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Proportion and characteristics of secondary progressive multiple sclerosis in five European registries using objective classifiers

Forsberg Lars; Spelman Tim; Klyve Pernilla; Manouchehrinia Ali; Ramanujam Ryan; Mouresan Elena; Drahota Jiri; Horakova Dana; Joensen Hanna; Pontieri Luigi; Magyari Melinda; Ellenberger David; Stahmann Alexander; Rodgers Jeff; Witts James; Middleton Rod; Nicholas Richard; Bezlyak Vladimir; Adlard Nicholas; Hach Thomas; Lines Carol; Vukusic Sandra; Soilu-Hänninen Merja; van der Walt Anneke; Butzkueven Helmut; Iaffaldano Pietro; Trojano Maria; Glaser Anna; Hillert Jan

Proportion and characteristics of secondary progressive multiple sclerosis in five European registries using objective classifiers

Forsberg Lars
Spelman Tim
Klyve Pernilla
Manouchehrinia Ali
Ramanujam Ryan
Mouresan Elena
Drahota Jiri
Horakova Dana
Joensen Hanna
Pontieri Luigi
Magyari Melinda
Ellenberger David
Stahmann Alexander
Rodgers Jeff
Witts James
Middleton Rod
Nicholas Richard
Bezlyak Vladimir
Adlard Nicholas
Hach Thomas
Lines Carol
Vukusic Sandra
Soilu-Hänninen Merja
van der Walt Anneke
Butzkueven Helmut
Iaffaldano Pietro
Trojano Maria
Glaser Anna
Hillert Jan
Katso/Avaa
20552173231153557.pdf (1.845Mb)
Lataukset: 

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
doi:10.1177/20552173231153557
URI
https://doi.org/10.1177/20552173231153557
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Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2023042538605
Tiivistelmä

Background: To assign a course of secondary progressive multiple sclerosis (MS) (SPMS) may be difficult and the proportion of persons with SPMS varies between reports. An objective method for disease course classification may give a better estimation of the relative proportions of relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS) and SPMS and may identify situations where SPMS is under reported.

Materials and methods: Data were obtained for 61,900 MS patients from MS registries in the Czech Republic, Denmark, Germany, Sweden, and the United Kingdom (UK), including date of birth, sex, SP conversion year, visits with an Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) score, MS onset and diagnosis date, relapses, and disease-modifying treatment (DMT) use. We included RRMS or SPMS patients with at least one visit between January 2017 and December 2019 if ≥ 18 years of age. We applied three objective methods: A set of SPMS clinical trial inclusion criteria ("EXPAND criteria") modified for a real-world evidence setting, a modified version of the MSBase algorithm, and a decision tree-based algorithm recently published.

Results: The clinically assigned proportion of SPMS varied from 8.7% (Czechia) to 34.3% (UK). Objective classifiers estimated the proportion of SPMS from 15.1% (Germany by the EXPAND criteria) to 58.0% (UK by the decision tree method). Due to different requirements of number of EDSS scores, classifiers varied in the proportion they were able to classify; from 18% (UK by the MSBase algorithm) to 100% (the decision tree algorithm for all registries). Objectively classified SPMS patients were older, converted to SPMS later, had higher EDSS at index date and higher EDSS at conversion. More objectively classified SPMS were on DMTs compared to the clinically assigned.

Conclusion: SPMS appears to be systematically underdiagnosed in MS registries. Reclassified patients were more commonly on DMTs.

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