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Case Conference: When '3-for-5' Is Not Enough

Kister, Ilya; Biller, Jose
ORIGINAL:0015535
ISSN: 1540-1367
CID: 5192272

Risk of COVID-19 infection and severe disease in MS patients on different disease-modifying therapies

Smith, Tyler E; Madhavan, Maya; Gratch, Daniel; Patel, Aneek; Saha, Valerie; Sammarco, Carrie; Rimler, Zoe; Zuniga, Guadalupe; Gragui, Dunia; Charvet, Leigh; Cutter, Gary; Krupp, Lauren; Kister, Ilya; Ryerson, Lana Zhovtis
BACKGROUND:The risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection and severity with disease modifying therapies (DMTs) in multiple sclerosis (MS) remains unclear, with some studies demonstrating increased risks of infection with B-cell-depleting (anti-CD20) therapies and severity, while others fail to observe an association. Most existing studies are limited by a reliance on 'numerator' data (i.e., COVID-19 cases) only. OBJECTIVE:To assess the risks of COVID-19 by DMT, this study aimed to assess both 'numerator' (patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection) and 'denominator' data (all patients treated with DMTs of interest) to determine if any DMTs impart an increased risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection or disease severity. METHODS:We systematically reviewed charts and queried patients during clinic encounters in the NYU MS Comprehensive Care Center (MSCCC) for evidence of COVID-19 in all patients who were on the most commonly used DMTs in our clinic (sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor (S1P) modulators (fingolimod/siponimod), rituximab, ocrelizumab, fumarates (dimethyl fumarate/diroximel fumarate), and natalizumab). COVID-19 status was determined by clinical symptoms (CDC case definition) and laboratory testing where available (SARS-CoV-2 PCR, SARS-CoV-2 IgG). Multivariable analyses were conducted to determine predictors of infection and severe disease (hospitalization or death) using SARS-CoV-2 infected individuals per DMT group and all individuals on a given DMT as denominator. RESULTS:We identified 1,439 MS patients on DMTs of interest, of which 230 had lab-confirmed (n = 173; 75.2%) or suspected (n = 57; 24.8%) COVID-19. Infection was most frequent in those on rituximab (35/138; 25.4%), followed by fumarates (39/217; 18.0%), S1P modulators (43/250; 17.2%), natalizumab (36/245; 14.7%), and ocrelizumab (77/589; 13.1%). There were 14 hospitalizations and 2 deaths. No DMT was found to be significantly associated with increased risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection. Rituximab was a predictor of severe SARS-CoV-2 infection among patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection (OR 6.7; 95% CI 1.1-41.7) but did not reach statistical significance when the entire patient population on DMT was used (OR 2.8; 95% CI 0.6-12.2). No other DMT was associated with an increased risk of severe COVID-19. CONCLUSIONS:Analysis of COVID-19 risk among all patients on the commonly used DMTs did not demonstrate increased risk of infection with any DMT. Rituximab was associated with increased risk for severe disease.
PMCID:8915504
PMID: 35398713
ISSN: 2211-0356
CID: 5191752

Multiple Sclerosis Severity Score (MSSS) improves the accuracy of individualized prediction in MS

Kalincik, Tomas; Kister, Ilya; Bacon, Tamar E; Malpas, Charles B; Sharmin, Sifat; Horakova, Dana; Kubala-Havrdova, Eva; Patti, Francesco; Izquierdo, Guillermo; Eichau, Sara; Ozakbas, Serkan; Onofrj, Marco; Lugaresi, Alessandra; Prat, Alexandre; Girard, Marc; Duquette, Pierre; Grammond, Pierre; Sola, Patrizia; Ferraro, Diana; Alroughani, Raed; Terzi, Murat; Boz, Cavit; Grand'Maison, Francois; Bergamaschi, Roberto; Gerlach, Oliver; Sa, Maria J; Kappos, Ludwig; Cartechini, Elisabetta; Lechner-Scott, Jeannette; van Pesch, Vincent; Shaygannejad, Vahid; Granella, Franco; Spitaleri, Daniele; Iuliano, Gerardo; Maimone, Davide; Prevost, Julie; Soysal, Aysun; Turkoglu, Recai; Ampapa, Radek; Butzkueven, Helmut; Cutter, Gary
BACKGROUND/UNASSIGNED:The MSBase prediction model of treatment response leverages multiple demographic and clinical characteristics to estimate hazards of relapses, confirmed disability accumulation (CDA), and confirmed disability improvement (CDI). The model did not include Multiple Sclerosis Severity Score (MSSS), a disease duration-adjusted ranked score of disability. OBJECTIVE/UNASSIGNED:To incorporate MSSS into the MSBase prediction model and compare model accuracy with and without MSSS. METHODS/UNASSIGNED:The associations between MSSS and relapse, CDA, and CDI were evaluated with marginal proportional hazards models adjusted for three principal components representative of patients' demographic and clinical characteristics. The model fit with and without MSSS was assessed with penalized r2 and Harrell C. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:A total of 5866 MS patients were started on disease-modifying therapy during prospective follow-up (age 38.4 ± 10.6 years; 72% female; disease duration 8.5 ± 7.7 years). Including MSSS into the model improved the accuracy of individual prediction of relapses by 31%, of CDA by 23%, and of CDI by 24% (Harrell C) and increased the amount of variance explained for relapses by 49%, for CDI by 11%, and for CDA by 10% as compared with the original model. CONCLUSION/UNASSIGNED:Addition of a single, readily available metric, MSSS, to the comprehensive MSBase prediction model considerably improved the individual accuracy of prognostics in MS.
PMID: 35373638
ISSN: 1477-0970
CID: 5191742

