Multiple sclerosis (MS) is incurable. However, early detection of the autoimmune disease is important in order to have a positive influence on its course. A US research team has now further developed a procedure that is intended to detect MS in the blood before the first symptoms appear.
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic inflammatory autoimmune disease that destroys the muscle-controlling nerves in the brain and spinal cord. Almost three million people worldwide suffer from it. Those affected initially only notice general symptoms such as dizziness, cramps and fatigue. As the disease progresses, they become less able to move.
New therapy methods can effectively slow down the disease, but have not yet cured it. In order to prevent nerve damage as much as possible, early diagnosis and treatment are important. To date, MRI scans of the brains of those affected have been used, but these usually only allow a clear diagnosis when nerve damage is clearly visible. Researchers have therefore been working for some time on alternative methods to detect MS earlier.
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A research team led by Colin Zamecnik from the University of California in San Francisco has now further developed a well-known procedure so that it can be used for multiple sclerosis. The neuroscientists used the common immunoprecipitation technique, which uses genetically modified viruses that carry small pieces of human proteins on their surface. With this method, antibodies in a blood sample that bind to such proteins stick to the viruses and are thus detected.
These so-called autoantibodies are known to be the trigger for autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis, in which the immune system accidentally attacks the body’s own proteins. Researchers assume that the human proteins are similar to those of common pathogens, so our immune system incorrectly identifies them as dangerous.
In their tests, Zamecnik and his colleagues used pieces of human proteins that resemble those of common viruses. Among other things, the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) contains proteins with this appearance. Previous studies suggest that this virus can cause MS.
Using this immunoprecipitation technique, Zamecnik and his colleagues looked for matching autoantibodies in blood samples from 250 MS patients. The samples came from a biobank that collects blood from US military personnel. The neuroscientists tested both blood samples collected shortly after an MS diagnosis and those collected an average of five years earlier when entering the military.
The researchers also compared these samples with those from 250 healthy test subjects. “A phenomenal cohort of individuals to see how this type of autoimmunity develops at the onset of this disease,” says Zamecnik.
In fact, the neuroscientists found a characteristic pattern of multiple autoantibodies in the tests for multiple sclerosis. In some cases, these did not only appear at the onset of symptoms, but rather in the older blood samples. In ten percent of the MS patients examined, these immune markers were evident years before diagnosis, as the team reports.
Further analyzes also confirmed that there are increased levels of the protein serum neurofilament light (sNfL) in the blood of MS patients. This protein is released into the blood by nerve cells when they die, as the researchers explain. In the study, this biomarker was also found in the early blood samples, which already contained the autoantibody signature before the onset of symptoms. This indicates an early but unnoticed onset of the disease.
However, sNfL is not specific to MS, but also occurs in other neuronal diseases, including Alzheimer’s and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). This biomarker is therefore not sufficient for a clear diagnosis.
To confirm their findings, Zamecnik and his colleagues repeated the tests with additional blood and cerebrospinal fluid samples from 104 diagnosed MS patients and 22 test subjects with similar neurological symptoms. The result: The characteristic autoantibodies previously observed were again found in ten percent of the samples from MS patients. However, subjects with similar symptoms who did not suffer from MS did not have these antibodies.
The neuroscientists conclude that their method is suitable for reliably and early diagnosing MS. “Diagnosing MS is not always easy because we have not had disease-specific biomarkers,” says senior author Michael Wilson from the University of California, San Francisco. “We are pleased that we now have something that can provide more diagnostic certainty at an earlier stage in order to have a concrete discussion about whether treatment should begin,” adds the neurologist.
In the future, multiple sclerosis could therefore be treated as a precautionary measure for some affected people, even before they develop the first symptoms. “This increases our chances of moving from oppression to healing,” says senior author Stephen Hauser of the University of California, San Francisco.
The researchers now want to use their experimental procedure to develop a standard blood test for the clinic. “Such diagnostics make early intervention more likely and give patients hope for a better life,” says Wilson.
Follow-up studies with more test subjects must now confirm the findings and also clarify why the remaining 90 percent of MS patients do not have any of the characteristic antibodies in their blood. The new early detection procedure is currently not suitable for them. (Nature Medicine, 2024; doi: 10.1038/s41591-024-02938-3 )
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The original for this article “New procedure aims to detect multiple sclerosis before symptoms begin” comes from scinexx.