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Decrease in Individual Multiple Sclerosis Severity Scores during Follow-Up Period: Analysis of the New York State Multiple Sclerosis Consortium Dataset [Meeting Abstract]

Kister, Ilya; Bacon, Tamar; Chamot, Eric; Cutter, Gary; Bacon, Joshua; Apatoff, Brian; Coyle, Patricia; Goodman, Andrew; Gottesman, Malcolm; Edwards, Keith; Frontera, Alfred; Holub, Richard; Jubelt, Burk; Khan, Mustafa; Krupp, Lauren; Lenihan, Michael; Mihai, Cornelia; Miller, Aaron; Lublin, Fred; Perel, Allan; Snyder, David; Teter, Barbara; Weinstock-Guttman, Bianca; Zivadinov, Robert; Herbert, Joseph
ISI:000288149303353
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 2225212

Migraine is comorbid with multiple sclerosis and associated with a more symptomatic MS course

Kister, Ilya; Caminero, A B; Monteith, T S; Soliman, A; Bacon, T E; Bacon, J H; Kalina, J T; Inglese, M; Herbert, J; Lipton, R B
The objectives of this study were: (1) to assess relative frequency of migraine in multiple sclerosis (MS) patients using the validated self-administered diagnostic questionnaire, and to compare the migraine rates in MS outpatients to age- and gender-matched historical population controls; (2) to compare clinical and radiographic characteristics in MS patients with migraine and headache-free MS patients. We conducted a cross-sectional study to assess the demographic profiles, headache features and clinical characteristics of MS patients attending a MS clinic using a questionnaire based on the American Migraine Prevalence and Prevention (AMPP) study. We compared the relative frequency of migraine in MS clinic patients and AMPP cohort. We also compared clinical and radiographic features in MS patients with migraine to an MS control group without headache. Among 204 MS patients, the relative frequency of migraine was threefold higher than in population controls both for women [55.7 vs. 17.1%; prevalence ratio (PR) =3.26, p<0.001] and men (18.4 vs. 5.6%; PR=3.29, p<0.001). In a series of logistic regression models that controlled for age, gender, disease duration, beta-interferon use, and depression, migraine in MS patients was significantly associated (p<0.01) with trigeminal and occipital neuralgia, facial pain, Lhermitte's sign, temporomandibular joint pain, non-headache pain and a past history of depression. Migraine status was not significantly associated with disability on patient-derived disability steps scale or T2 lesion burden on brain MRI. Migraine is three-times more common in MS clinic patients than in general population. MS-migraine group was more symptomatic than the MS-no headache group
PMCID:3452278
PMID: 20625916
ISSN: 1129-2377
CID: 138212

Rapid disease course in African Americans with multiple sclerosis

Kister, I; Chamot, E; Bacon, J H; Niewczyk, P M; De Guzman, R A; Apatoff, B; Coyle, P; Goodman, A D; Gottesman, M; Granger, C; Jubelt, B; Krupp, L; Lenihan, M; Lublin, F; Mihai, C; Miller, A; Munschauer, F E 3rd; Perel, A B; Teter, B E; Weinstock-Guttman, B; Zivadinov, R; Herbert, J
OBJECTIVE: To investigate utility of a Multiple Sclerosis Severity Scale (MSSS)-based classification system for comparing African American (AA) and white American (WA) multiple sclerosis (MS) subpopulations in the New York State Multiple Sclerosis Consortium (NYSMSC) database. MSSS is a frequency-rank algorithm relating MS disability to disease duration in a large, untreated reference population. Design/ METHODS: Distributions of patients in 6 MSSS-based severity grades were calculated for AA and WA registrants. RESULTS: There were 419 AA and 5,809 WA patients in the NYSMSC, who had EDSS recorded during years 1-30 since symptom onset. Median EDSS was not different in AA and WA (3.5 vs 3.0, p = 0.60), whereas median MSSS in AA was higher than in WA (6.0 vs 4.8, p = 0.001). AA patients were overrepresented in the 2 most severe grades (41.5% vs 29.3% for WA) and underrepresented in the 2 lowest grades (23.4% vs 35.4%; p < 0.001). In multivariable analysis (ordered logistic and median regression), MSSS for AA remained significantly higher than in WA after adjusting for age, gender, disease duration, disease type distribution, and treatment with disease-modifying therapies. CONCLUSIONS: The 6-tiered MSSS grading system is a powerful tool for comparing rate of disease progression in subpopulations of interest. MSSS-based analysis demonstrates that African ancestry is a risk factor for a more rapidly disabling disease course
PMID: 20644149
ISSN: 1526-632x
CID: 111364

