Author Of 1 Presentation
PS09.05 - Value of serum neurofilament light chain levels as a biomarker of suboptimal treatment response in MS clinical practice
- Ö. Yaldizli
- P. Benkert
- A. Maceski
- M. Barakovic
- R. Todea
- A. Cagol
- S. Schaedelin
- G. Disanto
- J. Oechtering
- A. Orleth
- D. Rey
- T. Sinnecker
- R. Rahmanzadeh
- S. Zadic
- R. Galbusera
- L. Achtnichts
- S. Aeschbacher
- A. Chan
- D. Conen
- T. Derfuss
- O. Findling
- B. Fischer-Barnicol
- K. Hrusovsky
- H. Kropshofer
- P. Lalive
- J. Lieb
- J. Lorscheider
- P. Maggi
- C. Müller
- S. Müller
- Y. Naegelin
- J. Müller
- J. Oksenberg
- C. Pot
- R. Du Pasquier
- E. Radue
- A. Salmen
- J. Vehoff
- E. Waubant
- S. Wellmann
- H. Wiendl
- J. Wuerfel
- C. Zecca
- K. Berger
- C. Gobbi
- L. Kappos
- D. Leppert
- C. Granziera
- J. Kuhle
Abstract
Background
Serum neurofilament light chain (sNfL) reflects neuro-axonal damage and may qualify as a biomarker of suboptimal response to disease modifying therapy (DMT).
Objectives
To investigate the predictive value of sNfL in clinically isolated syndrome (CIS) and relapsing-remitting (RR) MS patients with established DMT for future MS disease activity in the Swiss MS Cohort Study.
Methods
All patients were on DMT for at least 3 months. sNfL was measured 6 or 12-monthly with the NF-light®assay. The association between sNfL and age was modeled using a generalized additive model for location scale and shape. Z-scores (sNfLz) were derived thereof, reflecting the deviation of a patient sNfL value from the mean value of same age healthy controls (n=8865 samples). We used univariable mixed logistic regression models to investigate the association between sNfLz and the occurrence of clinical events (relapses, EDSS worsening [≥1.5 steps if EDSS 0; ≥1.0 if 1.0-5.5 or ≥0.5 if >5.5] in the following year in all patients, and in those fulfilling NEDA-3 criteria (no relapses, EDSS worsening, contrast enhancing or new/enlarging T2 lesions in brain MRI, based on previous year). We combined sNfLz with clinical and MRI measures of MS disease activity in the previous year (EDA-3) in a multivariable mixed logistic regression model for predicting clinical events in the following year.
Results
sNfL was measured in 1062 patients with 5192 longitudinal samples (median age 39.7 yrs; EDSS 2.0; 4.1% CIS, 95.9% RRMS; median follow-up 5 yrs). sNfLz predicted clinical events in the following year (OR 1.21 [95%CI 1.11-1.36], p<0.001, n=4624). This effect increased in magnitude with increasing sNfLz (sNfLz >1: OR 1.41 [95%CI 1.15-1.73], p=0.001; >1.5: OR 1.80 [95%CI 1.43-2.28], p<0.001; >2: OR 2.33 [95%CI 1.74-3.14], p<0.001). Similar results were found for the prediction of future new/enlarging T2 lesions and brain volume loss. In the multivariable model, new/enlarging T2 lesions (OR 1.88 [95%CI 1.13-3.12], p=0.016) and sNfLz>1.5 (OR 2.18 [95%CI 1.21-3.90], p=0.009) predicted future clinical events (n=853), while previous EDSS worsening, previous relapses and current contrast enhancement did not. In NEDA-3 patients, change of sNfLz (per standard deviation) was associated with a 37% increased risk of clinical events in the subsequent year (OR 1.37 [95%CI 1.04-1.78], p=0.025, n=587).
Conclusions
Our data support the value of sNfL levels, beyond the NEDA3 concept, for treatment monitoring in MS clinical practice.
Author Of 4 Presentations
P0096 - Intrathecal immunoglobulin M synthesis is associated with higher disease activity and severity in Multiple Sclerosis (ID 1101)
- J. Oechtering
- S. Schaedelin
- P. Benkert
- S. Müller
- L. Achtnichts
- J. Vehoff
- G. Disanto
- O. Findling
- B. Fischer-Barnicol
- A. Orleth
- A. Chan
- A. Salmen
- C. Pot
- C. Granziera
- I. Heijnen
- P. Lalive
- J. Wuerfel
- T. Lincke
- J. Lieb
- Ö. Yaldizli
- T. Sinnecker
- T. Derfuss
- A. Regeniter
- C. Zecca
- C. Gobbi
- L. Kappos
- D. Leppert
- J. Kuhle
Abstract
Background
Additional biomarkers reflecting disease activity and predicting severity of multiple sclerosis (MS) are urgently needed.
