Medicina

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/10637/57

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    IgM to phosphatidylcholine in multiple sclerosis patients: from the diagnosis to the treatment2023-08-17

    Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a demyelinating and neurodegenerative disease of the central nervous system. It affects young people, and a considerable percentage of patients need the help of a wheelchair in 15 years of evolution. Currently, there is not a specific technique for the diagnosis of MS. The detection of oligoclonal IgG bands (OIgGBs) is the most sensitive assay for it, but it is not standardizable, only reference laboratories develop it, and uses cerebrospinal fluid. To obtain this sample, a lumbar puncture is necessary, an invasive proceeding with important side effects. It is important to develop and implement standard assays to obtain a rapid diagnosis because the earlier the treatment, the better the evolution of the disease. There are numerous modifying disease therapies, which delay the progression of the disease, but they have important side effects, and a considerable percentage of patients give up the treatment. In addition, around 40% of MS patients do not respond to the therapy and the disease progresses. Numerous researches have been focused on the characterization of predictive biomarkers of response to treatment, in order to help physicians to decide when to change to a second-line treatment, and then the best therapeutic option. Here, we review the new biomarkers for the diagnosis and response to treatment in MS. We draw attention in a new assay, the detection of serum IgM to phosphatidylcholine, that showed a similar sensitivity as OIgGBs and predicts the response to disease modifying treatments.

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    Main Role of Antibodies in Demyelination and Axonal Damage in Multiple Sclerosis2021-02-24

    Antibodies and oxidative stress are hallmarks of multiple sclerosis (MS) lesions. We aimed to clarify the relation between them, their role in MS patients and to investigate their specificity, comparing MS with classical neurodegenerative diseases (ND). Brain samples from 14 MS cases, 6 with ND and 9 controls (without neurological diseases). Immunohistochemistry assays were used to detect oxidized lipids (EO6), IgG and IgM, oligodendrocytes (Olig2), axons (NF, neurofilament) and cellular (TUNEL) and axonal damage (APP, amyloid precursor protein). We did not observe EO6 in controls. All samples from MS patients showed EO6 in oligodendrocytes and axons within lesions. We did not detect co-localization between EO6 and antibodies. Neither did we between EO6 and TUNEL or APP. 94.4% of TUNEL-positive cells in normal appearing white matter were also stained for IgG and 75.5% for IgM. IgM, but not IgG, co-localized with APP. EO6 was associated with axonal damage in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). We did not observe association between antibodies and cellular or axonal damage in ND patients. MS patients showed a higher number of B cells and plasma cells in the lesions and meninges than controls. The number of B cells and plasma cells was associated with the presence of antibodies and with the activity of the lesions. We observed a main role of B lymphocytes in the development of MS lesions. Antibodies contribute to the oligodendrocyte and axonal damage in MS. Oxidative stress was associated with axonal damage in ALS.

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    Serum levels of IgM to phosphatidylcholine predict the response of multiple sclerosis patients to natalizumab or IFN-beta2022-08-03

    We developed an ELISA assay demonstrating the high prevalence of serum IgM to phosphatidylcholine (IgM-PC) in the first stages of multiple sclerosis (MS). We aimed to analyze the role of serum IgM-PC as a biomarker of response to treatment. Paired serum samples from 95 MS patients were obtained before (b.t) and after (a.t) treatment with disease modifying therapies. Patients were classified as non-responders or responders to treatment, according to classical criteria. Serum IgM-PC concentration was analyzed using our house ELISA assay. The level of serum IgM-PC b.t was higher in patients treated later with natalizumab than in those treated with Copaxone (p = 0.011) or interferon-β (p = 0.009). Responders to natalizumab showed higher concentration of serum IgM-PC b.t than those who did not respond to it (p = 0.019). The 73.3% of patients with the highest level of serum IgM-PC b.t responded to natalizumab. IgM-PC level decreased a.t in both cases, non-responders and responders to natalizumab. IgM-PC levels a.t did not decrease in non-responders to interferon-β, but in responders to it the IgM-PC level decreased (p = 0.007). Serum IgM-PC could be a biomarker of response to natalizumab or interferon-β treatment. Further studies would be necessary to validate these results.

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    Serum antibodies to phosphatidylcholine in MS2020-06-09

    Objective: To evaluate the value of serum immunoglobulin G (IgG) and immunoglobulin M (IgM) antibodies reactive with phosphatidylcholine (PC) and lactosylceramide (LC) as biomarkers in MS. Methods: We developed an ultrasensitive ELISA technique to analyze serum IgG and IgM antibodies to LC and PC, which we used to analyze samples from 362 patients with MS, 10 patients with non-MS myelin diseases (Non-MSMYDs), 11 patients with nonmyelin neurologic diseases (Non-MYNDs), and 80 controls. MS serum samples included clinically isolated syndrome (CIS, n = 17), relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS, n = 62), secondary progressive MS (SPMS, n = 50), primary progressive MS (PPMS, n = 37), and benign MS (BENMS, n = 36). Results: We detected higher levels of serum IgM antibodies to PC (IgM-PC) in MS than control samples; patients with CIS and RRMS showed higher IgM-PC levels than patients with SPMS, PPMS, and BENMS and controls. MS and control samples did not differ in serum levels of IgM antibodies reactive with LC, nor in IgG antibodies reactive with LC or PC. Conclusions: Serum IgM-PC antibodies are elevated in patients with MS, particularly during the CIS and RRMS phases of the disease. Thus, serum IgM-PC is a candidate biomarker for early inflammatory stages of MS. Classification of evidence: This study provides Class III evidence that serum antibodies to PC are elevated in patients with MS. The study is rated Class III because of the case control design and the risk of spectrum bias: antibody levels in patients with MS were compared with healthy controls.