Try a new search

Format these results:

Searched for:

in-biosketch:true

person:kistei01

Total Results:

280


Treatment of MOG antibody associated disorders: results of an international survey

Whittam, D H; Karthikeayan, V; Gibbons, E; Kneen, R; Chandratre, S; Ciccarelli, O; Hacohen, Y; de Seze, J; Deiva, K; Hintzen, R Q; Wildemann, B; Jarius, S; Kleiter, I; Rostasy, K; Huppke, P; Hemmer, B; Paul, F; Aktas, O; Pröbstel, A K; Arrambide, G; Tintore, M; Amato, M P; Nosadini, M; Mancardi, M M; Capobianco, M; Illes, Z; Siva, A; Altintas, A; Akman-Demir, G; Pandit, L; Apiwattankul, M; Hor, J Y; Viswanathan, S; Qiu, W; Kim, H J; Nakashima, I; Fujihara, K; Ramanathan, S; Dale, R C; Boggild, M; Broadley, S; Lana-Peixoto, M A; Sato, D K; Tenembaum, S; Cabre, P; Wingerchuk, D M; Weinshenker, B G; Greenberg, B; Matiello, M; Klawiter, E C; Bennett, J L; Wallach, A I; Kister, I; Banwell, B L; Traboulsee, A; Pohl, D; Palace, J; Leite, M I; Levy, M; Marignier, R; Solomon, T; Lim, M; Huda, S; Jacob, A
INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND:While monophasic and relapsing forms of myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody associated disorders (MOGAD) are increasingly diagnosed world-wide, consensus on management is yet to be developed. OBJECTIVE:To survey the current global clinical practice of clinicians treating MOGAD. METHOD/METHODS:Neurologists worldwide with expertise in treating MOGAD participated in an online survey (February-April 2019). RESULTS:Fifty-two responses were received (response rate 60.5%) from 86 invited experts, comprising adult (78.8%, 41/52) and paediatric (21.2%, 11/52) neurologists in 22 countries. All treat acute attacks with high dose corticosteroids. If recovery is incomplete, 71.2% (37/52) proceed next to plasma exchange (PE). 45.5% (5/11) of paediatric neurologists use IV immunoglobulin (IVIg) in preference to PE. Following an acute attack, 55.8% (29/52) of respondents typically continue corticosteroids for ≥ 3 months; though less commonly when treating children. After an index event, 60% (31/51) usually start steroid-sparing maintenance therapy (MT); after ≥ 2 attacks 92.3% (48/52) would start MT. Repeat MOG antibody status is used by 52.9% (27/51) to help decide on MT initiation. Commonly used first line MTs in adults are azathioprine (30.8%, 16/52), mycophenolate mofetil (25.0%, 13/52) and rituximab (17.3%, 9/52). In children, IVIg is the preferred first line MT (54.5%; 6/11). Treatment response is monitored by MRI (53.8%; 28/52), optical coherence tomography (23.1%; 12/52) and MOG antibody titres (36.5%; 19/52). Regardless of monitoring results, 25.0% (13/52) would not stop MT. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Current treatment of MOGAD is highly variable, indicating a need for consensus-based treatment guidelines, while awaiting definitive clinical trials.
PMID: 32623595
ISSN: 1432-1459
CID: 4507512