Objectives
To explore whether intrathecal immunoglobulin (Ig) M synthesis is associated with time from disease onset to first relapse, MS Severity Score (MSSS) and time to first initiation of high efficacy disease modifying treatments (DMT) in patients with relapsing MS in the Swiss Multiple Sclerosis Cohort study.
Methods
487patients were categorized by presence of CSF oligoclonal IgG bands (OCGB) and quantitative intrathecal IgG and IgM production (Intrathecal Fraction, IF). Treatments were classified according to "no therapy", "platform", "oral" and "high efficacy". Multivariable Cox proportional hazard models or a multivariable linear model, adjusted for relevant covariables, were used to assess time from disease onset to described endpoints and associations with the MSSS.
Results
OCGB were present in 89.3%, IgGIF in 66.3%, IgMIF in 26.9% and IgAIF in 11.9% of patients. Patients with IgMIF had a shorter interval from disease onset to first relapse (HR 1.887 [CI 1.181, 3.014], p<0.01) compared to those without OCGB and IgGIF and IgMIF. Quantitatively, patients with IgMIF above versus below the median had a 1.75- fold increased hazard of occurrence of a first relapse (HR 1.746 [CI 1.097, 2.781]; p=0.019). IgMIF positive patients had on average a 1.24 steps higher MSSS compared with those without any intrathecal Ig synthesis (estimate: 1.243 [CI 0.501,1.986], p<0.01), followed by patients with OCGB and quantitative production of IgGIF (estimate: 0.966 [CI 0.283, 1.650], p<0.01) and patients with only OCGB (estimate: 0.716 [CI -0.030, 1.461], p=0.060). Accordingly, patients with IgMIF production had a shorter interval to initiation of high efficacy DMT (HR 2.788 [CI 1.306, 5.951], p<0.01). Quantitatively, above versus below median IgMIF was associated with a 2.36-fold risk of escalation to a high efficacy DMT (HR 2.361 [CI 1.304, 4.277]; p<0.01).
Conclusions
In relapsing MS, presence of intrathecally produced IgM is associated with higher disease activity, more severe disease course and earlier use of high efficacy treatments. Intrathecally produced IgM may qualify as useful prognostic biomarker for therapeutic decision making in early stage of disease.
P0097 - Intrathecal immunoglobulin M synthesis is associated with higher serum neurofilament light chain levels and increased MRI disease activity in MS (ID 1089)
- J. Oechtering
- S. Schaedelin
- P. Benkert
- M. Barakovic
- A. Maceski
- A. Orleth
- D. Rey
- T. Sinnecker
- R. Rahmanzadeh
- S. Zadic
- R. Galbusera
- R. Todea
- A. Cagol
- L. Achtnichts
- S. Aeschbacher
- K. Berger
- A. Chan
- D. Conen
- T. Derfuss
- G. Disanto
- O. Findling
- B. Fischer-Barnicol
- I. Heijnen
- K. Hrusovsky
- H. Kropshofer
- P. Lalive
- J. Lieb
- T. Lincke
- J. Lorscheider
- P. Maggi
- C. Müller
- S. Müller
- Y. Naegelin
- J. Oksenberg
- C. Pot
- R. Du Pasquier
- E. Radue
- A. Regeniter
- A. Salmen
- J. Vehoff
- E. Waubant
- S. Wellmann
- H. Wiendl
- J. Würfel
- Ö. Yaldizli
- C. Zecca
- D. Leppert
- C. Gobbi
- L. Kappos
- C. Granziera
- J. Kuhle
Abstract
Background
Intrathecal IgM synthesis was reported to be associated with higher clinical disease activity and severity. We found an association also with earlier use of high efficacy treatments in relapsing MS (RMS).
Objectives
To explore whether patients with intrathecal IgM synthesis show a) higher serum neurofilament light chain levels (sNfL) as a reflection of neuronal damage, or b) signs of increased disease severity in cerebral MRI, in patients with RMS followed in the Swiss MS Cohort Study.
