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Validation of the 2023 International Diagnostic Criteria for MOGAD in a Selected Cohort of Adults and Children.

James A VarleyDimitrios ChampsasTimothy ProssorGiuseppe PontilloOmar A Abdel-MannanZhaleh KhaleeliAxel PetzoldAhmed E OthmanSachid A TripHeather WilsonDermot H MallonCheryl HemingwayKshitij MankadMichael Kin Loon ChouAndrew J ChurchMelanie S HartMichael P T LunnWallace BrownleeYael HacohenOlga Ciccarelli
Published in: Neurology (2024)
The international MOGAD diagnostic criteria exhibit high performance in selected patients with inflammatory demyelinating diseases (who had a high pretest probability of having MOGAD) compared with best clinical judgment; their performance was better in children than in adults. In adults, the MOGAD criteria led to an improvement in specificity and positive predictive value when compared with MOG-Ab testing alone, suggesting that the requirement of at least 1 clinical or MRI supporting feature is important. Future work should address the generalizability of the diagnostic criteria to cohorts of greater clinical diversity seen within neurologic settings.
Keyphrases
  • young adults
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • oxidative stress
  • deep learning
  • current status