Age is a critical determinant in recovery from multiple sclerosis relapses
Date
2019Author
Kantarci, Orhun H.
Uygunoglu, Ugur
Roariguez, Moses
Siva, Aksel
Zeydan, Burcu
Conway, Brittani L.
Novotna, Martina
Pittock, Sean J.
Atkinson, Elizabeth J.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Objective: To evaluate the impact of age on recovery from multiple sclerosis relapses. Background: Increasing disability in multiple sclerosis is a consequence of progressive disease and incomplete relapse recovery. Methods: The first and last-ever relapse data (357 relapses in 193 patients) from the Olmsted County population-based multiple sclerosis cohort were systematically reviewed for age, fulminance, location (optic nerve, brainstem/cerebellar, spinal cord), peak deficit, and maximum recovery. Three different relapse-outcome measures were studied both as paired analyses and as an overall group effect: change from peak deficit to maximum recovery in raw functional system score related to the relapse (Delta FSS), a previously published FSS-based relapse-impact model, and change from peak deficit to maximum recovery in Extended Disability Status Scale (Delta EDSS) score. Results: Older age was linearly associated with worse recovery in the Delta FSS outcome (p = 0.002), Delta EDSS outcome (p < 0.001), and the FSS-based relapse-impact model (p < 0.001). A multivariate analysis of Delta FSS outcome linked poor recovery to older age (p = 0.015), relapse location (transverse myelitis or brainstem/cerebellar syndrome; p < 0.001), and relapse fulminance (p = 0.004). Conclusion: Multiple sclerosis-relapse recovery declines in a linear fashion with increased age, which should be considered when making treatment decisions.
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