Methods
487 patients were categorized by presence of oligoclonal IgG bands (OCGB) and intrathecally produced IgG/M:
1) OCGB-/IgG-/IgM- (reference [ref]);
2) OCGB+/IgG-/IgM-;
3) OCGB+/IgG+/IgM- and
4) OCGB+/IgG+/IgM+.
sNfL was measured (at baseline and every 6- or 12 months) with the NF-light® assay. Age-dependent sNfL z-scores (sNfLz) were modelled in 8865 healthy control samples to reflect the deviation of a patient sNfL value compared to mean values observed in same age healthy controls. Yearly T2 lesion number and occurrence of new/enlarging T2 lesions were automatically assessed in cerebral MRIs and checked manually. Contrast enhancing lesions (CEL) were manually quantified. Linear or negative binomial mixed models were used to investigate the associations between the four CSF Ig patterns and longitudinal sNfLz and MRI measures, adjusted for DMT and other covariates.
Results
IgM+ patients had higher sNfLz vs reference (estimate 0.50 [CI 0.12, 0.89], p=0.011), whereas those with only OCGB+ (0.11 [-0.28, 0.50], p=0.582) or with OCGB+/IgG+ (0.20 [-0.16, 0.56], p=0.270) did not (n=2970 observations). This was confirmed when analyzing only untreated patients adjusting for T2 and CEL numbers (1.16 [0.47, 1.86], p<0.01 vs 0.58 [-0.11, 1.27], p=0.1022 vs 0.51 [-0.11, 1.13], p=0.108 vs ref, respectively) (n=234).
IgM+ patients had 2.28-fold more T2 lesions ([1.51, 3.44], p<0.01) vs ref; for patients with only OCGB+ (1.61 [1.07, 2.43], p=0.0237) or OCGB+/IgG+ (1.58 [CI 1.08, 2.32], p=0.0179) (n=1580) this association was weaker.
IgM+ was associated with a 2.47-fold risk for new/enlarging T2 lesions on yearly follow-up MRIs vs ref (2.47 [1.28, 4.78], p<0.01) but not the two other patient groups (1.84 [CI 0.93; 3.65], p=0.0799 and 1.61 [CI 0.87; 2.95], p=0.1280) (n=861).
Conclusions
Intrathecal IgM synthesis was consistently associated with quantitative measures of neuro-axonal injury and disease severity in RMS. Our findings strongly support the clinical utiliy of this biomarker.
P0160 - Serum NfL z-scores derived from a large healthy control group reflect different levels of treatment effect in a real-world setting (ID 916)
- P. Benkert
- S. Schaedelin
- A. Maceski
- G. Disanto
- J. Oechtering
- M. Barakovic
- A. Orleth
- D. Rey
- T. Sinnecker
- Ö. Yaldizli
- R. Rahmanzadeh
- S. Zadic
- R. Galbusera
- R. Todea
- A. Cagol
- L. Achtnichts
- S. Aeschbacher
- A. Chan
- D. Conen
- T. Derfuss
- O. Findling
- B. Fischer-Barnicol
- K. Hrusovsky
- H. Kropshofer
- P. Lalive
- J. Lieb
- J. Lorscheider
- P. Maggi
- C. Müller
- S. Müller
- Y. Naegelin
- J. Oksenberg
- C. Pot
- R. Du Pasquier
- E. Radue
- A. Salmen
- J. Vehoff
- E. Waubant
- S. Wellmann
- H. Wiendl
- J. Wuerfel
- C. Zecca
- C. Gobbi
- L. Kappos
- K. Berger
- C. Granziera
- D. Leppert
- J. Kuhle
Abstract
Background
Serum neurofilament light chain (sNfL) levels reflect neuroaxonal damage and relate to disease activity in MS. sNfL may qualify as well as a biomarker of suboptimal treatment response to disease modifying therapies (DMT). Establishment of age-dependent reference ranges in healthy controls is a prerequisite for developing this biomarker for clinical use.
Objectives
To compare on-treatment sNfL levels with values from a healthy control cohort and to investigate the effect of DMTs on sNfL levels in patients from the Swiss MS Cohort Study.
Methods
sNfL was measured (at baseline and every 6- or 12 months) with the NF-light® assay. Age-dependent sNfL z-scores (sNfLz) were modeled in healthy controls using a generalized additive model for location scale and shape to reflect the deviation of a patient sNfL value from the mean value of same age healthy controls. Linear mixed models were used to investigate the associations between clinical characteristics, DMT and longitudinal sNfLz. Interaction terms and splines were used to model sNfLz and for comparison log(NfL), and their dynamics under treatment.