Neurodiem

COVID and Multiple Sclerosis: What have we learned since the start of the pandemic?

Kister, Ilya
(Website)
CID: 5192292

Case Conference: Shaky Vision & Tired Left Eye : avoiding the trap of excessive coherence can reduce diagnostic error

Kister, Ilya; Biller, Jose
ORIGINAL:0015912
ISSN: 1474-7766
CID: 5308162

A Practical Guide to Diagnosing & Undiagnosing Multiple Sclerosis : A 3-step approach for the busy clinician

Kister, Ilya
ORIGINAL:0015914
ISSN: n/a
CID: 5308182

Case Conference: Diagnosing Fast & Slow in Neurology : this case conference illustrates how to switch from "thinking fast" to "thinking slow" when the data do not fit the diagnosis

Kister, Ilya; Biller, Jose
ORIGINAL:0015913
ISSN: 1474-7766
CID: 5308172

Case Conference: Shaky Vision & Tired Left Eye

Kister, Ilya; Biller, Jose
ORIGINAL:0015536
ISSN: 1540-1367
CID: 5192282

Case Conference: Diagnosing Fast & Slow in Neurology

Kister, Ilya; Biller, Jose
ORIGINAL:0015534
ISSN: 1540-1367
CID: 5192262

Antibody and T-cell responses to SARS-CoV-2 vaccines in MS patients on Ocrelizumab and other disease-modifying therapies: Preliminary results of an ongoing, prospective study [Meeting Abstract]

Kister, I; Patskovsky, Y; Voloshyna, I; Ferstler, N; Curtin, R; Yogambigai, V; Nyovanie, S; Mulligan, M J; Kim, J; Tardio, E; Rimler, Z; Perdomo, K; Bacon, T; Zhovtis, Ryerson L; Samanovic-Golden, M; Cornelius, A; Raposo, C; Priest, J; Winger, R; Krogsgaard, M; Silverman, G J
Objective: To compare humoral and T-cell responses to COVID- 19 vaccines in 400 MS patients who were on Ocrelizumab ('OCR') v. other disease-modifying therapies ('non-OCR') at the time of vaccination. Introduction: Peripheral B-cell depletion with anti-CD20 therapies attenuates humoral responses to vaccines. Whether immune responses to COVID-19 vaccines differ between B-cell depleted and non-B cell depleted MS patients is not known.
Method(s): Consecutive MS patients from NYU MS Care Center were invited to participate if they completed COVID-19 vaccination >=6 weeks previously. Immune testing included anti-spike RBD antibody (Elecsys Anti-SARS-CoV-2) (Roche Diagnostics); multiplex bead-based immunoassays of antibody-responses to SARS-COV-2 spike proteins; T-cell responses to SARS-CoV-2 Spike protein using IFNgamma enzyme-linked immune-absorbent spot (Invitrogen) and TruCulture (Myriad RBM) assays; high dimensional immunophenotyping; and live virus immunofluorescencebased microneutralization assay.
Result(s): As of 7/15/2021, 105 MS subjects were enrolled (mean age: 40.5 years; 76% female; 41% non-white; 38% on OCR; 12% with prior COVID-19 infection). 95% were fully vaccinated with mRNA vaccines (Pfizer/Moderna); 5% - with adenovirus-based vaccine (Johnson&Johnson). Median time from sample collection to last vaccine was 79 days. Positive Elecsys Anti-SARS-CoV-2 Ab titers post-vaccine were detected in 11/37 (30%) in OCR (mean level: 702 U/mL among seropositives) and 54/54 (100%) patients in non-OCR (mean level: 2310 U/mL; p<0.0001). Positive response by multiplex assay (threshold of 'positive' defined as 2 SD below the mean for the non-OCR) were detected in 10/27 (37%) OCR and 29/31 (94%) non-OCR (p<0.00001). T-cell activation based on induced IFNgamma secretion (TruCulture) was detected in 20/25 (80%) OCR and 16/19 (84%) non-OCR patients (p=0.71).
Conclusion(s): Preliminary results suggest robust T-cell immune response to SARS-CoV2 vaccines in approximately 80% of both OCR and non-OCR MS patients. Antibody responses were markedly attenuated in OCR compared to non-OCR group. Updated results will be presented
EMBASE:636340296
ISSN: 1477-0970
CID: 5179842