Abstract

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a highly heterogeneous disease with large inter-individual differences in disease course. MS lesion pathology shows considerable heterogeneity in localization, cellular content and degree of demyelination between patients. In this study, we investigated pathological correlates of disease course in MS using the autopsy cohort of the Netherlands Brain Bank (NBB), containing 182 MS brain donors. Using a standardized autopsy procedure including systematic dissection from standard locations, 3188 tissue blocks containing 7562 MS lesions were dissected. Unbiased measurements of lesion load were made using the tissue from standard locations. Lesion demyelinating and innate inflammatory activity were visualized by immunohistochemistry for proteolipid protein and human leukocyte antigen. Lesions were classified into active, mixed active/inactive (also known as chronic active), inactive or remyelinated, while microglia/macrophage morphology was classified as ramified, amoeboid or foamy. The severity score was calculated from the time from first symptoms to EDSS-6. Lesion type prevalence and microglia/macrophage morphology were analyzed in relation to clinical course, disease severity, lesion load and sex, and in relation to each other. This analysis shows for the first time that (1) in progressive MS, with a mean disease duration of 28.6 ± 13.3 years (mean ± SD), there is substantial inflammatory lesion activity at time to death. 57% of all lesions were either active or mixed active/inactive and 78% of all patients had a mixed active/inactive lesion present; (2) patients that had a more severe disease course show a higher proportion of mixed active/inactive lesions (p = 6e−06) and a higher lesion load (p = 2e−04) at the time of death, (3) patients with a progressive disease course show a higher lesion load (p = 0.001), and a lower proportion of remyelinated lesions (p = 0.03) compared to patients with a relapsing disease course, (4) males have a higher incidence of cortical grey matter lesions (p = 0.027) and a higher proportion of mixed active/inactive lesions compared to females across the whole cohort (p = 0.007). We confirm that there is a higher proportion of mixed active/inactive lesions (p = 0.006) in progressive MS compared to relapsing disease. Identification of mixed active/inactive lesions on MRI is necessary to determine whether they can be used as a prognostic tool in living MS patients.

Highlights

  • Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic inflammatory disease of the central nervous system, which is characterized by demyelination, inflammation and neuroaxonal damage [27,1 3 Vol.:(0123456789)Acta Neuropathologica (2018) 135:511–52839]

  • This study shows for the first time that: (1) MS brain donors with shorter time to Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS)-6 have a higher lesion load and a higher proportion of mixed active/inactive lesions at time of death

  • Similar results are shown with time to EDSS-8 and disease duration. These findings suggest that mixed active/inactive lesions are involved in disease progression, and it is plausible that this is due to the accumulation of this lesion type over time

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Summary

Introduction

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic inflammatory disease of the central nervous system, which is characterized by demyelination, inflammation and neuroaxonal damage [27,1 3 Vol.:(0123456789)Acta Neuropathologica (2018) 135:511–52839]. Lesion activity in the chronic late phase of MS does not show the four different patterns, large inter-individual differences in inflammatory and demyelinating activity, meningeal inflammation, degree of axonal loss, and remyelination are still observed in post-mortem MS cohort studies [9, 13, 35, 38]. Pathological correlates for clinical disease course, disease severity and sex differences in MS are currently not well explored [13]. This is probably due to the fact that world-wide, the availability of clinically and pathologically well-characterized MS brain tissue collections of sufficient power is limited

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