Asymptomatic optic nerve lesions an underestimated cause of silent retinal atrophy in ms

Archive ouverte

Davion, Jean-Baptiste | Lopes, Renaud | Drumez, Elodie | Labreuche, Julien | Hadhoum, Nawal | Lannoy, Julien | Vermersch, Patrick | Pruvo, Jean-Pierre | Leclerc, Xavier | Zephir, Helene | Outteryck, Olivier

Edité par CCSD ; American Academy of Neurology -

International audience. ObjectiveTo evaluate the frequency of asymptomatic optic nerve lesions and their role in the asymptomatic retinal neuroaxonal loss observed in multiple sclerosis (MS).MethodsWe included patients with remitting-relapsing MS in the VWIMS study (Analysis of Neurodegenerative Process Within Visual Ways In Multiple Sclerosis) (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: 03656055). Included patients underwent optical coherence tomography (OCT), optic nerve and brain MRI, and low-contrast visual acuity measurement. In eyes of patients with MS without optic neuritis (MS-NON), an optic nerve lesion on MRI (3D double inversion recovery [DIR] sequence) was considered as an asymptomatic lesion. We considered the following OCT/MRI measures: peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer thickness, macular ganglion cell + inner plexiform layer (mGCIPL) volumes, optic nerve lesion length, T2 lesion burden, and fractional anisotropy within optic radiations.ResultsAn optic nerve lesion was detected in half of MS-NON eyes. Compared to optic nerves without any lesion and independently of the optic radiation lesions, the asymptomatic lesions were associated with thinner inner retinal layers (p < 0.0001) and a lower contrast visual acuity (p ≤ 0.003). Within eyes with asymptomatic optic nerve lesions, optic nerve lesion length was the only MRI measure significantly associated with retinal neuroaxonal loss (p < 0.03). Intereye mGCIPL thickness difference (IETD) was lower in patients with bilateral optic nerve DIR hypersignal compared to patients with unilateral hypersignal (p = 0.0317). For the diagnosis of history of optic neuritis, sensitivity of 3D DIR and of mGCIPL IETD were 84.9% and 63.5%, respectively.ConclusionsAsymptomatic optic nerve lesions are an underestimated and preponderant cause of retinal neuroaxonal loss in MS. 3D DIR sequence may be more sensitive than IETD measured by OCT for the detection of optic nerve lesions.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Relation between retina, cognition and brain volumes in MS: a consequence of asymptomatic optic nerve lesions.

Archive ouverte | Davion, Jean-Baptiste | CCSD

International audience. IntroductionAsymptomatic optic nerve lesions are frequent in multiple sclerosis (MS) and their impact on cognition and/or brain volume has never been taken into account.Patients and methodsWe...

Brief International Cognitive Assessment for Multiple Sclerosis scores are associated with the cortical thickness of specific cortical areas in relapsing-remitting patients.

Archive ouverte | Davion, Jean-Baptiste | CCSD

International audience. BackgroundCognitive impairment is frequent and disabling in multiple sclerosis (MS). The Brief International Cognitive Assessment in MS (BICAMS) is a recent short battery usable in clinical p...

Optical coherence tomography for detection of asymptomatic optic nerve lesions in clinically isolated syndrome

Archive ouverte | Outteryck, Olivier | CCSD

International audience. ObjectiveTo evaluate the ability of intereye retinal thickness difference (IETD) measured by optical coherence tomography (OCT) to detect asymptomatic optic nerve involvement in clinically is...

Chargement des enrichissements...