Conference Coverage

Differential diagnosis in MS: What to watch for


 

FROM ACTRIMS FORUM 2023

Common mistakes

MOGAD and aquaporin 4–positive NMO spectrum disorder (AQP4+NMOSD) can be easily mistaken for MS, but there are some key differences. MOGAD and AQP4+NMOSD attacks are more severe than MS attacks, leaving patients more likely to be blind following an optic neuritis attack or wheelchair bound because of myelitis. More than 85% of CSF from patients with MS have oligoclonal bands versus about 15% of CSF from patients with MOGAD or AQP4+NMOSD. There is also a difference in lesion dynamics over time: MOGAD T2 lesions frequently resolve over follow-up while AQP4+NMOSD and MS lesions typically continue and leave a scar and persist. Silent lesions are more likely during surveillance MRI among MS patients, but are rare in MOGAD and AQP4+NMOSD, according to Dr. Flanagan. “One caveat to this is that with stronger MS medications we are seeing less silent lesions accumulating as we use those treatments more often.”

Dr. Solomon has been done nonpromotional speaking for EMD Serono. He has received research funding from Bristol-Myers Squibb. He has been on an advisory board or consulted for Greenwich Biosciences, TG Therapeutics, Octave Bioscience, and Horizon Therapeutics. Dr. Flanagan has no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Flanagan has served on advisory boards for Alexion, Genentech, Horizon Therapeutics, and UCB.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Advancing health equity in neurology is essential to patient care
MDedge Neurology
New framework for MS diagnosis and treatment proposed
MDedge Neurology
High drug costs exclude most neurology patients from cutting-edge treatment
MDedge Neurology
Four-gene signature linked to increased PML risk
MDedge Neurology
Stem cell transplant superior to DMTs for secondary progressive MS
MDedge Neurology
Despite ongoing challenges, experts are optimistic about the future of MS therapy
MDedge Neurology
Poor sleep quality as a teen may up MS risk in adulthood
MDedge Neurology
Biosimilar equal to natalizumab for relapsing remitting MS
MDedge Neurology
Health plans get very poor scores for access to autoimmune drugs
MDedge Neurology
CBT alone and with meds may decrease MS fatigue
MDedge Neurology