A Novel Computerized Word-Naming Test Shows That Crossed-Hemisphere Processing Speed Is Slowed in Multiple Sclerosis Patients [Meeting Abstract]

Bacon, J; Bacon, T; Kister, I; Herbert, J
ISI:000275274001646
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 111990

Trend towards Lowering of Multiple Sclerosis Severity Scores among More Recent Enrollees into the New York State Multiple Sclerosis Consortium [Meeting Abstract]

Herbert, J; Chamot, E; Bacon, J; Apatoff, B; Blitz, K; Coyle, P; Goodman, A; Gottesman, M; Edwards, K; Frontera, A; Holub, R; Jubelt, B; Khan, M; Krupp, L; Lenihan, M; Lublin, F; Mihai, C; Miller, A; Munschauer, FE; Perel, A; Snyder, D; Teter, B; Tullman, M; Weinstock-Guttman, B; Zivadinov, R; Kister, I
ISI:000275274002119
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 111991

Threefold Increase in Migraine in MS Patients Compared to Age- and Gender-Matched Population Controls [Meeting Abstract]

Kister, I; Rodriguez, ABC; Monteith, T; Soliman, A; Fromm, JT; Bacon, JH; Lipton, RB; Herbert, J
ISI:000264527902214
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 111996

US severity scores in African Americans are dramatically worse than mon-African Americans: Analysis of the New York state MS consortium (NYSMSC) dataset [Meeting Abstract]

Kister, I; Bacon, J; De Guzman, RA; Teter, B; Christodoulou, C; Coyle, P; Frontera, A; Gauthier, S; Goodman, A; Gottesman, M; Granger, C; Holub, R; Jubelt, B; Khan, M; Krupp, L; Lava, N; Lenihan, M; Lublin, F; Mihai, C; Miller, A; Munschauer, F; Nealon, N; Schwid, S; Smiroldo, J; Snyder, D; Tullman, M; Weinstock-Guttman, B; Zivadinov, R; Herbert, J
ISI:000257197202014
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 111999

Natalizumab reduces multiple sclerosis severity: Analysis of patients from the AFFIRM and SENTINEL studies using the multiple sclerosis severity scale [Meeting Abstract]

Herbert, J; Kappos, L; Calabresi, P; Confavreux, C; Galetta, S; Giovannoni, G; Havrdova, E; Hutchinson, M; Lublin, F; Miller, D; O'Connor, PW; Phillips, J; Polman, C; Radue, EW; Rudick, R; Stuart, W; Wajgt, A; Weinstock-Guttman, B; Wynn, D; Bacon, J; Kister, I; Pace, A; Panzara, M
ISI:000257197201204
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 111998

Impact of headaches on the course of multiple sclerosis: preliminary results of a cross-sectional survey [Meeting Abstract]

Kister, I; Soliman, A; Fuman, L; Fromm, T; Bacon, J; Herbert, J; Lipton, R
ISI:000251423400375
ISSN: 1352-4585
CID: 112001

Impact of natalizumab on multiple sclerosis severity: analysis of patients and subgroups from the AFFIRM study using the Multiple Sclerosis Severity Scale [Meeting Abstract]

Herbert, J; Kappos, L; Giovannoni, G; Havrdova, E; Hutchinson, M; Lublin, F; Miller, D; O'Connor, P; Phillips, JT; Polman, CH; Wajgt, A; Bacon, J; Kister, I; Pace, A; Panzara, M
ISI:000251423400521
ISSN: 1352-4585
CID: 75898