The effect of disease modifying therapies on CD62L expression in multiple sclerosis

Author:

Voortman Margarete MariaORCID,Greiner Paul,Moser Daniel,Stradner Martin Helmut,Graninger Winfried,Moser Adrian1,Haditsch Bernd2,Enzinger Christian34,Fuchs Siegrid,Fazekas Franz,Fessler Johannes5,Khalil Michael3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Medical University of Graz, Austria

2. Steiermärkische Gebietskrankenkasse, Austria

3. Department of Neurology, Medical University of Graz, Austria

4. Division of Neuroradiology, Vascular and Interventional Radiology, Medical University of Graz, Austria

5. Division of Rheumatology and Immunology, Medical University of Graz, Austria

Abstract

Background The increasing armamentarium of disease-modifying therapies in multiple sclerosis is accompanied by potentially severe adverse effects. The cell-adhesion molecule CD62L, which facilitates leukocyte extravasation, has been proposed as a predictive marker for treatment tolerability. However, pre-analytical procedures might impact test results, thereby limiting its clinical usability. Whether the immediate analysis of CD62L expression of peripheral blood mononuclear cells can aid treatment decision making is yet unclear. Objective To investigate the effect of various disease-modifying therapies in multiple sclerosis on CD62L expression of CD3+CD4+ peripheral blood mononuclear cells in freshly collected blood samples. Methods We collected peripheral blood samples from patients with clinically isolated syndrome and multiple sclerosis (baseline/follow up n = 234/ n = 98) and healthy controls ( n = 51). CD62L+CD3+CD4+ expression was analysed within 1 hour by fluorescence-activated cell sorting. Results CD62L+CD3+CD4+ expression was significantly decreased in patients treated with natalizumab ( n = 26) and fingolimod ( n = 20) and increased with dimethyl-fumarate ( n = 15) compared to patients receiving interferon/glatiramer acetate ( n = 90/30) or no disease-modifying therapies ( n = 53) and controls ( n = 51) ( p<0.001). CD62L expression showed temporal stability during unchanged disease-modifying therapy usage, but increased after natalizumab withdrawal and decreased upon fingolimod introduction. Conclusion CD62L+CD3+CD4+ expression is altered in patients treated with different disease-modifying therapies when measured in freshly collected samples. The clinical meaning of CD62L changes under disease-modifying therapies warrants further investigation.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Neurology (clinical)

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