2,885 results on '"Olsson, T."'
Search Results
52. All-cause mortality following a cancer diagnosis amongst multiple sclerosis patients: a Swedish population-based cohort study
- Author
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Roshanisefat, H., Bahmanyar, S., Hillert, J., Olsson, T., and Montgomery, S.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
53. Anti-MOG antibodies are under polygenic regulation with the most significant control coming from the C-type lectin-like gene locus
- Author
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Flytzani, S, Stridh, P, Guerreiro-Cacais, A O, Marta, M, Hedreul, M T, Jagodic, M, and Olsson, T
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
54. Age-dependent variation of genotypes in MHC II transactivator gene (CIITA) in controls and association to type 1 diabetes
- Author
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Gyllenberg, A, Asad, S, Piehl, F, Swanberg, M, Padyukov, L, Van Yserloo, B, Rutledge, E A, McNeney, B, Graham, J, Orho-Melander, M, Lindholm, E, Graff, C, Forsell, C, Åkesson, K, Landin-Olsson, M, Carlsson, A, Forsander, G, Ivarsson, S A, Larsson, H, Lindblad, B, Ludvigsson, J, Marcus, C, Lernmark, Å, Alfredsson, L, Åkesson, K, Olsson, T, and Kockum, I
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
55. Genome-wide association study of more than 40,000 bipolar disorder cases provides new insights into the underlying biology
- Author
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Mullins, N. Forstner, A.J. O’Connell, K.S. Coombes, B. Coleman, J.R.I. Qiao, Z. Als, T.D. Bigdeli, T.B. Børte, S. Bryois, J. Charney, A.W. Drange, O.K. Gandal, M.J. Hagenaars, S.P. Ikeda, M. Kamitaki, N. Kim, M. Krebs, K. Panagiotaropoulou, G. Schilder, B.M. Sloofman, L.G. Steinberg, S. Trubetskoy, V. Winsvold, B.S. Won, H.-H. Abramova, L. Adorjan, K. Agerbo, E. Al Eissa, M. Albani, D. Alliey-Rodriguez, N. Anjorin, A. Antilla, V. Antoniou, A. Awasthi, S. Baek, J.H. Bækvad-Hansen, M. Bass, N. Bauer, M. Beins, E.C. Bergen, S.E. Birner, A. Bøcker Pedersen, C. Bøen, E. Boks, M.P. Bosch, R. Brum, M. Brumpton, B.M. Brunkhorst-Kanaan, N. Budde, M. Bybjerg-Grauholm, J. Byerley, W. Cairns, M. Casas, M. Cervantes, P. Clarke, T.-K. Cruceanu, C. Cuellar-Barboza, A. Cunningham, J. Curtis, D. Czerski, P.M. Dale, A.M. Dalkner, N. David, F.S. Degenhardt, F. Djurovic, S. Dobbyn, A.L. Douzenis, A. Elvsåshagen, T. Escott-Price, V. Ferrier, I.N. Fiorentino, A. Foroud, T.M. Forty, L. Frank, J. Frei, O. Freimer, N.B. Frisén, L. Gade, K. Garnham, J. Gelernter, J. Giørtz Pedersen, M. Gizer, I.R. Gordon, S.D. Gordon-Smith, K. Greenwood, T.A. Grove, J. Guzman-Parra, J. Ha, K. Haraldsson, M. Hautzinger, M. Heilbronner, U. Hellgren, D. Herms, S. Hoffmann, P. Holmans, P.A. Huckins, L. Jamain, S. Johnson, J.S. Kalman, J.L. Kamatani, Y. Kennedy, J.L. Kittel-Schneider, S. Knowles, J.A. Kogevinas, M. Koromina, M. Kranz, T.M. Kranzler, H.R. Kubo, M. Kupka, R. Kushner, S.A. Lavebratt, C. Lawrence, J. Leber, M. Lee, H.