Conference Coverage

VIDEO: New MS ambulatory measure could fill clinical gap


 

REPORTING FROM ACTRIMS FORUM 2018

SAN DIEGO – Although clinical tools to assess ambulatory function among people with multiple sclerosis exist, some measure it as part of a comprehensive assessment while others require the patient to answer many questions and then clinicians to calculate a score.

To devise a more targeted, simpler instrument, Emily Evans, MD, and her colleagues developed the PDAS or Patient Derived Ambulation Scale. They evaluated the correlation of this single-item scale to assess ambulation – an important measure of patient function – and evaluated how the results correlated with existing tools such as the Patient Determined Disease Steps and 12-item MS Walking Scale. Dr. Evans presented preliminary findings at the ACTRIMS Forum 2018, held by the Americas Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis.

“We feel this is a quick test that can be readily implemented into clinical practice,” Dr. Evans, a neurologist at the John L. Trotter MS Center at Washington University in St. Louis, said in a video interview.

Recommended Reading

ACTRIMS Forum 2018 highlights MS therapeutic targets
MDedge Neurology
Researcher’s talk will tackle aging and gut bacteria in MS
MDedge Neurology
Barancik Prize winner to discuss MS biology advances
MDedge Neurology
Study finds rising use of newer DMTs in pediatric-onset MS
MDedge Neurology
Fingolimod cuts pediatric MS relapse rate more than interferon beta-1a
MDedge Neurology
Rituximab fails to eliminate meningeal inflammation in progressive MS
MDedge Neurology
VIDEO: Could targeting gut dysbiosis in MS prevent disease?
MDedge Neurology
MS may be a transmissible protein misfolding disorder, study suggests
MDedge Neurology
Ibudilast shows promise in progressive MS
MDedge Neurology
VIDEO: Alemtuzumab associated with long-term MS control in TOPAZ study
MDedge Neurology