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Trends in concussion mechanism of injury during the COVID-19 pandemic
Schaffer, Olivia; Xie, Frank; Cheng, Debby; Grossman, Scott N; Galetta, Steven L; Balcer, Laura J
OBJECTIVE:The primary objective was to determine the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on volume, demographics, and mechanisms of injury (MOI) for patients seen at an urban multidisciplinary concussion center. During the first phase of the pandemic in the United States, stay-at-home orders led to decreased group activities and required cancellation of outpatient appointments or initiation of telemedicine visits. METHODS:This study was a retrospective chart review of 3500 patient electronic medical records (EMR). Patients aged 1-99 years were eligible if they had been seen at New York University Langone Health Concussion Center during March 1-December 31, 2019 (control/pre-pandemic period) or during the same period in 2020 (pandemic period). Injury date, appointment date, age, sex, and MOI were captured; statistical analyses were performed using Stata17 (StataCorp, College Station, TX). RESULTS:There were 48% fewer visits during the COVID-19 pandemic period compared to the 2019 control period. There was a decreased proportion of pediatric patients (15% control, 6% pandemic; p = 0.007, chi-square test). Fewer concussions were related to team sports (21% control, 5% pandemic; p < 0.001), and a greater proportion were caused by bicycle accidents (4% control, 8% pandemic; p = 0.037) and assault/domestic violence (3% control, 9% pandemic; p < 0.001). CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:The relative proportions of concussion MOI, age distributions, and visit volumes were significantly associated with pre-pandemic vs. pandemic periods, suggesting that COVID-19 changed concussion epidemiology during the pandemic period. This study demonstrates how epidemiologic data may inform future resource allocation during public health emergencies.
PMCID:9797225
PMID: 36608628
ISSN: 1878-5883
CID: 5410162
Where's the Vision? The Importance of Visual Outcomes in Neurologic Disorders: The 2021 H. Houston Merritt Lecture
Patil, Sachi A; Grossman, Scott; Kenney, Rachel; Balcer, Laura J; Galetta, Steven
Neurologists have long-recognized the importance of the visual system in the diagnosis and monitoring of neurological disorders. This is particularly true since approximately 50% of the brain's pathways subserve afferent and efferent aspects of vision. During the past 30 years, researchers and clinicians have further refined this concept to include investigation of the visual system for patients with specific neurologic diagnoses, including multiple sclerosis (MS), concussion, Parkinson's disease (PD) and conditions along the spectrum of Alzheimer's disease (AD, mild cognitive impairment [MCI] and subjective cognitive decline [SCD]). This review, highlights the visual "toolbox" that has been developed over the past three decades and beyond to capture both structural and functional aspects of vision in neurologic disease. While the efforts to accelerate the emphasis on structure-function relationships in neurological disorders began with MS during the early 2000's, such investigations have broadened to recognize the need for outcomes of visual pathway structure, function and quality of life for clinical trials of therapies across the spectrum of neurological disorders. This review begins with a patient case study highlighting the importance utilizing the most modern technologies for visual pathway assessment, including optical coherence tomography (OCT). We emphasize that both structural and functional tools for vision testing can be used in parallel to detect what might otherwise be sub-clinical events or markers of visual and, perhaps, more global neurological, decline. Such measures will be critical as clinical trials and therapies become more available across the neurological disease spectrum.
PMID: 36522160
ISSN: 1526-632x
CID: 5382402
Long-Term Effectiveness and Safety of Natalizumab in African American and Hispanic/Latino Patients with Early Relapsing"“Remitting Multiple Sclerosis: STRIVE Data Analysis
Perumal, Jai; Balabanov, Roumen; Balcer, Laura; Galetta, Steven; Sun, Zhaonan; Li, Hanyue; Rutledge, Danette; Avila, Robin L.; Fox, Robert J.