-J. Lee, P.H. Levy, S.E. Lewis, C. Liao, C. Lucae, S. Lundberg, M. MacIntyre, D.J. Magnusson, S.H. Maier, W. Maihofer, A. Malaspina, D. Maratou, E. Martinsson, L. Mattheisen, M. McCarroll, S.A. McGregor, N.W. McGuffin, P. McKay, J.D. Medeiros, H. Medland, S.E. Millischer, V. Montgomery, G.W. Moran, J.L. Morris, D.W. Mühleisen, T.W. O’Brien, N. O’Donovan, C. Olde Loohuis, L.M. Oruc, L. Papiol, S. Pardiñas, A.F. Perry, A. Pfennig, A. Porichi, E. Potash, J.B. Quested, D. Raj, T. Rapaport, M.H. DePaulo, J.R. Regeer, E.J. Rice, J.P. Rivas, F. Rivera, M. Roth, J. Roussos, P. Ruderfer, D.M. Sánchez-Mora, C. Schulte, E.C. Senner, F. Sharp, S. Shilling, P.D. Sigurdsson, E. Sirignano, L. Slaney, C. Smeland, O.B. Smith, D.J. Sobell, J.L. Søholm Hansen, C. Soler Artigas, M. Spijker, A.T. Stein, D.J. Strauss, J.S. Świątkowska, B. Terao, C. Thorgeirsson, T.E. Toma, C. Tooney, P. Tsermpini, E.-E. Vawter, M.P. Vedder, H. Walters, J.T.R. Witt, S.H. Xi, S. Xu, W. Yang, J.M.K. Young, A.H. Young, H. Zandi, P.P. Zhou, H. Zillich, L. Adolfsson, R. Agartz, I. Alda, M. Alfredsson, L. Babadjanova, G. Backlund, L. Baune, B.T. Bellivier, F. Bengesser, S. Berrettini, W.H. Blackwood, D.H.R. Boehnke, M. Børglum, A.D. Breen, G. Carr, V.J. Catts, S. Corvin, A. Craddock, N. Dannlowski, U. Dikeos, D. Esko, T. Etain, B. Ferentinos, P. Frye, M. Fullerton, J.M. Gawlik, M. Gershon, E.S. Goes, F.S. Green, M.J. Grigoroiu-Serbanescu, M. Hauser, J. Henskens, F. Hillert, J. Hong, K.S. Hougaard, D.M. Hultman, C.M. Hveem, K. Iwata, N. Jablensky, A.V. Jones, I. Jones, L.A. Kahn, R.S. Kelsoe, J.R. Kirov, G. Landén, M. Leboyer, M. Lewis, C.M. Li, Q.S. Lissowska, J. Lochner, C. Loughland, C. Martin, N.G. Mathews, C.A. Mayoral, F. McElroy, S.L. McIntosh, A.M. McMahon, F.J. Melle, I. Michie, P. Milani, L. Mitchell, P.B. Morken, G. Mors, O. Mortensen, P.B. Mowry, B. Müller-Myhsok, B. Myers, R.M. Neale, B.M. Nievergelt, C.M. Nordentoft, M. Nöthen, M.M. O’Donovan, M.C. Oedegaard, K.J. Olsson, T. Owen, M.J. Paciga, S.A. Pantelis, C. Pato, C. Pato, M.T. Patrinos, G.P. Perlis, R.H. Posthuma, D. Ramos-Quiroga, J.A. Reif, A. Reininghaus, E.Z. Ribasés, M. Rietschel, M. Ripke, S. Rouleau, G.A. Saito, T. Schall, U. Schalling, M. Schofield, P.R. Schulze, T.G. Scott, L.J. Scott, R.J. Serretti, A. Shannon Weickert, C. Smoller, J.W. Stefansson, H. Stefansson, K. Stordal, E. Streit, F. Sullivan, P.F. Turecki, G. Vaaler, A.E. Vieta, E. Vincent, J.B. Waldman, I.D. Weickert, T.W. Werge, T. Wray, N.R. Zwart, J.-A. Biernacka, J.M. Nurnberger, J.I. Cichon, S. Edenberg, H.J. Stahl, E.A. McQuillin, A. Di Florio, A. Ophoff, R.A. Andreassen, O.A. HUNT All-In Psychiatry
- Abstract
Bipolar disorder is a heritable mental illness with complex etiology. We performed a genome-wide association study of 41,917 bipolar disorder cases and 371,549 controls of European ancestry, which identified 64 associated genomic loci. Bipolar disorder risk alleles were enriched in genes in synaptic signaling pathways and brain-expressed genes, particularly those with high specificity of expression in neurons of the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus. Significant signal enrichment was found in genes encoding targets of antipsychotics, calcium channel blockers, antiepileptics and anesthetics. Integrating expression quantitative trait locus data implicated 15 genes robustly linked to bipolar disorder via gene expression, encoding druggable targets such as HTR6, MCHR1, DCLK3 and FURIN. Analyses of bipolar disorder subtypes indicated high but imperfect genetic correlation between bipolar disorder type I and II and identified additional associated loci. Together, these results advance our understanding of the biological etiology of bipolar disorder, identify novel therapeutic leads and prioritize genes for functional follow-up studies. © 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.
