Getting worse
This newsletter explains why people with MS get worse despite having no evident inflammatory disease activity
In my MS clinic, I have to continually work on a narrative to explain to people with MS (pwMS) why they are getting worse despite having no evidence of inflammatory disease activity (NEIDA). The following is a narrative I use to explain what I now refer to as smouldering multiple sclerosis.
Disease worsening or disability progression in MS can be explained under 4 headings:
1. SS (scissors and stripper)
The acute focal inflammatory MS lesion acts like molecular scissors and strippers, cutting axons and stripping myelin off the axons or nerve fibre. These cut and naked axons are blocked from conducting signals and result in a neurological deficit. The neurological deficit from this block in the conduction of electrical signals will vary depending on the pathway affected, for example, if the lesion affects the optic nerves it will cause loss of vision. The way to prevent the SS from causing conduction block is to prevent new lesions from forming. To achieve this you need to be on an effective anti-inflammatory therapy and be rendered free from relapses and new MRI lesion formation, i.e. NEIDA.
2. EF (energy failure)
The demyelinated axons from the lesions may recover function by a process called axonal plasticity or remyelination. Axonal plasticity is the process by which the neuron inserts new ion channels into the demyelinated axonal segments, which restores conduction. Remyelination may also occur, but the new myelin is never as thick and as efficient as the old myelin and is susceptible to intermittent failure. These demyelinated and thinly remyelinated sections of axons are susceptible to temperature and fatigue. If the temperature rises these sections block and if the axons are used too much, for example with exercise, they run out of energy and also block. Sometimes the type of ion channel that is inserted into the axon's fire spontaneously can cause intermittent symptoms, for example, pins and needles, pain, neuralgia and muscle spasms. As these ion channels are sodium channels it explains why these intermittent symptoms respond to drugs that block sodium channels, for example, carbamazepine, oxcarbazepine, phenytoin and lamotrigine.
Another process that helps with recovery is that the surviving axons form sprouts to reconnect disconnected pathways and create new synapses, which are the connections between nerve fibres. All these processes increase the energy requirements of the axon, which makes it vulnerable to die-off later.
At the same time the ‘MS lesion’ remains inflamed and some of the chemicals produced as part of the inflammation poison the mitochondria, which are energy factories of the axons. A further reduction in energy production puts further stress on the system. As a result of these processes, there is a delayed dying off of axons that takes place over months to years after the initial MS lesion has formed. This delayed dying off of axons explains why despite effective treatments stopping new MS lesions from forming some people with MS still notice a slow deterioration in their functioning.
The following videos demonstrate normal conduction in a myelinated nerve and what happens in a demyelinated nerve that has undergone axonal plasticity mentioned above. In the first video, you can see how quickly and efficiently electrical impulses pass down the nerve. In the second video of a demyelinated nerve, the electrical signal crawls very slowly across the demyelinated segment; at one stage it looks like the signal is not going to make it or get blocked. The red shadow lines are an integrator of the energy it takes to restore the nerve back to its basal state so that it can transmit another electrical impulse. You can imagine this happening across the many MS lesions in the brain of a person with MS and explains why it takes so much energy for someone with MS to think and function normally. This also explains why pwMS suffer from both physical and cognitive fatigue.
3. SB (slow burn)
Some MS lesions never recover and become slowly expanding lesions or SELs. SELs have a rim of hot microglia (innate immune cells) at their edges and continue to swallow up the myelin and axons of the surrounding ‘normal-appearing’ tissue. These lesions don’t have much acute inflammation left in them, i.e. there are very few T and B cells in these lesions. SELs continue to expand over years to decades and are responsible for the slow accumulation of damage over many years. SELs can be seen on MRI; they typically cause black holes on so-called T1-weighted MR images and have a dark rim of iron around them when viewed with special MR sequences (susceptibility imaging). The iron rim is a marker of these so-called ‘hot microglia’.
At present we have no idea what causes some MS lesions to regress and recover and for others to expand and become SELs. What we do know is that our standard anti-inflammatory DMTs have little or no effect on SELs once they have developed. It is important to realise that SELs are found throughout the course of MS and are even seen in people with a radiologically isolated syndrome (RIS) or asymptomatic MS. In other words, the so-called ‘progressive MS pathology’ is found very early in the MS disease course. We do know that the number and size of the SELs increase with disease duration, i.e. the more MS lesions that develop the more SELs will be formed. Another important observation that has recently emerged is that a single strategically located SEL can cause an extraordinary amount of damage; for example, a single SEL in the so-called pyramidal tract or motor pathway can cause progressive weakness down one side of the body. I have a few patients like this and it is very disheartening when their weakness fails to respond to standard anti-inflammatory therapies.
An interesting debate is whether or not the ‘hot microglial’ response is abnormal, i.e. pathological, or is occurring in response to something in the surrounding tissue. I support the latter view and hypothesise that there is something in the surrounding tissue that is activating the microglia and they are just doing their job and trying to clear up the inciting agent. Others have suggested these microglia are responding to the back-end, or Fc-end, of antibodies and activated complement components as a result of these antibodies reacting with their target or in a non-specific manner. Other hypotheses include viruses, e.g. Epstein Barr Virus (EBV) and human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs), which are driving the expansion of these lesions. The way to test these two competing hypotheses is to use drugs that switch off or suppress microglia. If the ‘hot microglia’ are the problem these drugs will work and stop SELs from getting bigger. If the microglia are just doing their 'job' these agents are unlikely to work. The good news is that there are several ongoing trials in MS of drugs targeting microglia.
