NeuroCure Clinical Research Center, Experimental and Clinical Research Center, Department of Neurology, Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany

Author Of 2 Presentations

Neuromyelitis Optica and Anti-MOG Disease Poster Presentation

P0707 - Costs and health-related quality of life in patients with neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder and MOG-antibody associated disease (CHANCENMO-Study) (ID 1015)

Abstract

Background

Neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMOSD) and myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein-antibody associated disease (MOG-AD) are orphan diseases with high impact on quality of life and to date unknown socio-economic burden.

Objectives

The aim of this study was to evaluate costs and health-related quality of life of NMOSD and MOG-AD from the societal perspective.

Methods

In a multicenter cross-sectional study throughout Germany between 04/2017 and 04/2019, the primary data on retrospective consumption of medical and non-medical resources and work ability related to NMOSD and MOG-AD were assessed via standardized and pre-tested paper-based patient questionnaires. Health-related quality of life was captured by the EuroQoL Group EQ-5D-5L questionnaire. Clinical data were retrieved from the Neuromyelitis Optica Study Group (NEMOS) database. Patient recruitment took place at 17 German NEMOS centers. Costs were analyzed in EUR for 2018.

Results

During the recruitment period, 218 of 275 adult patients were screened for eligibility. 212 patients (80.2% women; mean age 49 ± SD 15 years; mean disease duration 9 ± SD 8.5 years; Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) 3.7 ± SD 2.1) were analyzed. The mean total annual per capita cost of illness accounted for EUR 59 576 and the mean index value of the EQ-5D-5L was 0.693. Given an estimated prevalence of NMOSD in Germany of 1.3/100 000, the annual burden from the societal perspective adds to EUR 64.3 Mio for Germany. The most important cost drivers were informal care costs (27.6% of total costs), indirect costs (23.3%; particularly loss of salary) and drugs, especially immunotherapeutics (16.4%). Costs showed a significant positive correlation with disease severity (p<0.0001); in the EDSS 6.5-8.5 subgroup the annual costs were EUR 129 436. Moreover, the health-related quality of life revealed a negative correlation with disease severity (p<0.0001); in the EDSS 6.5-8.5 subgroup the mean index value was 0.195.

Conclusions

These German data from the era without approved standard medications show enormous effects of the disease on costs and quality of life and might be helpful for estimating the impact and cost-effectiveness of new therapeutic approaches.

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Pathogenesis – the Blood-Brain Barrier Poster Presentation

P0945 - Brain choroid plexus volume in Multiple Sclerosis versus Neuromyelitis Optica Spectrum Disease (ID 1476)

Abstract

Background

Neuromyelitis optica spectrum disease (NMOSD) and multiple sclerosis (MS) have a different pathophysiology. Accumulating evidence suggests that the choroid plexus plays a pivotal role in the pathogenesis of MS. However, MRI data comparing the choroid plexus volume between MS and NMOSD are scarce.

Objectives

To compare the choroid plexus volume in MS vs. NMOSD in vivo using high-resolution 3D MRI data. Migraine patients and healthy individuals served as control groups.

Methods

We included 95 MS patients [45% secondary progressive (SP); mean age 51.0±11.5 years; disease duration 20.8±10.4 years, 62% female; median Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) 4.0], 43 NMOSD patients [28/43 anti-aquaporin 4 antibody positive; 11/43 anti-myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody positive; 87% female; mean age 50.0±13.8 years; disease duration 6.8±7.3 years, median EDSS 3.0], 38 migraine patients [mean age 39±13 years, 79% female; 15/38 migraine with aura] and 65 healthy individuals [HCs, mean age 41±17 years, 48% female]. The choroid plexus of the lateral ventricles and T2-weighted (T2w) white matter lesions (WMLs) were segmented fully automated on T1-weighted (T1w) magnetization-prepared rapid gradient echo (MPRAGE) images and fluid attenuated inversion recovery sequences (FLAIR, voxel size of both sequences 1x1x1 mm3), respectively, using a supervised deep learning algorithm (multi-dimensional gated recurrent units). Total intracranial volume (TIV) and lateral ventricle volumes were assessed fully automated using Freesurfer. All outputs were reviewed and manually corrected (if necessary) using 3D-Slicer by trained raters who were blinded to the clinical information. Group differences were analyzed using multivariable generalized linear models (GLMs) adjusted for age, gender, TIV and lateral ventricle volume. Cohens’ d was used to calculate the standardized difference between the respective groups. Given p-values are adjusted for multiple comparisons (Bonferroni).

Results

Mean choroid plexus was larger in MS compared to NMOSD (1907±455 vs. 1467±408 µl; p<0.001, d=0.86), HCs (1663±424 µl; p=0.007, d=1.17) and migraine (1527±366 µl; p=0.02, d=0.72). There was no statistical difference in the choroid plexus volume between NMOSD, migraine and HCs. The choroid plexus was marginally larger in RRMS than SPMS (1959±482 vs. 1875±476 µl; p=0.28; d=0.17) and in untreated MS patients compared to MS patients on disease modifying therapy (2111±382 vs. 1876±459 µl; p=0.36). However, these differences did not reach statistical significance after correction for multiple comparisons. There was no association between the choroid plexus volume and total T2w WML volume in MS.

Conclusions

Patients with MS have larger choroid plexus than HCs, migraine and NMOSD patients. Further studies are warranted to investigate the respective roles of the choroid plexus in the pathogenesis of MS and NMOSD.

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