Clinical course, therapeutic responses and outcomes in relapsing MOG antibody-associated demyelination

Author:

Ramanathan Sudarshini,Mohammad Shekeeb,Tantsis Esther,Nguyen Tina Kim,Merheb Vera,Fung Victor S C,White Owen Bruce,Broadley Simon,Lechner-Scott Jeannette,Vucic Steve,Henderson Andrew P D,Barnett Michael HarryORCID,Reddel Stephen W,Brilot Fabienne,Dale Russell C

Abstract

ObjectiveWe characterised the clinical course, treatment and outcomes in 59 patients with relapsing myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) antibody-associated demyelination.MethodsWe evaluated clinical phenotypes, annualised relapse rates (ARR) prior and on immunotherapy and Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS), in 218 demyelinating episodes from 33 paediatric and 26 adult patients.ResultsThe most common initial presentation in the cohort was optic neuritis (ON) in 54% (bilateral (BON) 32%, unilateral (UON) 22%), followed by acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM) (20%), which occurred exclusively in children. ON was the dominant phenotype (UON 35%, BON 19%) of all clinical episodes. 109/226 (48%) MRIs had no brain lesions. Patients were steroid responsive, but 70% of episodes treated with oral prednisone relapsed, particularly at doses <10 mg daily or within 2 months of cessation. Immunotherapy, including maintenance prednisone (P=0.0004), intravenous immunoglobulin, rituximab and mycophenolate, all reduced median ARRs on-treatment. Treatment failure rates were lower in patients on maintenance steroids (5%) compared with non-steroidal maintenance immunotherapy (38%) (P=0.016). 58% of patients experienced residual disability (average follow-up 61 months, visual loss in 24%). Patients with ON were less likely to have sustained disability defined by a final EDSS of ≥2 (OR 0.15, P=0.032), while those who had any myelitis were more likely to have sustained residual deficits (OR 3.56, P=0.077).ConclusionRelapsing MOG antibody-associated demyelination is strongly associated with ON across all age groups and ADEM in children. Patients are highly responsive to steroids, but vulnerable to relapse on steroid reduction and cessation.

Funder

The Petre Foundation

The National Blood Authorit IVIg Grant

Sydney Research Excellence Initiative 2020 Neuroimmunology Group

The National Blood Authority IVIg Grant

Brain Foundation

Multiple Sclerosis Research Australia

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical),Surgery

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