A longitudinal study of symptom botheration in Multiple Sclerosis

Kister, Ilya; Bacon, Tamar; Cutter, Gary R
BACKGROUND:It is well documented that ambulatory disability in MS worsens over time, but there is a dearth of information on symptom evolution in other domains commonly affected by MS. METHODS:SymptoMScreen (SyMS) is a validated tool for assessing symptom severity in 12 domains commonly affected by MS. Patients who attended two specialized MS centers filled out SyMS at each visit. We included in the study patients with neurologist-diagnosed MS who completed two SyMS questionnaires separated at least 12 months. We used the first and final assessment and adjusted for time on study, baseline SyMS score, age, sex, race, MS type, disability strata, and site. Changes over time were also examined using Markov chain estimates of moving from one level of botheration to another for each domain over 1-year periods. RESULTS:A total of 1,014 MS patients met the inclusion criteria. Mean composite SyMS score was 1.4 (±1.16) at baseline and increased by 0.084 (±0.73) points during 21.0 (±5.5) months of followup (p<0.0001). The initial mean composite SyMS score correlated strongly with the final mean composite SyMS score (r=0.81). Individual domain SyMS scores at baseline were highest for fatigue: 2.2 (±1.7), and lowest for vision: 1.1 (±1.3) and dexterity: 1.1 (±1.4). Small but significant increases during followup were seen in dexterity, bladder, vision, and pain domains, while significant decreases were seen in anxiety and sensory domains. We observed a high degree of inter-individual variability in symptom severity with the more extreme scores tending to resolve over time. CONCLUSIONS:Symptom botheration increases modestly year-to-year, as would be expected in a slowly progressive disease that evolves over decades. Initial symptom burden strongly correlated with final symptom burden, but there was a high degree of individual variability in symptom severity.
PMID: 33296981
ISSN: 2211-0356
CID: 4709012

Pearls and Oy-sters: Leukoencephalopathy in critically ill COVID-19 patients

Huang, Hao; Eichelberger, Hillary; Chan, Monica; Valdes, Eduard; Kister, Ilya; Krupp, Lauren; Weinberg, Harold; Galetta, Steven; Frontera, Jennifer; Zhou, Ting; Kahn, D Ethan; Lord, Aaron; Lewis, Ariane
PMID: 32788252
ISSN: 1526-632x
CID: 4556492

Paroxysmal symptoms in neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder: Results from an online patient survey

Lotan, Itay; Bacon, Tamar; Kister, Ilya; Levy, Michael
BACKGROUND:Paroxysmal symptoms (PS), defined as short-lasting, recurrent, and stereotyped neurological symptoms, are frequently reported by patients with Neuromyelitis Optica Spectrum Disorder (NMOSD). Their prevalence and spectrum of presentations in NMOSD have not been fully characterized. METHODS:Patients with NMOSD, who were members of a closed international Facebook Group, were recruited to complete an anonymous survey on REDCap. Participants were queried regarding demographic and NMOSD-related characteristics and PS history. RESULTS:The sample consisted of 219 responders with self-reported NMOSD, of whom 134 (63.8%) reported testing positive for AQP4 Antibody. 156 responders (71.9%) reported ≥1 type of PS during the disease course. The most common PS were intermittent tingling/numbness sensation (N=106, 67.9%), followed by involuntary muscle contractions/abnormal posture (N=95, 60.9%), hot/cold/burning sensations (N=87, 55.8%), and shock-like sensations along the spine or limbs (N=77, 49.4%). 150 responders (96% of those with PS) reported that PS were painful; in 82 responders (54.6%), the pain intensity reached ≥ 8/10 and in 40 responders (26.0%) - 10/10 level. PS were most commonly aggravated by fatigue (105 responders, 70.0%), physical activity (N=86, 57.3%), and neck flexion (N=39 responders, 26.0%). 82 patients (52.5% of those with PS) reported having been prescribed one or more medications for PS. Less than 50% reported them to be 'very helpful.' CONCLUSIONS:This survey highlights that PS occurs commonly in NMOSD patients. The symptomatology of PS is diverse. PS are often painful and not adequately treated. Our study represents a novel method to learn more about a rare disease from the patient's perspective. Given the fact that the study was conducted using an anonymous questionnaire and the diagnosis of NMOSD was self-reported by the survey participants, its' results should be regarded as a first step towards the understanding of PS in NMOSD, which should be further validated in a larger, controlled study.
PMID: 33223498
ISSN: 2211-0356
CID: 4676392

Serious safety events in rituximab-treated multiple sclerosis and related disorders

