Background: Measures to define treatment response, such as no evidence of disease activity (NEDA), are routinely used in multiple sclerosis (MS) clinical practice. Although spinal cord involvement is a frequent feature of MS, its magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) monitoring is not routinely performed.
Objective: To assess the impact of spinal cord MRI in the definition of NEDA in a cohort of people with MS (pwMS) with available spinal cord imaging performed as for routine monitoring.
Methods: We included 115 pwMS undergoing treatment with first-line disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) and retrospectively analyzed the presence of NEDA in the whole cohort, either considering or not spinal cord imaging.
Results: When considering only clinical and brain MRI measures, 97 out of 115 pwMS (84.3%) satisfied the criteria for NEDA. In the same cohort, the number of pwMS with NEDA significantly decreased to 88 (76.5%) (p < 0.01) when considering also spinal cord imaging.
Conclusion: These findings suggest that, in routine clinical practice, spinal cord MRI monitoring in pwMS under first-line DMTs leads to a slight but significant change in the proportion of subjects classified as clinically and radiologically stable according to the NEDA definition.
Keywords: Disease activity; Magnetic resonance imaging; Monitoring; Multiple sclerosis; NEDA; No evidence of disease activity; Spinal cord.
© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany.