Multiple Sclerosis Phenotypes as a Continuum

Author:

Vollmer Timothy L.,Nair Kavita V.,Williams Ian M.,Alvarez Enrique

Abstract

Purpose of ReviewThis review presents the hypothesis that loss of neurologic reserve explains onset of progressive multiple sclerosis (PrMS).Recent FindingsEvidence supporting the separate classification of PrMS and relapsing multiple sclerosis (RMS) is limited and does not explain PrMS or the response of these patients to therapy.SummaryWe argue that multiple sclerosis (MS) progresses along a continuum from RMS to PrMS, with differing levels of neurologic reserve accounting for phenotypic differences. In early MS, inflammation causes brain atrophy with symptoms buffered by neurologic reserve. As brain loss from normal aging and MS continues, reserve is depleted and effects of subclinical MS disease activity and aging are unmasked, manifesting as PrMS. Most therapies show limited benefit in PrMS; patients are older, have fewer inflammatory events, and the effects of aging cause continued loss of neurologic function, even if inflammation is terminated. Loss of neurologic reserve means patients with PrMS cannot recover function, unlike patients with RMS.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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1. Multiple sclerosis;The Lancet;2024-01

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3. Multiple Sclerosis Part 1;Magnetic Resonance Imaging Clinics of North America;2023-12

4. Disease activity in primary progressive multiple sclerosis: a systematic review and meta-analysis;Frontiers in Neurology;2023-11-06

5. Cerebellar pathology in multiple sclerosis and experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis: current status and future directions;Journal of Central Nervous System Disease;2023-11-06

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