Searched for: person:kistei01
Transfer of information across the corpus callosum is slowed in patients with multiple sclerosis compared to healthy controls [Meeting Abstract]
Bacon, J; Bacon, T; Kister, I; Herbert, J
ISI:000354441300308
ISSN: 1477-0970
CID: 1620512
Bifactor structure of clinical disability in relapsing multiple sclerosis
Chamot, Eric; Kister, Ilya; Cutter, Garry R
BACKGROUND: Multiple sclerosis (MS) can affect virtually every neurological function which complicates the conceptualization and assessment of disability. Similar challenges are encountered in other medical fields including child cognitive development and psychiatry, for instance. In these disciplines progress in diagnosis and outcome measurement has been recently achieved by capitalizing on the concept of bifactor model. OBJECTIVE: To present in accessible terms an application of bifactor confirmatory factor analysis to study the clinical disability outcomes in MS. METHODS: Data included 480 assessments on 301 patients with relapsing-remitting MS who participated in the North American interferon beta-1a clinical trial (Avonex). Measures consisted of the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS), the three components of the Multiple Sclerosis Functional Composite (MSFC), and five other clinical measures of neurological functions. We determined which of three confirmatory factor analysis models (unidimensional, multidimensional, and bifactor) best described the structure of the data. RESULTS: EDSS scores ranged from 0 to 8 (94% between 0 and 4). The final bifactor model fitted the data well, explained 59.4% of total variance, and provided the most useful representation of the data. In this model, the nine measures defined a scoring dimension of global neurological function (63.1% of total composite score variance) and two auxiliary dimensions of extra variability in leg and cognitive function (17.1% and 9% of total composite score variance). CONCLUSION: Bifactor modeling is a promising approach to further understanding of the structure of disability in MS and for refining composite measures of global disability.
PMID: 25878005
ISSN: 2211-0356
CID: 1532242
IV immunoglobulin confounds JC virus antibody serostatus determination
Kister, Ilya; Kuesters, Geoffrey; Chamot, Eric; Omari, Mirza; Dontas, Kim; Yarussi, Mary; Subramanyam, Meena; Herbert, Joseph
OBJECTIVE: To determine the impact of therapeutic infusion of IV immunoglobulin (IVIg) on John Cunningham virus antibody (JCV Ab) serostatus and level in serum. METHODS: We carried out a retrospective analysis of serum levels of JCV Ab among STRATIFY-2 trial enrollees from 2 multiple sclerosis centers who were exposed to IVIg during the trial. For the subset of eligible patients, we estimated mean linear trends while on IVIg and after stopping IVIg with a linear mixed-effects model. RESULTS: The JCV Ab seropositivity rate in the group of patients that was recently exposed to IVIg was 100%, which is significantly higher than in the IVIg-naive population (58%, p < 0.001). The seropositivity rate in the patient group with remote IVIg exposure was similar to that in the IVIg-naive population (67%, p = 0.68, Fisher exact test). The slope of the linear trend line after stopping IVIg decreased significantly by -0.310 units per 100 days (95% confidence interval, -0.611 to -0.008; p = 0.04). CONCLUSIONS: Recent IVIg exposure is invariably associated with JCV Ab seropositivity. After stopping IVIg, JCV Ab levels tend to decrease with time, and seroreversion to innately Ab-negative status can occur.
PMCID:4204227
PMID: 25340081
ISSN: 2332-7812
CID: 1315542
Item response theory-based measure of global disability in multiple sclerosis derived from the Performance Scales and related items
Chamot, Eric; Kister, Ilya; Cutter, Gary R
BackgroundThe eight Performance Scales and three assimilated scales (PS) used in North American Research Committee on Multiple Sclerosis (NARCOMS) registry surveys cover a broad range of neurologic domains commonly affected by multiple sclerosis (mobility, hand function, vision, fatigue, cognition, bladder/bowel, sensory, spasticity, pain, depression, and tremor/coordination). Each scale consists of a single 6-to-7-point Likert item with response categories ranging from inverted question marknormal inverted question mark to inverted question marktotal disability inverted question mark. Relatively little is known about the performances of the summary index of disability derived from these scales (the Performance Scales Sum or PSS). In this study, we demonstrate the value of a combination of classical and modern methods recently proposed by the Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information System (PROMIS) network to evaluate the psychometric properties of the PSS and derive an improved measure of global disability from the PS.MethodsThe study sample included 7,851adults with MS who completed a NARCOMS intake questionnaire between 2003 and 2011. Factor analysis, bifactor modeling, and item response theory (IRT) analysis were used to evaluate the dimension(s) of disability underlying the PS; calibrate the 11 scales; and generate three alternative summary scores of global disability corresponding to different model assumptions and practical priorities. The construct validity of the three scores was compared by examining the magnitude of their associations with participant inverted question marks background characteristics, including unemployment.ResultsWe derived structurally valid measures of global disability from the PS through the proposed methodology that were superior to the PSS. The measure most applicable to clinical practice gives similar weight to physical and mental disability. Overall reliability of the new measure is acceptable for individual comparisons (0.87). Higher scores of global disability were significantly associated with older age at assessment, longer disease duration, male gender, Native-American ethnicity, not receiving disease modifying therapy, unemployment, and higher scores on the Patient Determined Disease Steps (PDDS).ConclusionPromising, interpretable and easily-obtainable IRT scores of global disability were generated from the PS by using a sequence of traditional and modern psychometric methods based on PROMIS recommendations. Our analyses shed new light on the construct of global disability in MS.
