Radiological differentiation of optic neuritis with myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibodies, aquaporin-4 antibodies, and multiple sclerosis

Sudarshini Ramanathan(The University of Sydney), Kristina Prelog(Children's Hospital at Westmead), Elizabeth H Barnes(The University of Sydney), Esther Tantsis(The University of Sydney), Stephen W Reddel(The University of Sydney), Andrew Henderson(The University of Sydney), Steve Vucic(The University of Sydney), Mark Gorman(Boston University), Leslie Benson(Boston University), Gülay Alper(University of Pittsburgh), Catherine J. Riney(The University of Queensland), Michael Barnett(The University of Sydney), John Parratt(The University of Sydney), Todd A. Hardy(The University of Sydney), Richard J. Leventer(Royal Children's Hospital), Vera Merheb(The University of Sydney), Margherita Nosadini(The University of Sydney), Victor SC Fung(The University of Sydney), Fabienne Brilot(The University of Sydney), Russell C. Dale(The University of Sydney)
Multiple Sclerosis Journal
July 10, 2015
Cited by 375

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Recognizing the cause of optic neuritis (ON) affects treatment decisions and visual outcomes. OBJECTIVE: We aimed to define radiological features of first-episode demyelinating ON. METHODS: We performed blinded radiological assessment of 50 patients presenting with first-episode myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) antibody-associated ON (MOG-ON; n=19), aquaporin-4 (AQP4) antibody-associated ON (AQP4-ON; n=11), multiple sclerosis (MS)-associated ON (MS-ON; n=13), and unclassified ON (n=7). RESULTS: Bilateral involvement was more common in MOG-ON and AQP4-ON than MS-ON (84% vs. 82% vs. 23%), optic nerve head swelling was more common in MOG-ON (53% vs. 9% vs. 0%), chiasmal involvement was more common in AQP4-ON (5% vs. 64% vs. 15%), and bilateral optic tract involvement was more common in AQP4-ON (0% vs. 45% vs. 0%). Retrobulbar involvement was more common in MOG-ON, whereas intracranial involvement was more common in AQP4-ON. MOG-ON and AQP4-ON had longer lesion lengths than MS-ON. The combination of two predictors, the absence of magnetic resonance imaging brain abnormalities and a higher lesion extent score, showed a good ability to discriminate between an autoantibody-associated ON (MOG or AQP4) and MS. AQP4-ON more frequently had severe and sustained visual impairment. CONCLUSION: MOG-ON and AQP4-ON are more commonly bilateral and longitudinally extensive. MOG-ON tends to involve the anterior optic pathway, whereas AQP4-ON the posterior optic pathway.


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