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Mild gray matter atrophy in patients with long-standing multiple sclerosis and favorable clinical course.

Rosa CorteseMarco BattagliniFrancesca ParodiMaria Laura StromilloEmilio PortaccioLorenzo RazzoliniAntonio GiorgioMaria Pia SormaniMaria Pia AmatoNicola De Stefano
Published in: Multiple sclerosis (Houndmills, Basingstoke, England) (2021)
The mechanisms responsible for the favorable clinical course in multiple sclerosis (MS) remain unclear. In this longitudinal study, we assessed whether magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-based changes in focal and diffuse brain damage are associated with a long-term favorable MS diseases course. We found that global brain and gray matter (GM) atrophy changes were milder in MS patients with long-standing disease (⩾30 years from onset) and favorable (no/minimal disability) clinical course than in sex-age-matched disable MS patients, independently of lesions accumulation. Data showed that different trajectories of volume changes, as reflected by mild GM atrophy, may characterize patients with long-term favorable evolution.
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