Introduction: In STRIVE, natalizumab treatment demonstrated effectiveness in clinical, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and patient-reported outcomes (PROs) in patients with early relapsing"“remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS). This post hoc analysis examined the effectiveness and safety of natalizumab in patients who self-identified as either Black/African American (AA) or Hispanic/Latino. Methods: Clinical, MRI, and PROs were assessed for the Black/AA subgroup (n = 40) and compared with the non-Hispanic White subgroup (n = 158). As a result of the very small sample size, outcomes for the Hispanic/Latino subgroup (n = 18) were assessed separately, including a sensitivity analysis with Hispanic/Latino patients who completed the 4-year study on natalizumab. Results: Clinical, MRI, and PROs were comparable between the Black/AA and non-Hispanic White subgroups except for MRI outcomes at year 1. A higher proportion of non-Hispanic White than Black/AA patients achieved MRI no evidence of disease activity (NEDA; 75.4% vs. 50.0%, p = 0.0121) and no new or newly enlarging T2 lesions (77.6% vs. 50.0%, p = 0.0031) at year 1; these differences were not observed in years 2"“4 of the study. For the Hispanic/Latino subgroup in the intent-to-treat population, 46.2% and 55.6% achieved NEDA at years 1 and 2; 66.7% and 90.0% achieved clinical NEDA at years 3 and 4. Annualized relapse rate was reduced by 93.0% at year 1 versus the year before natalizumab initiation; this reduction was maintained throughout the study. Over 4 years, 37.5"“50.0% of patients had a clinically meaningful improvement in their Symbol Digit Modalities Test score, and 81.8"“100.0% and 90.9"“100.0% had stable/improved Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale-29 physical and psychological scores, respectively. Similar results were observed in the sensitivity analysis with Hispanic/Latino subgroup of the 4-year natalizumab completers. Conclusion: These results highlight the effectiveness and safety of natalizumab in patients with early RRMS who self-identified as Black/AA or Hispanic/Latino. ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01485003.
SCOPUS:85150742482
ISSN: 2193-8253
CID: 5447702
Multiple Sclerosis Followed by Neuromyelitis Optica Spectrum Disorder: From the National Multiple Sclerosis Society Case Conference Proceedings
Goldschmidt, Carolyn; Galetta, Steven L; Lisak, Robert P; Balcer, Laura J; Hellman, Andrew; Racke, Michael K; Lovett-Racke, Amy E; Cruz, Roberto; Parsons, Matthew S; Sattarnezhad, Neda; Steinman, Lawrence; Zamvil, Scott S; Frohman, Elliot M; Frohman, Teresa C
A woman presented at age 18 years with partial myelitis and diplopia and experienced multiple subsequent relapses. Her MRI demonstrated T2 abnormalities characteristic of multiple sclerosis (MS) (white matter ovoid lesions and Dawson fingers), and CSF demonstrated an elevated IgG index and oligoclonal bands restricted to the CSF. Diagnosed with clinically definite relapsing-remitting MS, she was treated with various MS disease-modifying therapies and eventually began experiencing secondary progression. At age 57 years, she developed an acute longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis and was found to have AQP4 antibodies by cell-based assay. Our analysis of the clinical course, radiographic findings, molecular diagnostic methods, and treatment response characteristics support the hypothesis that our patient most likely had 2 CNS inflammatory disorders: MS, which manifested as a teenager, and neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder, which evolved in her sixth decade of life. This case emphasizes a key principle in neurology practice, which is to reconsider whether the original working diagnosis remains tenable, especially when confronted with evidence (clinical and/or paraclinical) that raises the possibility of a distinctively different disorder.
PMID: 36270950
ISSN: 2332-7812
CID: 5352572
Optic neuritis and autoimmune optic neuropathies: advances in diagnosis and treatment
Bennett, Jeffrey L; Costello, Fiona; Chen, John J; Petzold, Axel; Biousse, Valérie; Newman, Nancy J; Galetta, Steven L
Optic neuritis is an inflammatory optic neuropathy that is commonly indicative of autoimmune neurological disorders including multiple sclerosis, myelin-oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody-associated disease, and neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder. Early clinical recognition of optic neuritis is important in determining the potential aetiology, which has bearing on prognosis and treatment. Regaining high-contrast visual acuity is common in people with idiopathic optic neuritis and multiple sclerosis-associated optic neuritis; however, residual deficits in contrast sensitivity, binocular vision, and motion perception might impair vision-specific quality-of-life metrics. In contrast, recovery of visual acuity can be poorer and optic nerve atrophy more severe in individuals who are seropositive for antibodies to myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein, AQP4, and CRMP5 than in individuals with typical optic neuritis from idiopathic or multiple-sclerosis associated optic neuritis. Key clinical, imaging, and laboratory findings differentiate these disorders, allowing clinicians to focus their diagnostic studies and optimise acute and preventive treatments. Guided by early and accurate diagnosis of optic neuritis subtypes, the timely use of high-dose corticosteroids and, in some instances, plasmapheresis could prevent loss of high-contrast vision, improve contrast sensitivity, and preserve colour vision and visual fields. Advancements in our knowledge, diagnosis, and treatment of optic neuritis will ultimately improve our understanding of autoimmune neurological disorders, improve clinical trial design, and spearhead therapeutic innovation.
