Several new studies are pointing against narrowed neck veins as being the primary culprit in causing multiple sclerosis.
The condition called chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency, or CCSVI, became the subject of numerous studies after Dr. Paolo Zamboni of Italy theorized it could be to blame for MS.
Zamboni has speculated that reduced blood flow leaves iron deposits in the brain, leading to the neural lesions typical of MS. He suggests that reversing the condition by unblocking neck veins using balloon angioplasty could help alleviate symptoms, and many hopeful Canadian MS patients have gone abroad seeking the procedure, which isn’t offered in this country.
Now, results of a study that involved Doppler ultrasounds of 499 subjects, led by Dr. Robert Zivadinov of the University of Buffalo, N.Y., have been published in the journal Neurology.
The prevalence of CCSVI was 56 per cent for patients with MS, 42 per cent in patients with other neurologic diseases, 38 per cent in those with clinically isolated syndrome that can be a precursor to MS and 23 per cent in healthy controls.
"Our findings are consistent with an increased prevalence of CCSVI in MS but with modest sensitivity/specificity," the researchers concluded.
"Our findings point against CCSVI having a primary causative role in the development of MS."
Altogether, the study included 289 people with MS, 163 healthy controls, 26 people with other neurologic diseases and 21 with clinically isolated syndrome.
An accompanying editorial in the journal says the study suggests that CCSVI, as defined using ultrasound of the intracranial and extracranial venous system, is not likely to be a primary causal process in MS.
"An increased prevalence in progressive as compared with relapsing disease leaves open the possibility that CCSVI may be playing a contributory role in, or be a consequence of, the disease, or may be age-related," wrote authors Dr. Robert J. Fox and Dr. Alex Rae Grant.
Given the uncertainties of the relationship between CCSVI and MS and the potential risks of intervention, they said balloon venoplasty should be restricted to "a blinded, controlled clinical trial using carefully chosen clinical endpoints and appropriate patient safety oversight."
"It behooves the clinical research community to carefully pursue CCSVI to its end; we should neither jump on the bandwagon as it passes through town, nor assiduously miss the parade," they wrote.
Zivadinov was attending the annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology in Honolulu and was not immediately available for an interview.
A number of other smaller studies on the subject were presented this week at the meeting.
A study led by Katayoun Alikhani of Calgary included 67 people at the city’s University Hospital who underwent magnetic resonance venography of their neck veins.
Among the findings: vein abnormalities were found in 20 per cent of those with MS and 20 per cent of those without MS.
"This first independent Canadian MRV study confirms neck vein abnormalities are infrequent and independent of the diagnosis of MS," the researchers wrote in their conclusion, noting that larger, controlled, blinded and more comprehensive studies are underway.
Another group in Europe assessed whether the venous drainage from the brain was impaired in 94 patients with MS and 20 healthy control subjects. Their findings provided compelling evidence against a significant role of cerebro-cervical venous congestion in the pathogenesis of MS, they concluded.
"Against this backdrop, interventional treatment attempts to cure a non-confirmed condition (CCSVI) seem unjustified," they wrote.
- Canadian woman charged with illegally crossing into U.S., kicking border agent’s face
- A new ‘cold’ war? Canada looks to bolster Arctic security, sovereignty
- Canadian furniture industry still ‘reeling’ after Trump pauses tariff spike
- Ottawa propose fines of up to $1M for violating foreign influence registry rules
Comments