Volume 255, Number 10, 1555-1560, DOI: 10.1007/s00415-008-0985-5

Optical coherence tomography in multiple sclerosis
Thickness of the retinal nerve fiber layer as a potential measure of axonal loss and brain atrophy

M. Siger, K. Dzięgielewski, L. Jasek, M. Bieniek, A. Nicpan, J. Nawrocki and K. Selmaj

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Abstract

Background   

Axonal distribution within the retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) measured by optical coherence tomography (OCT) correlates with axonal viability and integrity.

Objective   

To investigate correlations between RNFL and MRI measures of axonal loss in MS patients.

Methods   

Fifty one remitting-relapsing MS patients, 20 with a history of optic neuritis (MS-ON), 31 without optic neuritis (MS N-ON), and 12 healthy control subjects (HC) were included in the study. RNFL was measured by OCT and brain atrophy was assessed by MRI.

Results   

The average RNFL in the affected eye (AE) in the MS-ON group was significantly lower than the RNFL in the MS N-ON (p = 0.01) and in HC (p = 0.01). The average RNFL in the unaffected eye (UE) and RNFL in MS N-ON were also lower than HC, but this value did not achieve significance. In MS N-ON a lower average RNFL was associated with an increased T1 lesion volume (p = 0.03) and T2-lesion volume (p = 0.001). The RNFL in MS N-ON was also associated with a reduction of BPF and %gm fraction (p = 0.01, p = 0.02 respectively). In MS-ON there was a much weaker, non-significant correlation between RNFL thickness and T1, T2 volume, BPF, %gm and %wm fractions that might have resulted from a pronounced post-inflammatory local optic nerve atrophy in AE.

Conclusion   

The RNFL measured by OCT may be useful as a surrogate marker for assessment of brain atrophy in MS

Key words  multiple sclerosis - optical coherence tomography

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