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http://hdl.handle.net/1942/48962| Title: | Preserving Neurological Function in People at High and Low Risk of Aggressive Multiple Sclerosis: An Observational Cohort Study | Authors: | Roos, Izanne Sharmin , Sifat Ozakbas, Serkan Alroughani, Raed Eichau, Sara Grand'maison, Francois Boz, Cavit Lechner-Scott, Jeannette Buzzard, Katherine Prat, Alexandre Khoury, Samia J. Grammond, Pierre Van Der Walt, Anneke Blanco, Yolanda Foschi, Matteo Soysal, Aysun Barnett, Michael Prevost, Julie Terzi, Murat Gerlach, Oliver Macdonell, Richard Sa, Maria Jose Spitaleri, Daniele Laureys, Guy Van Pesch, Vincent John, Nevin Cartechini, Elisabetta Gouider, Riadh Maimone, Davide Ramo-Tello, Cristina Hodgkinson, Suzanne Slee, Mark Mccombe, Pamela Garber, Justin Sanchez-Menoyo, Jose Luis Al-Asmi, Abdullah Kermode, Allan G. Lapointe, Emmanuelle Shaygannejad, Vahid VAN WIJMEERSCH, Bart Willekens, Barbara Castillo-Trivino, Tamara Taylor, Bruce Mathey, Guillaume Le Page, Emmanuelle De Seze, Jerome Ruet, Aurelie Clavelou, Pierre Berger, Eric Zephir, Helene Kwiatkowski, Arnaud Pelletier, Jean Moreau, Thibault Labauge, Pierre Ciron, Jonathan Lebrun-Frenay, Christine Papeix, Caroline Defer, Gilles Laplaud, David Axel Thouvenot, Eric Stankoff, Bruno Maillart, Elisabeth Al-Khedr, Abdullatif Bourre, Bertrand Casez, Olivier Dos Santos, Amelie Camdessanche, Jean-Philippe Hankiewicz, Karolina Wahab, Abir Cabre, Philippe Heinzlef, Olivier Pottier, Corinne Moulin, Solene Magy, Laurent Labeyrie, Celine Doghri, Ines Vukusic, Sandra Kalincik, Tomas |
Issue Date: | 2026 | Publisher: | ADIS INT LTD | Source: | CNS drugs, | Status: | Early view | Abstract: | Background and ObjectivesPatients aged >= 35 years at multiple sclerosis (MS) symptom onset with an Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) score >= 3 within the first year are at highest risk of developing aggressive MS (EDSS >= 6 within 10 years). Patients without these features are at lowest risk. This study aimed to evaluate whether high-efficacy disease-modifying therapy (HE-DMT) reduced the risk of relapse and disability accumulation in individuals at high risk of aggressive MS, and whether treatment benefit varied by MS severity.MethodsThis observational cohort study used longitudinal data from two registries: MSBase (international) and OFSEP (France). Adults with relapse-onset MS and an EDSS score recorded within 12 months of symptom onset were included. Patients were classified into high-risk or low-risk groups for aggressive MS based on the above strata; those at intermediate risk were excluded. A pseudo-cohort framework compared periods of continuous HE-DMT (fingolimod, cladribine, monoclonal antibodies) with periods of non-HE-DMT states (on lower-efficacy DMTs or untreated) within each aggressive MS risk stratum. Marginal structural models with repeated adjustment for time-varying confounders of treatment and censoring were used to estimate counterfactual cumulative hazards of relapses and 6-month confirmed disability worsening and improvement. An interaction between MS risk stratum and treatment strategy was tested. A secondary analysis evaluated patients who received an HE-DMT during the study period.ResultsIn total, 10,405 people (2021 high risk, 8384 low risk) were included. Continuous HE-DMT reduced the risk of relapse in both high-risk and low-risk groups. There was no evidence of a difference in disability outcomes between treatment approaches. There was no evidence of an interaction between aggressive MS risk and treatment effect. In stratified analyses, lowest relapse risk was observed in the low-risk group treated with HE-DMT (hazard ratio [HR] 0.75, 95% CI 0.69-0.80). Treatment with HE-DMT was associated with relapse risk comparable to that observed in the low-risk group not treated with HE-DMT (HR 0.99, 0.87-1.13). In a secondary analysis restricted to patients who receive HE-DMT during the study timeframe, treatment with HE-DMT reduced the risk of disability worsening in the high-risk group (HR 0.75, 0.58-0.99), to the level observed in the low-risk group (HR 0.80, 0.70-0.92).ConclusionsHE-DMTs reduced the risk of relapse in people at both high and low risk of aggressive MS, with no evidence of differential treatment benefit. In the overall population, no evidence of a difference in disability outcomes between HE-DMT-treated and HE-DMT-untreated time was observed. However, among patients ever exposed to HE-DMT, disability worsening was less common while treated with HE-DMT. | Notes: | Kalincik, T (corresponding author), Royal Melbourne Hosp, Neuroimmunol Ctr, Dept Neurol, L7 635 Elizabeth St, Melbourne, Vic 3000, Australia.; Kalincik, T (corresponding author), Univ Melbourne, Dept Med, CORE, Melbourne, Australia. tomas.kalincik@unimelb.edu.au |
Keywords: | autistic individuals;body image;body representations;body schema;systematic review | Document URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/1942/48962 | ISSN: | 1172-7047 | e-ISSN: | 1179-1934 | DOI: | 10.1007/s40263-026-01287-8 | ISI #: | 001731960400001 | Rights: | The Author(s) 2026. Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, which permits any non-commercial use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/. | Category: | A1 | Type: | Journal Contribution |
| Appears in Collections: | Research publications |
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| s40263-026-01287-8.pdf | Early view | 1.61 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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