PMID: 36155661
ISSN: 1474-4465
CID: 5333932
Recurrent Optic Neuritis and Perineuritis Followed by an Unexpected Discovery: From the National Multiple Sclerosis Society Case Conference Proceedings
Pimentel Maldonado, Daniela A; Lisak, Robert; Galetta, Steven; Balcer, Laura; Varkey, Thomas; Goodman, Andrew; Graves, Jennifer; Racke, Michael; Zamvil, Scott S; Newsome, Scott; Frohman, Elliot M; Frohman, Teresa C
We describe a woman with a history of relapsing acute optic neuritis and perineuritis. Testing failed to confirm a specific diagnosis; hence, she was diagnosed with seronegative neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder and treated with the immunotherapy rituximab, later in conjunction with mycophenolate mofetil. She achieved a durable remission for 9 years until she presented with paresthesia affecting her left fifth digit, right proximal thigh, and left foot, while also reporting a 25-pound weight loss over the prior 3 months. New imaging demonstrated a longitudinally extensive and enhancing optic nerve, in conjunction with multifocal enhancing lesions within the spinal cord, in a skip-like distribution. The differential diagnosis is discussed.
PMID: 36357190
ISSN: 2332-7812
CID: 5357492
Life stressors significantly impact long-term outcomes and post-acute symptoms 12-months after COVID-19 hospitalization
Frontera, Jennifer A; Sabadia, Sakinah; Yang, Dixon; de Havenon, Adam; Yaghi, Shadi; Lewis, Ariane; Lord, Aaron S; Melmed, Kara; Thawani, Sujata; Balcer, Laura J; Wisniewski, Thomas; Galetta, Steven L
BACKGROUND:Limited data exists evaluating predictors of long-term outcomes after hospitalization for COVID-19. METHODS:We conducted a prospective, longitudinal cohort study of patients hospitalized for COVID-19. The following outcomes were collected at 6 and 12-months post-diagnosis: disability using the modified Rankin Scale (mRS), activities of daily living assessed with the Barthel Index, cognition assessed with the telephone Montreal Cognitive Assessment (t-MoCA), Neuro-QoL batteries for anxiety, depression, fatigue and sleep, and post-acute symptoms of COVID-19. Predictors of these outcomes, including demographics, pre-COVID-19 comorbidities, index COVID-19 hospitalization metrics, and life stressors, were evaluated using multivariable logistic regression. RESULTS:Of 790 COVID-19 patients who survived hospitalization, 451(57%) completed 6-month (N = 383) and/or 12-month (N = 242) follow-up, and 77/451 (17%) died between discharge and 12-month follow-up. Significant life stressors were reported in 121/239 (51%) at 12-months. In multivariable analyses, life stressors including financial insecurity, food insecurity, death of a close contact and new disability were the strongest independent predictors of worse mRS, Barthel Index, depression, fatigue, and sleep scores, and prolonged symptoms, with adjusted odds ratios ranging from 2.5 to 20.8. Other predictors of poor outcome included older age (associated with worse mRS, Barthel, t-MoCA, depression scores), baseline disability (associated with worse mRS, fatigue, Barthel scores), female sex (associated with worse Barthel, anxiety scores) and index COVID-19 severity (associated with worse Barthel index, prolonged symptoms). CONCLUSIONS:Life stressors contribute substantially to worse functional, cognitive and neuropsychiatric outcomes 12-months after COVID-19 hospitalization. Other predictors of poor outcome include older age, female sex, baseline disability and severity of index COVID-19.
