Multiple Sclerosis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Investigation Into the Role of Neuroretinal Biomarkers in the Phenotyping of Neurodegenerative Diseases, and Potential for Tracking Progression and Monitoring Impact of Interventions, Events and Therapies.
There is increasing evidence that examining our eyes can tell us a lot of information about our health, and systemic diseases. We want to study what eyes can reveal about serious neurodegenerative diseases like multiple sclerosis, and motor neurone disease, by analysing the retinal images from a simple non-invasive eye scan, that is already being routinely used to provide immediate clinical information in this group of patients.
The identification of reliable biomarkers in multiple sclerosis (MS), and other
neurodegenerative diseases, has become increasingly important with the development of
disease-modifying treatments.
A range of genetic, metabolic and imaging biomarkers exist, in correlations with diagnosis,
phenotypic expression, inflammation, degeneration and prognosis; although there is wide
variation in specificity, sensitivity, reproducibility and cost.
In MS specifically, we know that whilst the primary pathological process is demyelination of
neurones (which can be accompanied by inflammation, and resolving symptoms), it is the
subsequent axonal loss - neurodegeneration - that gives rise to the permanent functional
disability.
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) brain scans are currently our primary source of objective
information in assessing MS disease status, in terms of neurodegeneration and possibly
prognosis. Measurements of brain atrophy have shown worsening rates are higher in untreated
MS patients compared with healthy controls and also correlate with subsequent disability
status eight years later.
However, brain atrophy measures sometimes reveal paradoxical outcomes, particularly of white
matter atrophy, where normal or increased volume as a result of pathological processes, such
as tissue damage and repair, can impact upon the measures.
The search then for other markers of neurodegenerative disease status and prognosis
continues, with renewed interest in the eye.
In MS, early work has suggested certain retinal measures, particularly the width of the
layer that consists largely of retinal ganglion cell nerve axons, as candidate biomarkers,
under the hypothesis that neuroretinal tissue reflects global central nervous system (CNS)
pathology. Conceptually, this would seem reasonable, given the frequency for anterior visual
pathway involvement as the primary presentation of MS; and in addition, the unmyelinated
ganglion cell axons that form the retinal nerve fibre layer (RNFL) are a direct extension of
the brain, and global neurodegeneration would be expected to involve these neurones -
particularly in MS, where the disease lesions have a predilection for the periventricular
regions, which are in close proximity to the optic radiations.
However, the natural history of neuroretinal tissue integrity is poorly understood, and in
vivo measurement is a very new modality, requiring validation and context to any
interpretation.
In addition, retinal imaging permits the direct visualisation, and subsequent analysis, of
the retinal vasculature - shown in studies of stroke and hypertension to be an accurate
representation of brain vasculature, with diagnostic and prognostic potential.
In summary, a combined score of neuroretinal integrity as measured by retinal imaging may
yield new insights into sever neurodegenerative disease.
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Observational Model: Case Control, Time Perspective: Prospective
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