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New brain lesions with no impact on physical disability can impact cognition in early multiple sclerosis: A ten-year longitudinal study

OBJECTIVE: In early multiple sclerosis, although brain T2 lesions accrual are hallmark of the disease, only weak correlations were found between T2 lesions accrual and EDSS progression, the disability scale commonly used in multiple sclerosis studies. This may be related to the very poor sensitivity...

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Autores principales: Wybrecht, D., Reuter, F., Pariollaud, F., Zaaraoui, W., Le Troter, A., Rico, A., Confort-Gouny, S., Soulier, E., Guye, M., Maarouf, A., Ranjeva, J-P., Pelletier, J., Audoin, B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5693435/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29149177
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0184650
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author Wybrecht, D.
Reuter, F.
Pariollaud, F.
Zaaraoui, W.
Le Troter, A.
Rico, A.
Confort-Gouny, S.
Soulier, E.
Guye, M.
Maarouf, A.
Ranjeva, J-P.
Pelletier, J.
Audoin, B.
author_facet Wybrecht, D.
Reuter, F.
Pariollaud, F.
Zaaraoui, W.
Le Troter, A.
Rico, A.
Confort-Gouny, S.
Soulier, E.
Guye, M.
Maarouf, A.
Ranjeva, J-P.
Pelletier, J.
Audoin, B.
author_sort Wybrecht, D.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: In early multiple sclerosis, although brain T2 lesions accrual are hallmark of the disease, only weak correlations were found between T2 lesions accrual and EDSS progression, the disability scale commonly used in multiple sclerosis studies. This may be related to the very poor sensitivity of EDSS to cognitive dysfunctions that may occur and progress from the first stage of the disease. In the present study, we aimed to demonstrate that cognitive deficits progress during the first ten years of MS and are significantly impacted by new T2 lesions. METHODS: EDSS and extensive neuropsychological battery (22 measures) exploring memory, attention/speed of information processing and executive functions were assessed at baseline, Year 1 and Year 10 in 26 patients enrolled after their first clinical attack. To limit the bias of test-retest effect, only measures obtained at Year 1 and Year 10 were reported in the analysis. Raw scores of patients were transformed into z-scores using published normative data when available or scores of matched controls. Lesion probability mapping was used to assess the potential relationships between T2 lesions accumulation, cognitive decline and EDSS progression (P<0.05, FWE-corrected). RESULTS: At Year 1, 27% of patients showed attention/speed of information processing deficits, 11.5% executive dysfunction and 11.5% memory impairment. During the follow-up, frequency and severity of executive dysfunction increased (from 11.5% of patients at Year 1 to 42% at Year 10, p<0.01) while no significant changes were evidenced for the other cognitive domains. Median EDSS increased from 0.5 [range: 0–3] at Year 1 to 2.5 [range: 0–6.5] at Year 10 (p<0.001). During the ten-year follow-up, lesions accumulation in the left cerebellum and semi-ovale centers was associated with EDSS progression. In contrast, most lesions accumulation in the frontal, parietal and temporal lobes were associated with cognitive decline but had no effect on EDSS progression. CONCLUSION: The present study provides strong evidence that clinically silent T(2) lesions impact cognition in early MS. In daily practice, early prevention of T2 lesions accrual may be useful to limit cognitive decline.
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spelling pubmed-56934352017-11-30 New brain lesions with no impact on physical disability can impact cognition in early multiple sclerosis: A ten-year longitudinal study Wybrecht, D. Reuter, F. Pariollaud, F. Zaaraoui, W. Le Troter, A. Rico, A. Confort-Gouny, S. Soulier, E. Guye, M. Maarouf, A. Ranjeva, J-P. Pelletier, J. Audoin, B. PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVE: In early multiple sclerosis, although brain T2 lesions accrual are hallmark of the disease, only weak correlations were found between T2 lesions accrual and EDSS progression, the disability scale commonly used in multiple sclerosis studies. This may be related to the very poor sensitivity of EDSS to cognitive dysfunctions that may occur and progress from the first stage of the disease. In the present study, we aimed to demonstrate that cognitive deficits progress during the first ten years of MS and are significantly impacted by new T2 lesions. METHODS: EDSS and extensive neuropsychological battery (22 measures) exploring memory, attention/speed of information processing and executive functions were assessed at baseline, Year 1 and Year 10 in 26 patients enrolled after their first clinical attack. To limit the bias of test-retest effect, only measures obtained at Year 1 and Year 10 were reported in the analysis. Raw scores of patients were transformed into z-scores using published normative data when available or scores of matched controls. Lesion probability mapping was used to assess the potential relationships between T2 lesions accumulation, cognitive decline and EDSS progression (P<0.05, FWE-corrected). RESULTS: At Year 1, 27% of patients showed attention/speed of information processing deficits, 11.5% executive dysfunction and 11.5% memory impairment. During the follow-up, frequency and severity of executive dysfunction increased (from 11.5% of patients at Year 1 to 42% at Year 10, p<0.01) while no significant changes were evidenced for the other cognitive domains. Median EDSS increased from 0.5 [range: 0–3] at Year 1 to 2.5 [range: 0–6.5] at Year 10 (p<0.001). During the ten-year follow-up, lesions accumulation in the left cerebellum and semi-ovale centers was associated with EDSS progression. In contrast, most lesions accumulation in the frontal, parietal and temporal lobes were associated with cognitive decline but had no effect on EDSS progression. CONCLUSION: The present study provides strong evidence that clinically silent T(2) lesions impact cognition in early MS. In daily practice, early prevention of T2 lesions accrual may be useful to limit cognitive decline. Public Library of Science 2017-11-17 /pmc/articles/PMC5693435/ /pubmed/29149177 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0184650 Text en © 2017 Wybrecht et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Wybrecht, D.
Reuter, F.
Pariollaud, F.
Zaaraoui, W.
Le Troter, A.
Rico, A.
Confort-Gouny, S.
Soulier, E.
Guye, M.
Maarouf, A.
Ranjeva, J-P.
Pelletier, J.
Audoin, B.
New brain lesions with no impact on physical disability can impact cognition in early multiple sclerosis: A ten-year longitudinal study
title New brain lesions with no impact on physical disability can impact cognition in early multiple sclerosis: A ten-year longitudinal study
title_full New brain lesions with no impact on physical disability can impact cognition in early multiple sclerosis: A ten-year longitudinal study
title_fullStr New brain lesions with no impact on physical disability can impact cognition in early multiple sclerosis: A ten-year longitudinal study
title_full_unstemmed New brain lesions with no impact on physical disability can impact cognition in early multiple sclerosis: A ten-year longitudinal study
title_short New brain lesions with no impact on physical disability can impact cognition in early multiple sclerosis: A ten-year longitudinal study
title_sort new brain lesions with no impact on physical disability can impact cognition in early multiple sclerosis: a ten-year longitudinal study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5693435/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29149177
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0184650
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