(12):939–46.
4. Stoppe M, Busch M, Krizek L, Then BF. Outcome of MS relapses in the era of disease-modifying therapy. BMC Neurol. 2017;17(1):151.
5. Oliveri RL, Valentino P, Russo C, Sibilia G, Aguglia U, Bono F, et al. Randomized trial comparing two different high doses of methylprednisolone in MS: a clinical and MRI study. Neurology. 1998;50(6):1833–6.
Cited by
9 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献