4.7 Article

Timing and Predictors of T2-Lesion Resolution in Patients With Myelin Oligodendrocyte Glycoprotein Antibody-Associated Disease

Journal

NEUROLOGY
Volume 101, Issue 13, Pages E1376-E1381

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000207478

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The study investigated the timing and predictors of T2-lesion resolution in MOGAD, finding that small lesions resolved more frequently and faster than large lesions. Factors such as acute T1-hypointensity and acute steroids influenced the resolution of T2-lesions. Spontaneous resolution of T2-lesions without treatment was also observed.
ObjectivesTo determine the timing and predictors of T2-lesion resolution in myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody-associated disease (MOGAD).MethodsThis retrospective observational study using standard-of-care data had inclusion criteria of MOGAD diagnosis, >= 2 MRIs 12 months apart, and >= 1 brain/spinal cord T2-lesion. The median (interquartile range [IQR]) number of MRIs (82% at disease onset) per-patient were: brain, 5 (2-8); spine, 4 (2-8). Predictors of T2-lesion resolution were assessed with age- and sex-adjusted generalized estimating equations and stratified by T2-lesion size (small <1 cm; large >= 1 cm).ResultsWe studied 583 T2-lesions (brain, 512 [88%]; spinal cord, 71 [12%]) from 55 patients. At last MRI (median follow-up 54 months [IQR 7-74]) 455 T2-lesions (78%) resolved. The median (IQR) time to resolution was 3 months (1.4-7.0). Small T2-lesions resolved more frequently and faster than large T2-lesions. Acute T1-hypointensity decreased the likelihood (odds ratio [95% CI]) of T2-lesion resolution independent of size (small: 0.23 [0.09-0.60], p = 0.002; large: 0.30 [0.16-0.55], p < 0.001), whereas acute steroids favored resolution of large T2-lesions (1.75 [1.01-3.03], p = 0.046). Notably, 32/55 (58%) T2-lesions resolved without treatment.DiscussionThe high frequency of spontaneous T2-lesion resolution suggests that this represents MOGAD's natural history. The speed of T2-lesion resolution and influence of size, corticosteroids, and T1-hypointensity on this phenomenon gives insight into MOGAD pathogenesis.

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