- Published
- 2021
56. Epstein-Barr virus infection after adolescence and human herpesvirus 6A as risk factors for multiple sclerosis
- Author
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Bistrom, M., Jons, D., Engdahl, E., Gustafsson, R., Huang, J., Brenner, N., Butt, J., Alonso-Magdalena, L., Gunnarsson, M., Vrethem, Magnus, Bender, N., Waterboer, T., Granasen, G., Olsson, T., Kockum, I., Andersen, O., Fogdell-Hahn, A., Sundstrom, Peter, Bistrom, M., Jons, D., Engdahl, E., Gustafsson, R., Huang, J., Brenner, N., Butt, J., Alonso-Magdalena, L., Gunnarsson, M., Vrethem, Magnus, Bender, N., Waterboer, T., Granasen, G., Olsson, T., Kockum, I., Andersen, O., Fogdell-Hahn, A., and Sundstrom, Peter
- Abstract
Background and purpose Infections with human herpesvirus 6A (HHV-6A) and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) have been linked to multiple sclerosis (MS) development. For EBV, late infection has been proposed as a risk factor, but serological support is lacking. The objective of this study was to investigate how age affects the EBV and HHV-6A associated risks of developing MS. Methods In this nested case-control study, Swedish biobanks were accessed to find pre-symptomatically collected blood samples from 670 individuals who later developed relapsing MS and 670 matched controls. A bead-based multiplex assay was used to determine serological response against EBV and HHV-6A. Conditional logistic regression was used to calculate odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals. Results Seropositivity against EBV exhibited a pattern where associations switched from a decreased risk of developing MS in the group below 20 years of age to an increased risk amongst individuals aged 20-29 and 30-39 years (p for trend 0.020). The age of transition was estimated to be 18.8 years. In contrast, HHV-6A was associated with increased MS risk in all age groups (total cohort odds ratio 2.1, 95% confidence interval 1.6-2.7). Conclusions This study suggests EBV infection after adolescence and age independent HHV-6A infection as risk factors for MS., Funding Agencies|Swedish Research CouncilSwedish Research Council [2015-02419]; Swedish Brain Foundation; KAW Foundation; Margaretha af Ugglas Foundation; Horizon 2020 MultipleMS [733161]; Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada [EGID 3045]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
57. Impact of B-cell depleting treatments on development of humoral and cellular immunological memory against SARS-CoV-2
- Author
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Hogelin, K. Asplund, Ruffin, N., Jiang, X., Pin, Elisa, Månberg, Anna, Hober, Andreas, Gafvelin, G., Gronlund, H., Frisell, T., Nilsson, Peter, Khademi, M., Olsson, T., Piehl, F., Al Nimer, F., Hogelin, K. Asplund, Ruffin, N., Jiang, X., Pin, Elisa, Månberg, Anna, Hober, Andreas, Gafvelin, G., Gronlund, H., Frisell, T., Nilsson, Peter, Khademi, M., Olsson, T., Piehl, F., and Al Nimer, F.
- Abstract
QC 20211206
- Published
- 2021
58. Genome-wide association study of more than 40,000 bipolar disorder cases provides new insights into the underlying biology
- Author
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Mullins, N, Forstner, AJ, O'Connell, KS, Coombes, B, Coleman, JR, Qiao, Z, Als, TD, Bigdeli, TB, Borte, S, Bryois, J, Charney, AW, Drange, OK, Gandal, MJ, Hagenaars, SP, Ikeda, M, Kamitaki, N, Kim, M, Krebs, K, Panagiotaropoulou, G, Schilder, BM, Sloofman, LG, Steinberg, S, Trubetskoy, V, Winsvold, BS, Won, H-H, Abramova, L, Adorjan, K, Agerbo, E, Al