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Physical and Cognitive Functioning After 3 Years Can Be Predicted Using Information From the Diagnostic Process in Recently Diagnosed Multiple Sclerosis
Authors:Vincent de Groot  Heleen Beckerman  Bernard M. Uitdehaag  Rogier Q. Hintzen  Arjan Minneboo  Martijn W. Heymans  Gustaaf J. Lankhorst  Chris H. Polman  Lex M. Bouter  Functional Prognostication  Disability Study Group
Affiliation:a Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
b Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
c Department of Neurology, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
d Department of Radiology, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
e EMGO Institute, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
f Department of Neurology, Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Abstract:de Groot V, Beckerman H, Uitdehaag BM, Hintzen RQ, Minneboo A, Heymans MW, Lankhorst GJ, Polman CH, Bouter LM, on behalf of the Functional Prognostication and Disability (FuPro) Study Group. Physical and cognitive functioning after 3 years can be predicted using information from the diagnostic process in recently diagnosed multiple sclerosis.

Objective

To predict functioning after 3 years in patients with recently diagnosed multiple sclerosis (MS).

Design

Inception cohort with 3 years of follow-up. At baseline, predictors were obtained from medical history taking, neurologic examination, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).

Setting

Neurology outpatient clinic.

Participants

Patients with MS (N=156); 146 with complete follow-up.

Interventions

Not applicable.

Main Outcome Measures

Inability to walk at least 500m, impaired dexterity, cognitive impairments, incontinence, inability to drive a car or use public transportation, social dysfunction, and reliance on a disability pension.

Results

Clinical prediction rules were constructed for the models that were well calibrated (sufficient agreement between predicted and observed outcomes, based on visual inspection of calibration curves) and that showed sufficient discrimination (area under the receiver operation characteristic curve >.70) after internal bootstrap validation. The models for the inability to walk at least 500m, impaired dexterity, and cognitive impairments were well calibrated. Discrimination was sufficient for all 7 models, except the one predicting social dysfunction (.67). The inability to walk at least 500m was predicted by the perceived ability to walk, impairment of the cerebellar tract, and the number of MRI lesions in the spinal cord. Impaired dexterity was predicted by the perceived ability to use the hands, impairments of the pyramidal, cerebellar, and sensory tracts, and the T2-weighted infratentorial lesion load. Cognitive impairment was predicted by age, gender, the perceived ability to concentrate, and the T2-weighted supratentorial lesion load.

Conclusions

Inability to walk at least 500m, impaired dexterity, and cognitive impairments can be predicted with predictors that are derived from medical history taking, neurologic examination, and MRI shortly after a definite diagnosis of MS has been made.
Keywords:Cohort studies   Disability evaluation   Multiple sclerosis   Prognosis   Rehabilitation
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