Cognitive impairment is a common and disabling feature of Multiple Sclerosis (MS), including early MS, and may even pre-date any physical symptoms. It contributes even more to withdrawal from work than physical disability. Here, we provide an overview of cognitive impairment in MS, particularly in early MS where it is most commonly under-reported and under-treated. We address the presenting features of CI, its impact on quality of life, and its validated assessments (in particular the use of Brief International Cognitive Assessment in MS for use in a clinical setting). We review the insights radiology has given us into the pathogenesis of cognitive impairment in MS, particularly in early CI and in cognitively preserved MS patients. We review current treatments for cognitive impairment, primarily cognitive rehabilitation. We address the evidence for its associated co-morbidities, which may exacerbate or trigger CI, and should therefore be addressed early in the disease course (smoking, alcohol, mood, fatigue and potential co-existing sleep disorders, exercise, and vitamin D). The article supports the importance for early recognition and management of cognitive impairment in MS, before it becomes an established and irreversible entity.
Background:The current severe acute respiratory syndrome-coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) pandemic has raised awareness of vaccine hesitancy. Specific reasons for vaccine hesitancy among people with multiple sclerosis (pwMS) have not been fully described. Notably, pwMS may experience higher morbidity from vaccinepreventable diseases such as influenza, pneumococcal disease, and human papillomavirus (HPV)-associated warts and malignancies. Furthermore, screening for immunity against measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) is not standard practice, despite a resurgence of measles and mumps outbreaks in Europe and worldwide. We aimed to evaluate general vaccination status among pwMS to better inform vaccine practices in this cohort. Methods: This was a prospective audit of pwMS attending an Irish tertiary referral MS centre. We designed a questionnaire that explored awareness, uptake, and hesitancy for the influenza, pneumococcal, SARS-CoV-2, HPV, and MMR vaccines. The clinician administered the questionnaire during the outpatient MS clinic. Results: One-hundred-and-five pwMS participated in the audit, mean (SD) age 47.3 (12.8) years, mean MS disease duration 14.1 (9.5) years, median Expanded Disability Severity Scale (EDSS) score 2.0 (IQR 1.0-6.0), forty-nine (46.7%) were taking either maintenance immunosuppressive or immune reconstitution therapies. SARS-CoV-2 vaccine willingness among pwMS was higher (90.5 vs 60-80%) than that reported in other Western countries, and higher than that for the influenza and pneumococcal vaccines (~80%) for which perceived unnecessity and unfamiliarity respectively were the main limiting factors. The primary reason for SARS-CoV-2 vaccine hesitancy was safety concern. PwMS who were explicitly advised by a healthcare professional to obtain the influenza vaccine were more likely to do so than those who were not (odds ratio, 8.1, 95% CI 2.8 -23.4, p<0.001). Of pwMS currently receiving B-cell therapy (ocrelizumab/rituximab, n=12), all but one (n=11, 91.7%) have never received the pneumococcal vaccine, and a quarter (n=3) were uncertain whether to obtain this in the future. Patient-reported uptake of HPV (1.0%) and MMR (51.4%) vaccines were suboptimal. Prevalence of vaccine promotion among healthcare professionals was low (influenza vaccine, 4.8 -32.4%; pneumococcal vaccine, 0 -18.1%). Conclusions: Vaccine hesitancy is common (10-20%) in pwMS, consequent to insufficient knowledge and misconceptions about vaccination among pwMS and suboptimal vaccine promotion by healthcare professionals who manage pwMS. Conscientious and context-specific vaccination counselling is necessary to tackle vaccine hesitancy among pwMS, including (i) avoiding infection-associated disability accrual during MS relapses, (ii) reducing the potentially higher risk of life-threatening/treatment-refractory complications that may be observed in those who develop vaccine-preventable infections while receiving certain DMTs, and (iii) avoiding attenuated vaccine responses or delayed/interrupted DMT with early pre-treatment vaccine deliv...
The International Panel on Diagnosis of Multiple Sclerosis (MS) recently revised the 2010 McDonald criteria and made recommendations for revision, allowing for the earliest possible, accurate diagnosis of MS. For relapsing-remitting MS, positive, unmatched cerebrospinal fluid oligoclonal bands may substitute for dissemination in time. Symptomatic lesions, including brainstem and spinal cord, may demonstrate dissemination in space or in time if enhancing (with the exception of the optic nerve). Cortical and juxtacortical lesions are equivalent. In this retrospective analysis, we applied revised criteria to 250 patients previously diagnosed with relapsing-remitting MS according to 2010 criteria and assessed for change in diagnostic times. There was a significant improvement in time to diagnosis between 2010 and 2017 groups ( p < 0.01). Median time to diagnosis according to McDonald 2010 was 7.4 months, compared with 2.3 months for McDonald 2017. Use of cerebrospinal fluid results most frequently resulted in a reduction in time to diagnosis. Symptomatic gadolinium-enhancing lesions led to earliest diagnostic times.
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