https://doi.org/10.55788/fb36add0
Patients with MS have elevated titers of EBV-specific antibodies in serum and show signs of CNS damage only after EBV infection. Dr Tilman Schneider-Hohendorf (University of Münster, Germany) explained that, in a preceding study, MS was shown to be associated with a broader MHC-I-restricted EBV-specific T-cell receptor beta chain (TCRβ) repertoire, compared with controls [1,2]. “This can be interpreted as an imprint of an aberrant primary or ongoing ineffective response to EBV in MS” [2]. The researchers wanted to know if the ineffective response to EBV in MS extends to NMOSD, MOGAD, and Susac syndrome. They also evaluated whether this ineffective EBV response can be influenced by MS therapies.
Dr Schneider-Hohendorf and colleagues sequenced blood samples of cohorts with NMOSD, MOGAD, and Susac syndrome who were matched with patients with MS and healthy controls, balanced for age, sex, and HLA alleles. They found that, other than in MS, none of the evaluated diseases presented with a broader anti-EBV TCRβ repertoire.
Furthermore, modulation of the broader anti-EBV TCRβ repertoire by ocrelizumab, teriflunomide, and dimethyl fumarate was observed, but not by IFN-β or glatiramer acetate. None of the disease-modifying treatments modulated an anti-cytomegalovirus response. Dr Schneider-Hohendorf offered 2 possible explanations for these findings: “Either there is a direct depletion of anti-EBV-specific CD8+ cells, or a more indirect mechanism whereby EBV-infected B cells are depleted in large numbers, and subsequently less of an EBV response is required.” He believed that for ocrelizumab the second explanation holds true. For dimethyl fumarate and teriflunomide, both explanations could be correct.
Future studies will have to demonstrate whether the observed modulation of the EBV response by some of the disease-modifying treatments directly contributes to their clinical efficacy.
- Schneider-Hohendorf T, et al. J Exp Med. 2022 Nov 7;219(11):e20220650.
- Schneider-Hohendorf T, et al. Broader anti-EBV TCR repertoire in multiple sclerosis: disease specificity and treatment modulation. Abstract O133, ECTRIMS 2024, 18–20 September, Copenhagen, Denmark.
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Table of Contents: ECTRIMS 2024
Featured articles
Diagnosis, Biomarkers, and Phenotypes
Revised McDonald criteria allow earlier and more precise MS diagnosis
Approaches to RIS and MS converge
AI versus clinicians: who diagnoses MS faster and better?
Blood markers predict MS progression
Gut microbiota modulate inflammation and cortical damage
Risk factors and importance of persistent PIRA
Vitamin D supplementation in progressive MS should be medically supervised
Treatment: Strategies
Encouraging real-world results of AHSCT to treat aggressive MS
CAR T-cell therapy in MS: in its infancy but highly anticipated
B cell-tailored dosing of ocrelizumab shows good results
First-line moderate-efficacy DMTs show similar efficacy
Treatment: Trials
Tolebrutinib slows disability worsening in relapsing MS
Frexalimab shows favourable safety and efficacy in OLE
Good safety of ozanimod over up to 8 years of treatment
Tolebrutinib slows disability in non-relapsing SPMS
High-dose simvastatin does not slow disability progression in SPMS
Comorbidity Risks and Pregnancy
High genetic burden for depression associated with MS disease activity
More comorbidity is associated with worse clinical outcomes in MS
Transfer of ocrelizumab into breastmilk is negligible
NMOSD/MOGAD
Ineffective response to EBV in MS not seen in similar diseases
Comparative effectiveness and safety of DMTs in NMOSD
Age, time, and treatment determine relapse risk in MOGAD
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