Vollmer, Brandi L; Wallach, Asya I; Corboy, John R; Dubovskaya, Karolina; Alvarez, Enrique; Kister, Ilya
INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND:Studies investigating rates and risk factors for serious safety events (SSEs) during rituximab treatment of multiple sclerosis (MS), neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders (NMOSD), and related disorders are limited. METHODS:Rituximab-treated patients with MS, NMOSD, or related disorders at the Rocky Mountain and New York University MS Care Centers were included. The follow-up period was defined as the time from the initial dose of rituximab up to 12 months of last dose of rituximab or ocrelizumab (in patients who switched). Clinician-reported and laboratory data were retrospectively collected from electronic medical records. RESULTS:One-thousand patients were included comprising 907 MS, 77 NMOSD, and 16 related disorders. Patients had a mean follow-up of 31.1 months and a mean cumulative rituximab dose of 4012 mg. Of the 169 patients who switched to ocrelizumab, the mean ocrelizumab dose was 1141 mg. Crude incidence rate per 1000 person-years (PY) for lymphopenia was 19.2, neutropenia 5.6, and hypogammaglobulinemia 17.8. Infections resulting in either hospitalization, IV antibiotics, or using antibiotics ≥14 days occurred at a rate of 38.6/1000 PY. Risk factors for infection were duration of therapy, male gender, increased disability, prior exposure to immunosuppression/chemotherapy, lymphopenia, and hypogammaglobulinemia. Particularly, wheelchair-bound patients had 8.56-fold increased odds of infections. Crude incidence rates of malignant cancer were 3.5, new autoimmune disease 2.3, thromboembolic event 3.1, and mortality of 5.4 per 1000 PY. INTERPRETATION/CONCLUSIONS:Rates of SSEs in patients with MS, NMOSD, and related disorders were low. Through properly assessing risk:benefit of B-cell depleting therapy in neuroinflammatory disorders and continual monitoring, clinicians may decrease the risk of serious infections.
PMID: 32767531
ISSN: 2328-9503
CID: 4554472

COVID-19 outcomes in MS: Observational study of early experience from NYU Multiple Sclerosis Comprehensive Care Center

Parrotta, Erica; Kister, Ilya; Charvet, Leigh; Sammarco, Carrie; Saha, Valerie; Charlson, Robert Erik; Howard, Jonathan; Gutman, Josef Maxwell; Gottesman, Malcolm; Abou-Fayssal, Nada; Wolintz, Robyn; Keilson, Marshall; Fernandez-Carbonell, Cristina; Krupp, Lauren B; Zhovtis Ryerson, Lana
OBJECTIVE:To report outcomes on patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) and related disorders with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) illness. METHODS:From March 16 to April 30, 2020, patients with MS or related disorders at NYU Langone MS Comprehensive Care Center were identified with laboratory-confirmed or suspected COVID-19. The diagnosis was established using a standardized questionnaire or by review of in-patient hospital records. RESULTS:We identified 76 patients (55 with relapsing MS, of which 9 had pediatric onset; 17 with progressive MS; and 4 with related disorders). Thirty-seven underwent PCR testing and were confirmed positive. Of the entire group, 64 (84%) patients were on disease-modifying therapy (DMT) including anti-CD20 therapies (n = 34, 44.7%) and sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor modulators (n = 10, 13.5%). The most common COVID-19 symptoms were fever and cough, but 21.1% of patients had neurologic symptom recrudescence preceding or coinciding with the infection. A total of 18 (23.7%) were hospitalized; 8 (10.5%) had COVID-19 critical illness or related death. Features more common among those hospitalized or with critical illness or death were older age, presence of comorbidities, progressive disease, and a nonambulatory status. No DMT class was associated with an increased risk of hospitalization or fatal outcome. CONCLUSIONS:Most patients with MS with COVID-19 do not require hospitalization despite being on DMTs. Factors associated with critical illness were similar to the general at-risk patient population. DMT use did not emerge as a predictor of poor COVID-19 outcome in this preliminary sample.
PMID: 32646885
ISSN: 2332-7812
CID: 4518282

Timing of high-efficacy therapy for multiple sclerosis: a retrospective observational cohort study

He, Anna; Merkel, Bernd; Brown, James William L; Zhovits Ryerson, Lana; Kister, Ilya; Malpas, Charles B; Sharmin, Sifat; Horakova, Dana; Kubala Havrdova, Eva; Spelman, Tim; Izquierdo, Guillermo; Eichau, Sara; Trojano, Maria; Lugaresi, Alessandra; Hupperts, Raymond; Sola, Patrizia; Ferraro, Diana; Lycke, Jan; Grand'Maison, Francois; Prat, Alexandre; Girard, Marc; Duquette, Pierre; Larochelle, Catherine; Svenningsson, Anders; Petersen, Thor; Grammond, Pierre; Granella, Franco; Van Pesch, Vincent; Bergamaschi, Roberto; McGuigan, Christopher; Coles, Alasdair; Hillert, Jan; Piehl, Fredrik; Butzkueven, Helmut; Kalincik, Tomas
BACKGROUND:High-efficacy therapies in multiple sclerosis are traditionally used after unsuccessful treatment with first-line disease modifying therapies. We hypothesised that early commencement of high-efficacy therapy would be associated with reduced long-term disability. We therefore aimed to compare long-term disability outcomes between patients who started high-efficacy therapies within 2 years of disease onset with those who started 4-6 years after disease onset. METHODS:In this retrospective international observational study, we obtained data from the MSBase registry and the Swedish MS registry, which prospectively collect patient data that are specific to multiple sclerosis as part of routine clinical care. We identified adult patients (aged ≥18 years) with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis, with at least 6 years of follow-up since disease onset, and who started the high-efficacy therapy (rituximab, ocrelizumab, mitoxantrone, alemtuzumab, or natalizumab) either 0-2 years (early) or 4-6 years (late) after clinical disease onset. We matched patients in the early and late groups using propensity scores calculated on the basis of their baseline clinical and demographic data. The primary outcome was disability, measured with the Expanded Disability Status Score (EDSS; an ordinal scale of 0-10, with higher scores indicating increased disability), at 6-10 years after disease onset, assessed with a linear mixed-effects model. FINDINGS/RESULTS:We identified 6149 patients in the MSBase registry who had been given high-efficacy therapy, with data collected between Jan 1, 1975, and April 13, 2017, and 2626 patients in the Swedish MS Registry, with data collected between Dec 10, 1997, and Sept 16, 2019. Of whom, 308 in the MSBase registry and 236 in the Swedish MS registry were eligible for inclusion. 277 (51%) of 544 patients commenced therapy early and 267 (49%) commenced therapy late. For the primary analysis, we matched 213 patients in the early treatment group with 253 in the late treatment group. At baseline, the mean EDSS score was 2·2 (SD 1·2) in the early group and 2·1 (SD 1·2) in the late group. Median follow-up time for matched patients was 7·8 years (IQR 6·7-8·9). In the sixth year after disease onset, the mean EDSS score was 2·2 (SD 1·6) in the early group compared with 2·9 (SD 1·8) in the late group (p<0·0001). This difference persisted throughout each year of follow-up until the tenth year after disease onset (mean EDSS score 2·3 [SD 1·8] vs 3·5 [SD 2·1]; p<0·0001), with a difference between groups of -0·98 (95% CI -1·51 to -0·45; p<0·0001, adjusted for proportion of time on any disease-modifying therapy) across the 6-10 year follow-up period. INTERPRETATION/CONCLUSIONS:High-efficacy therapy commenced within 2 years of disease onset is associated with less disability after 6-10 years than when commenced later in the disease course. This finding can inform decisions regarding optimal sequence and timing of multiple sclerosis therapy. FUNDING/BACKGROUND:National Health and Medical Research Council Australia and MS Society UK.
PMID: 32199096
ISSN: 1474-4465
CID: 4353802

