Standard of care?
While the unique MRI techniques used in the study may not be easily obtained in standard practice, Dr. Cree noted that efforts are underway to facilitate the process. “Development of a fully automated software package to obtain those measurements for both clinical trials and in some [clinical settings] is underway,” he said.
Dr. Cree noted that once those technologies are available, the assessment of spinal cord atrophy could become standard in MS care. “I predict that when upper cervical cord measurements can be readily measured, assessment for decrease in the upper cervical cord area will be an essential component of routine care of relapsing MS patients,” he said.
“Because decreases in upper cervical cord areas herald disability worsening, there may well be a window of opportunity to use highly effective treatments to arrest or even reverse this process before irreversible disability accumulates,” Dr. Cree added.
Treatment implications
Commenting on the findings, ACTRIMS program cochair Anne Cross, MD, professor of neurology and the Manny and Rosalyn Rosenthal–Dr John Trotter MS Chair in Neuroimmunology, Washington University, St. Louis, noted that the study is important for two key reasons.
“We lack a good prognostic marker of future progression, but this could have very important implications for the choice of treatment of patients, particularly if the findings are applicable not only at the group level, as in the study, but also at the level of the individual patient,” said Dr. Cross, who was not involved with the research.
Secondly, the results suggest benefits in the selection of patients for clinical trials of agents that might stop progression. “Choosing patients who would deliver the most impact in studies of potential new treatments for progressive MS” is important, Dr. Cross said.
“We don’t want to dilute our trial patient populations with patients who might not be destined to progress in the ensuing years,” she added.
Also commenting on the findings, Benjamin Segal, MD, director of the University of Michigan’s Multiple Sclerosis Center and the Holtom-Garrett Program in Neuroimmunology, Ann Arbor, agreed that the study offers valuable insights. “These findings are striking in that they underscore the fact that even patients with relapsing-remitting MS undergo functional decline in between overt clinical exacerbations, although the decline is more subtle than that experienced by people with progressive forms of MS,” Dr. Segal said.
He noted that the strong correlation between silent progression and spinal cord atrophy, more so than with brain measures, “is not so surprising, since clinical decline was measured using the EDSS scale – which emphasizes ambulation over other functions,” such as cognition.
“It would be interesting to correlate silent progression with serum neurofilament light chain levels, at baseline as well as change over time,” Dr. Segal added.
Dr. Bischof and Dr. Segal have reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Cree has received personal compensation for consulting from Biogen, EMD Serono, and Novartis.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.