It is also important to remind you that myelin debris from damaged and demyelinating axons inhibits remyelination so these microglia may be needed to help with the repair. The problem is that without being able to switch off the abnormal processes that are causing SELs to enlarge, trying to stimulate repair mechanisms may be futile.
Another factor that can’t be ignored is recurrent infections, which sometimes affects a lot of people with advanced MS. Recurrent urinary tract infections (UTIs) are the biggest problem. This is why we take UTIs so seriously. Every time you get an infection it causes your immune system to produce cytokines, or inflammatory messengers, that travel to the brain and boost the activity of the microglia. The hot microglia then exacerbate the damage that MS is doing to your brain and spinal cord. This is why many of you tolerate infections so poorly and often don’t recover back to baseline after a severe infection. There is a lot we can do to reduce recurrent bladder infections. For example, the judicious use of intermittent self-catheterisation, drinking lots of liquids to flush the bladder, using urinary antiseptics to suppress the growth of bacteria in the bladder and screening for asymptomatic UTIs using self-monitoring home dipsticking and prompt treatment.
The upshot of ‘slow burn’ is that we need additional therapies to add on top of DMTs that stop new lesions, and in particular chronic expanding or SELs, from forming. These treatments may be drugs to purge the CNS of antibody-producing B cells and plasma cells, drugs that inhibit complement activation and/or the activation of Fc receptors on microglia, antivirals that target EBV and HERVs, and/or drugs that inhibit activated microglia. In other words, there are many therapeutic targets that still need to be explored as add-on therapies in MS.
4. PA (premature ageing)
Most of you are aware of the effects of ageing on the nervous system. The brain and spinal cord were never designed by evolution to last longer than about 35 years. It is only relatively recently that as a species we have extended our lifespans. Once you go beyond approximately 35 years of age there is a gradual loss of nerve cells and axons. This explains why as you get older you notice the effects of ageing; reduced vision, loss of hearing, poor balance and sadly age-related cognitive impairment. In short, life is an age-dependent neurodegenerative disease. If we all live long enough we will all develop cognitive impairment. What protects us from age-related changes is so-called brain reserve capacity, i.e. the size of the brain and spinal cord, and cognitive reserve, which relates to education level and environmental enrichment (social capital, adult learning, cognitive exercises, etc.). We know that MS reduces both brain and cognitive reserve and as a result people with MS experience the impact of ageing much earlier. I refer to this as premature ageing. Can we do anything about this? Yes, we can. We know from studies in the general population there are many things that you can do to maximise your brain and cognitive reserve. This is called Brain Health and involves lifestyle factors such as exercise, diet, sleep and avoiding smoking and excessive alcohol consumption. It is also important to be screened for comorbidities or other diseases and have them treated; these include smoking, hypertension, diabetes, obesity and abnormal lipids. As for diet, there have not been any that have been studied specifically in MS. However, data from animal and other studies indicate that calorie-restricted, intermittent fasting and ketogenic diets have the most promise with regard to brain health. However, we need more evidence of their beneficial effects before promoting these widely to pwMS.
Ageing is also a biological process and as we decode the molecular programmes that cause ageing we may be able to develop treatments that reverse or slow ageing. An example of this is metformin, a drug for treating diabetes that has recently been shown to reprogramme oligodendrocyte precursors in older animals to behave as if they were young cells and become more efficient at remyelinating axons. I envisage in the future using anti-ageing drugs as add-on therapies to treat MS.
Many of you will be tired of hearing me speak about Brain Health, but if we want to maximise the outcome for pwMS we need to treat MS holistically and that means living a Brain Healthy life and for us to offer you brain health and wellness programmes. The big challenge is getting the healthcare systems to fund this initiative.
About 10 years ago when I suggested to one of my managers that I wanted to start an MS Wellness clinic he laughed. Now that I wear a preventive neurology hat as well it may be time to revisit this idea. What do you think?
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General Disclaimer: Please note that the opinions expressed here are those of Professor Giovannoni and do not necessarily reflect the positions of Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry nor Barts Health NHS Trust. The advice is intended as general advice and should not be interpreted as being personal clinical advice. If you have problems please tell your own healthcare professional who will be able to help you.
Wow this is so mind blowingly satisfying to have this level of information written in an easy to understand language and organised logically. I can’t thank you enough Prof G. The video of the electrical signal along the demyelinated nerve is visually exactly how it feels!!! The SEL lesions I’ve never heard of, scary as f!! Would we ever know as pwMS if we had these and how many on our yearly MRI’s? Why aren’t we getting this breakdown of detail each year to track our disease to feed into our self management and DMT choices? And YES YES YES to the wellness clinic! So many of us want to feel some level of input and control over our lives with MS. Thank you again, amazing information!!!
Thank you, yet again, for fascinating, readable and highly relevant article. The flickering red shadowing on the Conduction in demyelated axion video mimics the mosquito hitting the electric bar feeling when TriGem neuralgia hits 😱. Yes please 🙏 to a MS Wellness Clinic.