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- Title
Modelling Disease Progression of Multiple Sclerosis in a South Wales Cohort.
- Authors
Uzochukwu, Emeka C.; Harding, Katharine E.; Hrastelj, James; Kreft, Karim L.; Holmans, Peter; Robertson, Neil P.; Tallantyre, Emma C.; Lawton, Michael
- Abstract
Objectives: The objective of this study was to model multiple sclerosis (MS) disease progression and compare disease trajectories by sex, age of onset, and year of diagnosis. Study Design and Setting: Longitudinal EDSS scores (20,854 observations) were collected for 1,787 relapse-onset MS patients at MS clinics in South Wales and modelled using a multilevel model (MLM). The MLM adjusted for covariates (sex, age of onset, year of diagnosis, and disease-modifying treatments), and included interactions between baseline covariates and time variables. Results: The optimal model was truncated at 30 years after disease onset and excluded EDSS recorded within 3 months of relapse. As expected, older age of onset was associated with faster disease progression at 15 years (effect size (ES): 0.75; CI: 0.63, 0.86; p: <0.001) and female-sex progressed more slowly at 15 years (ES: −0.43; CI: −0.68, −0.18; p: <0.001). Patients diagnosed more recently (defined as 2007–2011 and >2011) progressed more slowly than those diagnosed historically (<2006); (ES: −0.46; CI: −0.75, −0.16; p: 0.006) and (ES: −0.95; CI: −1.20, −0.70; p: <0.001), respectively. Conclusion: We present a novel model of MS outcomes, accounting for the non-linear trajectory of MS and effects of baseline covariates, validating well-known risk factors (sex and age of onset) associated with disease progression. Also, patients diagnosed more recently progressed more slowly than those diagnosed historically. What Is New: We developed a contemporary multilevel model for multiple sclerosis disease progression with longer follow-up using an ongoing cohort established in 1985 from the same geographical region. We assessed differences in disease trajectory by sex, age of onset, and year of diagnosis; showing that patients diagnosed in earlier years (before 2006) were found to have faster disability progression, while validating results that male-sex and older age of onset progressed faster than female-sex and younger age of onset, respectively.
- Subjects
SOUTH Wales; SEX factors in disease; DISEASE progression; MULTIPLE sclerosis; AGE of onset; MULTILEVEL models
- Publication
Neuroepidemiology, 2024, Vol 58, Issue 3, p218
- ISSN
0251-5350
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1159/000536427