PMCID:4195863
PMID: 25278315
ISSN: 1471-2377
CID: 1283152
Adult-onset spastic paraparesis: An approach to diagnostic work-up
Zhovtis Ryerson, Lana; Herbert, Joseph; Howard, Jonathan; Kister, Ilya
Adult-onset, chronic progressive spastic paraparesis may be due to a large number of causes and poses a diagnostic challenge. There are no recent evidence-based guidelines or comprehensive reviews to help guide diagnostic work-up. We survey the literature on chronic progressive spastic paraparesis, with special emphasis on myelopathies, and propose a practical, MRI-based approach to facilitate the diagnostic process. Building on neuro-anatomic and radiographic conventions, we classify spinal MRI findings into six patterns: extradural; intradural/extramedullary; Intramedullary; Intramedullary-Tract specific; Spinal Cord Atrophy; and Normal Appearing Spinal Cord. A comprehensive differential diagnosis of chronic progressive myelopathy for each of the six patterns is generated. We highlight some of the more common and/or treatable causes of progressive spastic paraparesis and provide clinical pointers that may assist clinicians in arriving at the diagnosis. We outline a practical, comprehensive MRI-based algorithm to diagnosing adult-onset chronic progressive myelopathy.
PMID: 25263600
ISSN: 0022-510x
CID: 1259952
Sound Lateralization Test Distinguishes Unimpaired MS Patients from Healthy Controls
Bacon, Joshua H; Kister, Ilya; Bacon, Tamar E; Pasternak, Eliana; Strauchler, Yael; Herbert, Joseph
There is an urgent need to develop a practical and reliable clinical measure of disease progression in early and mild MS. We hypothesized that a test of sound lateralization, which is exquisitely sensitive to transmission delays in auditory brainstem, could be more useful for detecting processing speed deficits in mildly impaired MS subjects than standard cognitive tasks. Objective. To develop a practical test of sound lateralization for the clinic and to compare performance of MS subjects with variable disability and healthy subjects on Sound Lateralization Test (SLT) and two speed-of-processing tasks. Design. 42 healthy controls and 90 subjects with clinically definite MS, divided into no, mild, and moderate disability strata, were administered the Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT), and 3-second Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test (PASAT). Results. All of the tests showed an overall difference in performance between controls and the three MS groups, but only the SLT measured a significant difference between controls and the no disability group. Conclusion. SLT is rapidly applied, technically simple, and superior to standard processing speed tests for discriminating between healthy controls and nondisabled MS subjects. SLT should be investigated as an outcome measure in early-phase trials and for monitoring early disease progression in the clinic.
PMCID:4124231
PMID: 25132994
ISSN: 2090-2654
CID: 1132092
Headache in Behcet's Syndrome: Review of Literature and NYU Behcet's Syndrome Center Experience
Vishwanath, Vijay; Wong, Ericka; Crystal, Sara C; Robbins, Matthew S; Filopoulos, Maria; Lipton, Richard B; Yazici, Yusuf; Kister, Ilya
Headache, a common and disabling symptom in Behcet's syndrome, may be associated with a variety of neurologic syndromes and ocular inflammation, or may present as an isolated feature. Our objective is to describe the various neurologic and ocular syndromes of Behcet's syndrome of which headache is a symptom, and to review the features of isolated headaches in Behcet's. We also report results of a study of headache in Behcet's syndrome patients who are followed at NYU Hospital for Joint Diseases, the first study of its kind in North American patients, and the first to document prevalence of both episodic and chronic daily headache in Behcet's.
PMID: 25091130
ISSN: 1534-3081
CID: 1105272
Glatiramer acetate-induced acute hepatotoxicity in an adolescent with MS
Antezana, Ariel; Herbert, Joseph; Park, James; Kister, Ilya
PMID: 24843037
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 1003742
CHARACTERIZATION OF MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS PATIENTS BASED ON THE ACTIONABLE BLADDER SYMPTOM AND SCREENING TOOL (ABSST) [Meeting Abstract]
Sadiq, Areeba; Aponte, Margarita; Kister, Ilya; Sammarco, Carrie; Nitti, Victor; Brucker, Benjamin
ISI:000331012800143
ISSN: 0733-2467
CID: 867602
Periventricular lesions help differentiate neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders from multiple sclerosis
Raz, Eytan; Loh, John P; Saba, Luca; Omari, Mirza; Herbert, Joseph; Lui, Yvonne; Kister, Ilya
Objective. To compare periventricular lesions in multiple sclerosis (MS) and neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders (NMOsd). Materials and Methods. Sagittal and axial fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) sequences of 20 NMOsd and 40 group frequency-matched MS patients were evaluated by two neuroradiologists. On axial FLAIR, periventricular area was characterized as free of lesions/smooth-bordered ("type A") or jagged-bordered ("type B") pattern. On sagittal FLAIR, the images were evaluated for presence of "Dawson's fingers." Results. Type A pattern was observed in 80% of NMOsd patients by Reader 1 and 85% by Reader 2 but only in 5% MS patients by either Reader. Type B was seen in 15% NMOsd patients by Reader 1 and 20% by Reader 2 and in 95% MS patients by either Reader. Dawson's fingers were observed in no NMOsd patients by Reader 1 and 5% by Reader 2. In MS, Dawson's fingers were seen in 92.5% patients by Reader 1 and 77.5% by Reader 2. The differences in periventricular patterns and Dawson's finger detection between NMOsd and MS were highly significant (P < 0.001). Conclusions. Dawson's fingers and "jagged-bordered" periventricular hyperintensities are typical of MS and almost never seen in NMOsd, which suggests a practical method for differentiating the two diseases.
PMCID:3934317
PMID: 24665366
ISSN: 2090-2654
CID: 867152