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- Melih Tutuncu, Junger Tang, Nuhad Abou Zeid, Nilufer Kale, Daniel J Crusan, Elizabeth J Atkinson, Aksel Siva, Sean J Pittock, Istvan Pirko, B Mark Keegan, Claudia F Lucchinetti, John H Noseworthy, Moses Rodriguez, Brian G Weinshenker, and Orhun H Kantarci.
- Mayo Clinic Center for Multiple Sclerosis and CNS Demyelinating Diseases, Department of Neurology, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, MN 55905, USA.
- Mult. Scler. 2013 Feb 1;19(2):188-98.
BackgroundIt is unclear if all patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) ultimately develop progressive MS. Onset of progressive disease course seems to be age- rather than disease duration-dependent. Some forms of progressive MS (e.g. primary progressive MS (PPMS)) are uncommon in population-based studies. Ascertainment of patients with PPMS from clinic-based populations can facilitate a powerful comparison of age at progression onset between secondary progressive MS (SPMS) and PPMS but may introduce unclear biases.ObjectiveOur aim is to confirm that onset of progressive disease course is more relevant to the patient's age than the presence or duration of a pre-progression relapsing disease course in MS.MethodsWe studied a population-based MS cohort (n=210, RRMS n=109, progressive MS n=101) and a clinic-based progressive MS cohort (n=754). Progressive course was classified as primary (PPMS; n=322), single attack (SAPMS; n=112) and secondary progressive (SPMS; n=421). We studied demographics (chi(2) or t-test), age-of-progression-onset (t-test) and time to Expanded Disability Status Scale of 6 (EDSS6) (Kaplan-Meier analyses).ResultsSex ratio (p=0.58), age at progression onset (p=0.37) and time to EDSS6 (p=0.16) did not differ between the cohorts. Progression had developed before age 75 in 99% of patients with known progressive disease course; 38% with RRMS did not develop progression by age 75. Age at progression onset did not differ between SPMS (44.9±9.6), SAPMS (45.5±9.6) and PPMS (45.7±10.8). In either cohort, only 2% of patients had reached EDSS6 before onset of progression.ConclusionsPatients with RRMS do not inevitably develop a progressive disease course. Onset of progression is more dependent on age than the presence or duration of a pre-progression symptomatic disease course. Moderate disability is sustained predominantly after the onset of a progressive disease course in MS.
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