Author:
Kim Su-Hyun,Mealy Maureen A.,Levy Michael,Schmidt Felix,Ruprecht Klemens,Paul Friedemann,Ringelstein Marius,Aktas Orhan,Hartung Hans-Peter,Asgari Nasrin,Tsz-Ching Jessica Li,Siritho Sasitorn,Prayoonwiwat Naraporn,Shin Hyun-June,Hyun Jae-Won,Han Mira,Leite Maria Isabel,Palace Jacqueline,Kim Ho Jin
Abstract
ObjectiveWe aimed to evaluate racial differences in the clinical features of neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder.MethodsThis retrospective review included 603 patients (304 Asian, 207 Caucasian, and 92 Afro-American/Afro-European), who were seropositive for anti–aquaporin-4 antibody, from 6 centers in Denmark, Germany, South Korea, United Kingdom, United States, and Thailand.ResultsMedian disease duration at last follow-up was 8 years (range 0.3–38.4 years). Asian and Afro-American/Afro-European patients had a younger onset age than Caucasian patients (mean 36, 33, and 44 years, respectively; p < 0.001). During the disease course, Caucasian patients (23%) had a lower incidence of brain/brainstem involvement than Asian (42%) and Afro-American/Afro-European patients (38%) (p < 0.001). Severe attacks (visual acuity ≤0.1 in at least one eye or Expanded Disability Status Scale score ≥6.0 at nadir) at onset occurred more frequently in Afro-American/Afro-European (58%) than in Asian (46%) and Caucasian (38%) patients (p = 0.005). In the multivariable analysis, older age at onset, higher number of attacks before and after immunosuppressive treatment, but not race, were independent predictors of severe motor disabilities at last follow-up.ConclusionA review of a large international cohort revealed that race affected the clinical phenotype, age at onset, and severity of attacks, but the overall outcome was most dependent on early and effective immunosuppressive treatment.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Cited by
137 articles.
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