Influence of female sex and fertile age on neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders

  • Nadja Borisow
  • Ingo Kleiter
  • Anna Gahlen
  • Katrin Fischer
  • Klaus-Dieter Wernecke
  • Florence Pache
  • Klemens Ruprecht
  • Joachim Havla
  • Markus Krumbholz
  • Tania Kümpfel
  • Orhan Aktas
  • Marius Ringelstein
  • Christian Geis
  • Christoph Kleinschnitz
  • Achim Berthele
  • Bernhard Hemmer
  • Klemens Angstwurm
  • Robert Weissert
  • Jan-Patrick Stellmann
  • Simon Schuster
  • Martin Stangel
  • Florian Lauda
  • Hayrettin Tumani
  • Christoph Mayer
  • Lena Zeltner
  • Ulf Ziemann
  • Ralf A Linker
  • Matthias Schwab
  • Martin Marziniak
  • Florian Then Bergh
  • Ulrich Hofstadt-van Oy
  • Oliver Neuhaus
  • Alexander Winkelmann
  • Wael Marouf
  • Lioba Rückriem
  • Jürgen Faiss
  • Brigitte Wildemann
  • Friedemann Paul
  • Sven Jarius
  • Corinna Trebst
  • Kerstin Hellwig
  • NEMOS (Neuromyelitis Optica Study Group)

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Gender and age at onset are important epidemiological factors influencing prevalence, clinical presentation, and treatment response in autoimmune diseases. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the impact of female sex and fertile age on aquaporin-4-antibody (AQP4-ab) status, attack localization, and response to attack treatment in patients with neuromyelitis optica (NMO) and its spectrum disorders (neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMOSD)). METHODS: Female-to-male ratios, diagnosis at last visit (NMO vs NMOSD), attack localization, attack treatment, and outcome were compared according to sex and age at disease or attack onset. RESULTS: A total of 186 NMO/SD patients (82% female) were included. In AQP4-ab-positive patients, female predominance was most pronounced during fertile age (female-to-male ratio 23:1). Female patients were more likely to be positive for AQP4-abs (92% vs 55%; p < 0.001). Interval between onset and diagnosis of NMO/SD was longer in women than in men (mean 54 vs 27 months; p = 0.023). In women, attacks occurring ⩽40 years of age were more likely to show complete remission (p = 0.003) and better response to high-dose intravenous steroids (p = 0.005) compared to woman at >40 years. CONCLUSION: Our data suggest an influence of sex and age on susceptibility to AQP4-ab-positive NMO/SD. Genetic and hormonal factors might contribute to pathophysiology of NMO/SD.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN1352-4585
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 07.2017
PubMed 27758954