PART 1
(3:42 min)
Hear MS experts discuss how concurrent relapsing and progressive mechanisms drive MS from the start—and what this means for early, comprehensive intervention.
PART 2
(3:37 min)
Explore the challenges of defining and detecting “true” PIRA in clinical practice and why evolving measurement tools are essential for timely, informed decision-making.
PART 3
(5:51 min)
Learn how incorporating brain health strategies into clinical conversations can support CNS reserve and help change the trajectory of MS.
Relapsing biology: Acute, peripheral B‑ and T‑cell inflammation leads to CNS infiltration, contributing to focal MRI lesions, relapses, and relapse‑associated worsening (RAW)1,6,7
Progressive biology: CNS‑compartmentalized inflammation (ie, microglial activation) and neurodegeneration drive disability progression independent of relapse (PIRA)1,3,6,10
Rather than focusing on phenotypic descriptors, we should focus on the intrinsic biology and factors that lead to early disease progression.
—Carrie M. Hersh, DO, MSc, FAAN
Clinically, there isn't some magic point where a patient transitions to a progressive course of MS. Progressive biology is concurrent with relapsing biology and occurs throughout the disease course, driving the accrual of disability.
—Jiwon Oh, MD, PhD, FRCPC, FAAN
Both relapsing and progressive biology act concurrently in MS.1,6,8 The urgent unmet need is to address both biologic processes without losing the gains made thus far on relapsing biology.
Relapse-associated worsening (RAW):
Progression independent of relapse activity (PIRA):
The understanding in the field has evolved toward the view of MS as one disease—which is important because the more we continue to split the clinical descriptors, the more confusing it becomes.
—Scott Newsome, DO, MSCS, FAAN, FANA
More sensitive tools, such as those below, are needed to capture subtle signs of loss of function and distinguish true PIRA from other factors that may mimic progression, such as aging, deconditioning, poor health-related behaviors, and sequelae from comorbidities:
Timed 25‑foot walk, 9‑hole peg test, symbol digit modality test14
Wearable gait sensors, smartphone cognitive apps13,15
Paramagnetic rim lesions, slowly expanding lesions10
Serum neurofilament light chain, glial fibrillary acidic protein10
A patient-reported change in function warrants further investigation.
Brain reserve represents the capacity of the CNS to compensate for damage and is influenced by fixed and modifiable factors such as positive health-related behaviors.16,20,21 While we await therapies that comprehensively modulate relapsing and progressive biology, brain reserve may present a modifiable factor that clinicians and patients can use today:
Despite remarkable gains, an urgent unmet need remains: mechanisms that can concurrently address relapsing and progressive biology. Until then, it's important to optimize brain health and rigorously monitor both acute and chronic drivers of disability.
MS is one disease that shares very similar mechanisms across very different presentations—all of which benefit from brain-healthy behaviours.
—Augusto Miravalle, MD, FAAN
Share your views by completing a short survey and receive 5 action steps that you can implement in your practice.
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