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Baseline Inflammatory Status Reveals Dichotomic Immune Mechanisms Involved In Primary-Progressive Multiple Sclerosis Pathology.


ABSTRACT:

Objective

To ascertain the role of inflammation in the response to ocrelizumab in primary-progressive multiple sclerosis (PPMS).

Methods

Multicenter prospective study including 69 patients with PPMS who initiated ocrelizumab treatment, classified according to baseline presence [Gd+, n=16] or absence [Gd-, n=53] of gadolinium-enhancing lesions in brain MRI. Ten Gd+ (62.5%) and 41 Gd- patients (77.4%) showed non-evidence of disease activity (NEDA) defined as no disability progression or new MRI lesions after 1 year of treatment. Blood immune cell subsets were characterized by flow cytometry, serum immunoglobulins by nephelometry, and serum neurofilament light-chains (sNfL) by SIMOA. Statistical analyses were corrected with the Bonferroni formula.

Results

More than 60% of patients reached NEDA after a year of treatment, regardless of their baseline characteristics. In Gd+ patients, it associated with a low repopulation rate of inflammatory B cells accompanied by a reduction of sNfL values 6 months after their first ocrelizumab dose. Patients in Gd- group also had low B cell numbers and sNfL values 6 months after initiating treatment, independent of their treatment response. In these patients, NEDA status was associated with a tolerogenic remodeling of the T and innate immune cell compartments, and with a clear increase of serum IgA levels.

Conclusion

Baseline inflammation influences which immunological pathways predominate in patients with PPMS. Inflammatory B cells played a pivotal role in the Gd+ group and inflammatory T and innate immune cells in Gd- patients. B cell depletion can modulate both mechanisms.

SUBMITTER: Fernandez-Velasco JI 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC8977599 | biostudies-literature | 2022

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Baseline Inflammatory Status Reveals Dichotomic Immune Mechanisms Involved In Primary-Progressive Multiple Sclerosis Pathology.

Fernández-Velasco José I JI   Monreal Enric E   Kuhle Jens J   Meca-Lallana Virginia V   Meca-Lallana José J   Izquierdo Guillermo G   Oreja-Guevara Celia C   Gascón-Giménez Francisco F   Sainz de la Maza Susana S   Walo-Delgado Paulette E PE   Lapuente-Suanzes Paloma P   Maceski Aleksandra A   Rodríguez-Martín Eulalia E   Roldán Ernesto E   Villarrubia Noelia N   Saiz Albert A   Blanco Yolanda Y   Diaz-Pérez Carolina C   Valero-López Gabriel G   Diaz-Diaz Judit J   Aladro Yolanda Y   Brieva Luis L   Íñiguez Cristina C   González-Suárez Inés I   Rodríguez de Antonio Luis A LA   García-Domínguez José M JM   Sabin Julia J   Llufriu Sara S   Masjuan Jaime J   Costa-Frossard Lucienne L   Villar Luisa M LM  

Frontiers in immunology 20220321


<h4>Objective</h4>To ascertain the role of inflammation in the response to ocrelizumab in primary-progressive multiple sclerosis (PPMS).<h4>Methods</h4>Multicenter prospective study including 69 patients with PPMS who initiated ocrelizumab treatment, classified according to baseline presence [Gd+, n=16] or absence [Gd-, n=53] of gadolinium-enhancing lesions in brain MRI. Ten Gd+ (62.5%) and 41 Gd- patients (77.4%) showed non-evidence of disease activity (NEDA) defined as no disability progressio  ...[more]

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