PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Validating predictors of disease progression in a large cohort of primary-progressive multiple sclerosis based on a systematic literature review.

  • Jan-Patrick Stellmann,
  • Anneke Neuhaus,
  • Christian Lederer,
  • Martin Daumer,
  • Christoph Heesen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0092761
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 3
p. e92761

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundNew agents with neuroprotective or neuroregenerative potential might be explored in primary-progressive Multiple Sclerosis (PPMS)--the MS disease course with leading neurodegenerative pathology. Identification of patients with a high short-term risk for progression may minimize study duration and sample size. Cohort studies reported several variables as predictors of EDSS disability progression but findings were partially contradictory.ObjectiveTo analyse the impact of published predictors on EDSS disease progression in a large cohort of PPMS patients.MethodsA systematic literature research was performed to identify predictors for disease progression in PPMS. Individual case data from the Sylvia Lawry Centre (SLC) and the Hamburg MS patient database (HAPIMS) was pooled for a retrospective validation of these predictors on the annualized EDSS change.ResultsThe systematic literature analysis revealed heterogeneous data from 3 prospective and 5 retrospective natural history cohort studies. Age at onset, gender, type of first symptoms and early EDSS changes were available for validation. Our pooled cohort of 597 PPMS patients (54% female) had a mean follow-up of 4.4 years and mean change of EDSS of 0.35 per year based on 2503 EDSS assessments. There was no significant association between the investigated variables and the EDSS-change.ConclusionNone of the analysed variables were predictive for the disease progression measured by the annualized EDSS change. Whether PPMS is still unpredictable or our results may be due to limitations of cohort assessments or selection of predictors cannot be answered. Large systematic prospective studies with new endpoints are needed.