PMCID:9637014
PMID: 36379135
ISSN: 1878-5883
CID: 5383312
Normative Data and Conversion Equation for Spectral-Domain Optical Coherence Tomography in an International Healthy Control Cohort
Kenney, Rachel; Liu, Mengling; Hasanaj, Lisena; Joseph, Binu; Al-Hassan, Abdullah A; Balk, Lisanne; Behbehani, Raed; Brandt, Alexander U; Calabresi, Peter A; Frohman, Elliot M; Frohman, Teresa; Havla, Joachim; Hemmer, Bernhard; Jiang, Hong; Knier, Benjamin; Korn, Thomas; Leocani, Letizia; MartÃnez-Lapiscina, Elena H; Papadopoulou, Athina; Paul, Friedemann; Petzold, Axel; Pisa, Marco; Villoslada, Pablo; Zimmermann, Hanna; Ishikawa, Hiroshi; Schuman, Joel S; Wollstein, Gadi; Chen, Yu; Saidha, Shiv; Thorpe, Lorna E; Galetta, Steven L; Balcer, Laura J
BACKGROUND:Spectral-domain (SD-) optical coherence tomography (OCT) can reliably measure axonal (peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer [pRNFL]) and neuronal (macular ganglion cell + inner plexiform layer [GCIPL]) thinning in the retina. Measurements from 2 commonly used SD-OCT devices are often pooled together in multiple sclerosis (MS) studies and clinical trials despite software and segmentation algorithm differences; however, individual pRNFL and GCIPL thickness measurements are not interchangeable between devices. In some circumstances, such as in the absence of a consistent OCT segmentation algorithm across platforms, a conversion equation to transform measurements between devices may be useful to facilitate pooling of data. The availability of normative data for SD-OCT measurements is limited by the lack of a large representative world-wide sample across various ages and ethnicities. Larger international studies that evaluate the effects of age, sex, and race/ethnicity on SD-OCT measurements in healthy control participants are needed to provide normative values that reflect these demographic subgroups to provide comparisons to MS retinal degeneration. METHODS:Participants were part of an 11-site collaboration within the International Multiple Sclerosis Visual System (IMSVISUAL) consortium. SD-OCT was performed by a trained technician for healthy control subjects using Spectralis or Cirrus SD-OCT devices. Peripapillary pRNFL and GCIPL thicknesses were measured on one or both devices. Automated segmentation protocols, in conjunction with manual inspection and correction of lines delineating retinal layers, were used. A conversion equation was developed using structural equation modeling, accounting for clustering, with healthy control data from one site where participants were scanned on both devices on the same day. Normative values were evaluated, with the entire cohort, for pRNFL and GCIPL thicknesses for each decade of age, by sex, and across racial groups using generalized estimating equation (GEE) models, accounting for clustering and adjusting for within-patient, intereye correlations. Change-point analyses were performed to determine at what age pRNFL and GCIPL thicknesses exhibit accelerated rates of decline. RESULTS:The healthy control cohort (n = 546) was 54% male and had a wide distribution of ages, ranging from 18 to 87 years, with a mean (SD) age of 39.3 (14.6) years. Based on 346 control participants at a single site, the conversion equation for pRNFL was Cirrus = -5.0 + (1.0 × Spectralis global value). Based on 228 controls, the equation for GCIPL was Cirrus = -4.5 + (0.9 × Spectralis global value). Standard error was 0.02 for both equations. After the age of 40 years, there was a decline of -2.4 μm per decade in pRNFL thickness ( P < 0.001, GEE models adjusting for sex, race, and country) and -1.4 μm per decade in GCIPL thickness ( P < 0.001). There was a small difference in pRNFL thickness based on sex, with female participants having slightly higher thickness (2.6 μm, P = 0.003). There was no association between GCIPL thickness and sex. Likewise, there was no association between race/ethnicity and pRNFL or GCIPL thicknesses. CONCLUSIONS:A conversion factor may be required when using data that are derived between different SD-OCT platforms in clinical trials and observational studies; this is particularly true for smaller cross-sectional studies or when a consistent segmentation algorithm is not available. The above conversion equations can be used when pooling data from Spectralis and Cirrus SD-OCT devices for pRNFL and GCIPL thicknesses. A faster decline in retinal thickness may occur after the age of 40 years, even in the absence of significant differences across racial groups.
PMID: 36049213
ISSN: 1536-5166
CID: 5337812
A new classification for diagnosis of optic neuritis
Galetta, Steven L
PMID: 36179755
ISSN: 1474-4465
CID: 5334682
Two cases of unilateral cone-rod dysfunction presenting in adult females
Choi, Stephanie; Pandit, Saagar A; Nair, Archana A; Greenstein, Vivienne; Galetta, Steven L; Brodie, Scott E
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:To describe cases of unilateral cone-rod dysfunction presenting in two middle-aged females. METHODS:This case series highlights two middle-aged female patients with progressive visual decline in one eye. Fundus photography, fundus autofluorescence (FAF), spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT), multi-focal electroretinogram (mfERG), full-field electroretinogram(ffERG), and genetic testing were obtained. RESULTS:In the first patient, mfERG showed an extinguished response and ffERG demonstrated markedly reduced a-wave and b-wave amplitudes (more pronounced under photopic conditions) in the right eye. SD-OCT showed attenuation of the ellipsoid zone of the right eye. Similar findings were appreciated in the second patient. Genetic testing in the first patient identified three heterozygous variants in PRPH2, RCBTB1, and USH2A. The second patient was found to have heterozygous variants in BBS1 and ABCA4. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:These two cases add to the literature of case reports of unilateral cone-rod and rod-cone dystrophies. However, the underlying etiology of the unilateral pattern of cone-rod dysfunction and the significance of the heterozygous mutations found in both cases remains uncertain.
PMID: 36070159
ISSN: 1573-2622
CID: 5332462