Is initial misdiagnosis associated with reaching disability milestones in patients with multiple sclerosis?

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dc.contributor.author Ivaniuk, A. en
dc.contributor.author Marusich, T. en
dc.contributor.author Solodovnikova, Y. en
dc.contributor.author Son, A. en
dc.date.accessioned 2022-12-14T12:00:52Z
dc.date.available 2022-12-14T12:00:52Z
dc.date.issued 2020
dc.identifier.citation Is initial misdiagnosis associated with reaching disability milestones in patients with multiple sclerosis? / A. Ivaniuk, T. Marusich, Y. Solodovnikova, A. Son // Medicina. - 2020. - P. 170175. uk_UA
dc.identifier.uri https://repo.odmu.edu.ua:443/xmlui/handle/123456789/11806
dc.description.abstract Background and objectives: multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic demyelinating disorder of the CNS with a variable course and disability progression. The latter may be prevented with disease-modifying therapy (DMT). Initial misdiagnosis may postpone the use of DMT. There are no studies to explore whether initial misdiagnosis is indeed associated with a higher rate of reaching disability in MS patients. We aimed to investigate the association between initial misdiagnosis and reaching disability milestones in relapsing-remitting MS (RR-MS) patients. Materials and methods: Data from 128 RR-MS patients were retrospectively reviewed. EDSS 4 and EDSS 6 were chosen as disability milestones as those associated with a significant decrease in ambulation. Survival analysis was used, and Kaplan–Meier curves were generated to investigate how initial misdiagnosis affects reaching the defined milestones. Results: 53 patients (41.4%, 31 females, 22 males) were initially misdiagnosed. Initially misdiagnosed patients had a lesser risk of reaching EDSS 4 up to 11 years and EDSS 6 up to 22 years from the onset than non-misdiagnosed patients (p = 0.22 and p = 0.25 correspondingly). Median time to reaching EDSS 4 and 6 was eight years (95% CI 0.0–17.6) and 10 years (95% CI 4.25–20.75) in misdiagnosed and three years (95% CI 0.0–20.0 years) and five years (95% CI 0.0–13.73 years) in non-misdiagnosed patients correspondingly. Conclusions: Initially misdiagnosed RR-MS patients tended to reach disability milestones later than non-misdiagnosed ones, which might reflect an intrinsically milder disease. Individuals presenting with mild or non-specific symptoms suspicious of MS, must be deliberately managed. en
dc.language.iso en uk_UA
dc.subject
dc.subject sclerosis en
dc.subject misdiagnosis en
dc.subject prognosis en
dc.subject disability en
dc.subject EDSS en
dc.title Is initial misdiagnosis associated with reaching disability milestones in patients with multiple sclerosis? uk_UA
dc.type Article uk_UA


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