“In patients with [natalizumab-associated PML], both the probability for a positive CSF JCV PCR result and the JCV viral load are associated with the total PML lesion volume ... as a consequence, patients with smaller PML lesion volumes are more likely to have undetectable JCV DNA, and PML can thus not reliably be excluded based on a negative PCR,” they concluded.
They warned that strict pharmacovigilance by MRI “will lead to identification of smaller [PML] lesions that associate with a higher likelihood of negative polymerase chain reaction results, which hampers a formal diagnosis of [PML] and may complicate patient treatment.”
Meticulous clinical and MRI follow-up in combination with repeated CSF JCV PCR testing was warranted in these patients, the researchers advised.
They suggested that complementary PML diagnostic approaches, such as assessing intrathecal antibody synthesis to JCV by determining the CSF JCV antibody index, may also be of additional value.