To explore whether brain volume loss (BVL) in people with multiple sclerosis (MS), assessed on magnetic imaging (MRI) data obtained during routine medical follow-up (and thus outside a standardized research environment), differs from that of healthy controls and correlates with measures of physical and/or cognitive disability, the latter also gathered during regular clinical practice.
This project will not be the first study on real-world data in an existing MS cohort. A NMSC research group has already reported on the contribution of a single brain volumetric assessment to the prediction of MS-related disability10 - with distinct patterns for the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) as a measure of physical disability11, and Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT) as a measure of cognitive disability12 - and found a threshold effect for the lowest brain volumes with regard to SDMT worsening over time10. Ghione and co-workers, in turn, have demonstrated a positive correlation between annualized BVL and EDSS progression based on the EDSS in a very large sample containing nearly 2,000 individuals13. The novelty of this new study lies in the fact that the investigators want to explore the correlations between BVL and changes in an expanded set of routinely collected clinical variables in our center - in addition to the EDSS score - such as Timed 25-Feet Walk Test (T25FWT)14, 9-Hole Peg Test (9HPT)15 and SDMT.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
70
Nationaal Multiple Sclerose Centrum Melsbroek
Melsbroek, Vlaams-Brabant, Belgium
The primary endpoint of this study will be the difference in annualized whole brain volume percentage change between the MS and control cohort
the difference in annualized whole brain volume measured by Icometrix
Time frame: 4 - 5 years
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