Longitudinal ultra-high field MRI of brain lesions in neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders

Chawla, Sanjeev; Ge, Yulin; Wuerfel, Jens; Asadollahi, Shadi; Mohan, Suyash; Paul, Friedemann; Sinnecker, Tim; Kister, Ilya
BACKGROUND:In neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMOSD), clinical disability in NMOSD patients is relapse-related and progressive phase is rare. This observation raises the question whether there is any radiographic disease activity. The aim of present study was to determine the longitudinal changes in cerebral lesion number, lesion size, lesion-to-venule relationship, and morphological patterns of lesions in NMOSD using multiparametric 7T MR imaging. We also aimed to assess brain volume changes in NMOSD. METHODS:A cohort of 22 patients with NMOSD underwent high-resolution 3D-susceptibility weighted imaging (SWI) and 2D-gradient-echo (GRE-T2*) weighted imaging on 7T MRI of brain at baseline and after ~2.8 years of follow-up. Morphologic imaging characteristics, and signal intensity patterns of lesions were recorded at both time points. Lesions were classified as "iron-laden" if they demonstrated hypointense signal on GRE-T2* images and/or SWI as well as hyperintense signal on quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM). Lesions were considered "non-iron-laden" if they were hyperintense on GRE-T2*/SWI and isointense or hyperintense on QSM. Additionally, fractional brain parenchymal volume (fBPV) was computed at both time points. RESULTS:A total of 169 lesions were observed at baseline. At follow-up, 6 new lesions were found in 5 patients. In one patient, a single lesion could not be detected on the follow-up scan. No appreciable change in lesion size and vessel-lesion relationship was observed at follow up. All lesions demonstrated hyperintense signal intensity on GRE-T2* weighted images and isointense signal on QSM at both time points. Therefore, these lesions were considered as non-associated with iron pathology. Additionally, no significant change in brain volume was observed: fBPV 0.78 ± 0.06 at baseline vs. 0.77 ± 0.05 at follow up, p>0.05. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Cerebral lesions in NMOSD patients remain 'inert' and do not show any substantial variations in morphological characteristics during a 2-3-year follow-up period.
PMID: 32272444
ISSN: 2211-0356
CID: 4374602

Clinical Reasoning: A 63-year-old man with gastroenteritis progressing to stupor and quadriparesis

Wallach, Asya I; Kister, Ilya; Raz, Eytan
PMID: 32098854
ISSN: 1526-632x
CID: 4323402

Pharmacodynamics of natalizumab extended interval dosing in MS

Zhovtis Ryerson, Lana; Li, Xiaochun; Goldberg, Judith D; Hoyt, Tamara; Christensen, Angel; Metzger, Ryan R; Kister, Ilya; Foley, John
OBJECTIVE:To determine if the concentration and saturation of natalizumab (NTZ) administration at extended interval dosing (EID; every 5-8 weeks) over 18 months is able to be maintained in the range considered adequate to sustain the clinical efficacy of NTZ. METHODS:-integrin receptor saturations were analyzed via cytometry, in blood samples obtained at trough timepoints. RESULTS:Trough serum concentration was above the "therapeutic" concentration of 2.0 μg/mL in 72% of EID patients. Trough saturation was above the "therapeutic" 50% threshold in 79% of EID-treated patients. Our model predicted that at least 9 NTZ infusions/year are required to maintain adequate trough saturation and concentration levels. Higher body mass index (BMI) was a predictor of suboptimal trough saturation on EID NTZ. CONCLUSIONS:Trough α4-integrin receptor saturation >50% correlated with high clinical efficacy of NTZ in previous studies. A continual treatment with EID maintains receptor saturation and concentration that are in the "therapeutic range" for most patients. This finding provides biological plausibility for the clinical efficacy of NTZ EID. Patients with higher BMI may require closer clinical and MRI follow-up.
PMID: 32019876
ISSN: 2332-7812
CID: 4300172