Oligoclonal IgG bands in the cerebrospinal fluid of Portuguese patients with multiple sclerosis: Negative results indicate benign disease

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Abstract

We assessed the frequency of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) restricted oligoclonal IgG bands (IgG-OCB) in Portuguese multiple sclerosis (MS) patients and its relationship with outcome. Paired CSF/serum samples of 406 patients with neurological disorders were submitted to isoelectric focusing with immunodetection of IgG. Ninety-two patients had definite MS; non-MS cases were assembled in groups inflammatory/infectious diseases (ID, n=141) and other/controls (OD, n=173). We found in the MS group: mean duration, 38.9 months; clinically isolated syndromes, 24%; relapsing/remitting course (RR), 65%; in RR patients the mean EDSS was 2.1 and the mean index of progression was 0.31. Positive patterns significantly predominated in MS (82.6%; ID, 40.4%; OD, 3.5%). The sensitivity and the specificity of positive IgG-OCB for MS diagnosis was 82.6% and 79.9%, respectively. The sole statistically significant difference in the MS group was the lower progression index observed in negative cases. We conclude that the frequency of positive IgG-OCB patterns in our MS patients fits most values reported in the literature, and that negative results indicate benign disease.

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Sá, M. J., Sequeira, L., Rio, M. E., & Thompson, E. J. (2005). Oligoclonal IgG bands in the cerebrospinal fluid of Portuguese patients with multiple sclerosis: Negative results indicate benign disease. Arquivos de Neuro-Psiquiatria, 63(2 B), 375–379. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0004-282X2005000300001

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