Clinical Features and Genetic Risk of Demyelination Following Anti-TNF Treatment
journal contribution
posted on 2024-05-28, 05:36authored bySimeng Lin, Harry D Green, Peter Hendy, Neel Heerasing, Neil Chanchlani, Benjamin Hamilton, Gareth J Walker, Graham A Heap, Jeremy Hobart, Roswell J Martin, Alasdair J Coles, Mark S Silverberg, Peter M Irving, Guy Chung-Faye, Eli Silber, JR Fraser Cummings, Ellina Lytvyak, Vibeke Andersen, Andrew R Wood, Jessica Tyrrell, Robin N Beaumont, Michael N Weedon, Nicholas A Kennedy, Alexander Spiers, Timothy Harrower, James R Goodhand, Tariq Ahmad
Abstract
Background
Anti-TNF exposure has been linked to demyelination events. We sought to describe the clinical features of demyelination events following anti-TNF treatment and to test whether affected patients were genetically predisposed to multiple sclerosis [MS].
Methods
We conducted a case-control study to describe the clinical features of demyelination events following anti-TNF exposure. We compared genetic risk scores [GRS], calculated using carriage of 43 susceptibility loci for MS, in 48 cases with 1219 patients exposed to anti-TNF who did not develop demyelination.
Results
Overall, 39 [74%] cases were female. The median age [range] of patients at time of demyelination was 41.5 years [20.7–63.2]. The median duration of anti-TNF treatment was 21.3 months [0.5-99.4] and 19 [36%] patients were receiving concomitant immunomodulators. Most patients had central demyelination affecting the brain, spinal cord, or both. Complete recovery was reported in 12 [23%] patients after a median time of 6.8 months [0.1–28.7]. After 33.0 months of follow-up, partial recovery was observed in 29 [55%] patients, relapsing and remitting episodes in nine [17%], progressive symptoms in three [6%]: two [4%] patients were diagnosed with MS. There was no significant difference between MS GRS scores in cases (mean -3.5 × 10–4, standard deviation [SD] 0.0039) and controls [mean -1.1 × 10–3, SD 0.0042] [p = 0.23].
Conclusions
Patients who experienced demyelination events following anti-TNF exposure were more likely female, less frequently treated with an immunomodulator, and had a similar genetic risk to anti-TNF exposed controls who did not experience demyelination events. Large prospective studies with pre-treatment neuroimaging are required to identify genetic susceptibility loci.