Abstract

Background and purposeMuch clinical knowledge about multiple sclerosis (MS) has been gained from patients who attend MS specialty clinics. However, there is limited information about whether these patients are representative of the wider MS population. The objective of this study was to compare incident MS cases who were MS clinic users to non‐users of the specialty MS clinics in British Columbia, Canada.MethodsThis was a retrospective record‐linkage cohort study using prospectively collected data from the British Columbia Multiple Sclerosis database and province‐wide health administrative databases.ResultsThere were 2841 incident MS cases between 1996 and 2004 including 1648 (58%) that had registered at an MS clinic (‘clinic cases’) and 1193 (42%) that had not (‘non‐clinic cases’). Gender and socioeconomic status distributions were similar; however, non‐clinic cases were older, accessed health services more frequently and had a higher burden of comorbidity than clinic cases. Only 1% of the non‐clinic cases had filled a prescription for an MS‐specific disease‐modifying therapy, compared to 51% of the clinic cases.ConclusionsOur findings have several important implications: even within a publicly funded healthcare system, a high proportion of individuals with MS may not access a specialty MS clinic; the needs of MS patients managed in the community may differ from those referred to an MS clinic; findings from studies involving clinic‐based MS cohorts may not always be generalizable to the wider MS population; and access to population‐based health administrative data offers the opportunity to gain a broader understanding of MS.

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