Results
sNfL was measured in 1368 patients with 7550 longitudinal samples (baseline: median age: 41.9 yrs; 5.4% CIS, 83.2% RRMS, 5.6% SPMS, 5.8% PPMS; median EDSS: 2.0; median follow-up: 4.6 yrs) and 4133 healthy controls with 8865 samples (median age: 44.8 yrs). In the multivariable model, sNfLz increased with EDSS (0.131/step, [95% CI 0.101;0.161]), recent (<120 days) relapse (0.739 [0.643;0.835]) decreased with age (-0.014/year [-0.02;-0.009]), and time on DMT (-0.040/year [-0.054;-0.027]); sNfLz were lower when sampled while on more effective DMT (oral versus platform injectables: -0.229 [-0.344;-0.144]; monoclonal antibodies (mAB) versus platform injectables: -0.349 [-0.475;-0.224]), (p<0.001 for all associations). sNfLz were inversely associated with the hierarchy in efficacy of mAB over orals and orals over platform therapies with regard to slope and extent of decrease (interaction between time under DMT and DMT class: p<0.001). sNfLz, but not log(NfL) showed normalization of sNfL levels by mAB to healthy control levels.
Conclusions
The dynamic change of sNfLz on DMT reflects closely their relative clinical efficacy and is more meaningful than log(sNfL) by excluding age as a confounding factor. Use of sNfLz based on a large normative database as an age-independent sNfL measure improves the accuracy of the sNfL signal and hence their clinical utility.
P0638 - Role of Gadolinium-based contrast agents to detect subclinical disease activity in clinically stable patients in the Swiss MS Cohort Study (ID 821)
- E. Ruberte
- Ö. Yaldizli
- R. Rahmanzadeh
- R. Galbusera
- R. Todea
- A. Cagol
- S. Subramaniam
- P. Benkert
- S. Müller
- L. Achtnichts
- J. Vehoff
- G. Disanto
- O. Findling
- A. Chan
- A. Salmen
- C. Pot
- P. Lalive
- C. Zecca
- T. Derfuss
- J. Lieb
- E. Radue
- L. Remonda
- F. Wagner
- M. Vargas
- P. Maeder
- E. Pravata
- J. Weber
- D. Leppert
- L. Kappos
- C. Gobbi
- C. Granziera
- J. Würfel
- J. Kuhle
Abstract
Background
Gadolinium (Gd)-based contrast agents are widely used to assess disease activity and treatment response by MRI in multiple sclerosis (MS). There is, however, increasing concern about their safety as their repeated administration may lead to brain parenchymal accumulation, while preclinical models suggest that they induce mitochondrial toxicity and neuronal cell death. Moreover, recent reports have demonstrated that three-dimensional (3D) T2-weighted Fluid-Attenuated-Inversion-Recovery (FLAIR) is highly sensitive in detecting new or enlarging MS lesions.
Objectives
To explore whether the presence of contrast enhancing lesions (CEL) based on Gd injection is more sensitive in detecting lesional activity in clinically stable MS patients in comparison to the analysis of new or enlarging MS lesions by 3D FLAIR.
Methods
MS patients being part of the observational, multicenter Swiss Multiple Sclerosis Cohort Study (SMSC) with contrast enhanced T1-weighted (T1w) images were included. Clinical stability was defined as no relapse and no Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) increase during at least twelve months prior to MRI. Presence of CEL was assessed on contrast enhanced T1w images. Presence of new or enlarging T2w lesions was assessed manually on 3D FLAIR in an independent analysis by a different investigator in clinically stable MS patients presenting with CEL.
Results
3930 MRI scans (3.0 Tesla n=1497 (38%)) in 1057 participants (685 women, median age 42.0 years, 941 with relapsing MS, 116 with progressive MS, median EDSS 2.0 (range 1.5-3.5), median disease duration 7.4 years) were included.
Of 2620 MRI scans (66.7%) acquired in clinically stable conditions 46 (1.8%) demonstrated CEL. In all of these, new or enlarging T2w lesions were detectable by 3D FLAIR when a previous MRI was available for comparison (previous MRI available in 29/46; median number of new or enlarging T2w lesions: 3 (range 1-41, total number 176); median number of CEL: 1 (range 1-4, total number 47)).
Conclusions
In our large cohort from clinical practice, the assessment of new or enlarging lesions by 3D FLAIR was equally sensitive as the quantification of CEL to detect disease activity in clinically stable MS patients, challenging current practice of the use of Gd-enhanced MRI for monitoring of MS in clinical routine.