Eissa, M, Albani, D, Alliey-Rodriguez, N, Anjorin, A, Antilla, V, Antoniou, A, Awasthi, S, Baek, JH, Baekvad-Hansen, M, Bass, N, Bauer, M, Beins, EC, Bergen, SE, Birner, A, Pedersen, CB, Boen, E, Boks, MP, Bosch, R, Brum, M, Brumpton, BM, Brunkhorst-Kanaan, N, Budde, M, Bybjerg-Grauholm, J, Byerley, W, Cairns, M, Casas, M, Cervantes, P, Clarke, T-K, Cruceanu, C, Cuellar-Barboza, A, Cunningham, J, Curtis, D, Czerski, PM, Dale, AM, Dalkner, N, David, FS, Degenhardt, F, Djurovic, S, Dobbyn, AL, Douzenis, A, Elvsashagen, T, Escott-Price, V, Ferrier, IN, Fiorentino, A, Foroud, TM, Forty, L, Frank, J, Frei, O, Freimer, NB, Frisen, L, Gade, K, Garnham, J, Gelernter, J, Pedersen, MG, Gizer, IR, Gordon, SD, Gordon-Smith, K, Greenwood, TA, Grove, J, Guzman-Parra, J, Ha, K, Haraldsson, M, Hautzinger, M, Heilbronner, U, Hellgren, D, Herms, S, Hoffmann, P, Holmans, PA, Huckins, L, Jamain, S, Johnson, JS, Kalman, JL, Kamatani, Y, Kennedy, JL, Kittel-Schneider, S, Knowles, JA, Kogevinas, M, Koromina, M, Kranz, TM, Kranzler, HR, Kubo, M, Kupka, R, Kushner, SA, Lavebratt, C, Lawrence, J, Leber, M, Lee, H-J, Lee, PH, Levy, SE, Lewis, C, Liao, C, Lucae, S, Lundberg, M, MacIntyre, DJ, Maier, W, Maihofer, A, Malaspina, D, Maratou, E, Martinsson, L, Mattheisen, M, McCarroll, SA, McGregor, NW, McGuffin, P, McKay, JD, Medeiros, H, Medland, SE, Millischer, V, Montgomery, GW, Moran, JL, Morris, DW, Muhleisen, TW, O'Brien, N, O'Donovan, C, Loohuis, LMO, Oruc, L, Papiol, S, Pardinas, AF, Perry, A, Pfennig, A, Porichi, E, Potash, JB, Quested, D, Raj, T, Rapaport, MH, DePaulo, JR, Regeer, EJ, Rice, JP, Rivas, F, Rivera, M, Roth, J, Roussos, P, Ruderfer, DM, Sanchez-Mora, C, Schulte, EC, Senner, F, Sharp, S, Shilling, PD, Sigurdsson, E, Sirignano, L, Slaney, C, Smeland, OB, Sobell, JL, Hansen, CS, Artigas, MS, Spijker, AT, Stein, DJ, Strauss, JS, Swiatkowska, B, Terao, C, Thorgeirsson, TE, Toma, C, Tooney, P, Tsermpini, E-E, Vawter, MP, Vedder, H, Walters, JTR, Witt, SH, Xi, S, Xu, W, Yang, JMK, Young, AH, Young, H, Zandi, PP, Zhou, H, Zillich, L, Adolfsson, R, Agartz, I, Alda, M, Alfredsson, L, Babadjanova, G, Backlund, L, Baune, BT, Bellivier, F, Bengesser, S, Berrettini, WH, Blackwood, DHR, Boehnke, M, Borglum, AD, Breen, G, Carr, VJ, Catts, S, Corvin, A, Craddock, N, Dannlowski, U, Dikeos, D, Esko, T, Etain, B, Ferentinos, P, Frye, M, Fullerton, JM, Gawlik, M, Gershon, ES, Goes, F, Green, MJ, Grigoroiu-Serbanescu, M, Hauser, J, Henskens, F, Hillert, J, Hong, KS, Hougaard, DM, Hultman, CM, Hveem, K, Iwata, N, Jablensky, A, Jones, I, Jones, LA, Kahn, RS, Kelsoe, JR, Kirov, G, Landen, M, Leboyer, M, Lewis, CM, Li, QS, Lissowska, J, Lochner, C, Loughland, C, Martin, NG, Mathews, CA, Mayoral, F, McElroy, SL, McIntosh, AM, McMahon, FJ, Melle, I, Michie, P, Milani, L, Mitchell, PB, Morken, G, Mors, O, Mortensen, PB, Mowry, B, Muller-Myhsok, B, Myers, RM, Neale, BM, Nievergelt, CM, Nordentoft, M, Nothen, MM, ODonovan, MC, Oedegaard, KJ, Olsson, T, Owen, MJ, Paciga, SA, Pantelis, C, Pato, C, Pato, MT, Patrinos, GP, Perlis, RH, Posthuma, D, Ramos-Quiroga, JA, Reif, A, Reininghaus, EZ, Ribases, M, Rietschel, M, Ripke, S, Rouleau, GA, Saito, T, Schall, U, Schalling, M, Schofield, PR, Schulze, TG, Scott, LJ, Scott, RJ, Serretti, A, Weickert, CS, Smoller, JW, Stefansson, H, Stefansson, K, Stordal, E, Streit, F, Sullivan, PF, Turecki, G, Vaaler, AE, Vieta, E, Vincent, JB, Waldman, ID, Weickert, TW, Werge, T, Wray, NR, Zwart, J, Biernacka, JM, Nurnberger, J, Cichon, S, Edenberg, HJ, Stahl, EA, McQuillin, A, Di Florio, A, Ophoff, RA, Andreassen, OA, Mullins, N, Forstner, AJ, O'Connell, KS, Coombes, B, Coleman, JR, Qiao, Z, Als, TD, Bigdeli, TB, Borte, S, Bryois, J, Charney, AW, Drange, OK, Gandal, MJ, Hagenaars, SP, Ikeda, M, Kamitaki, N, Kim, M, Krebs, K, Panagiotaropoulou, G, Schilder, BM, Sloofman, LG, Steinberg, S, Trubetskoy, V, Winsvold, BS, Won, H-H, Abramova, L, Adorjan, K, Agerbo, E, Al Eissa, M, Albani, D, Alliey-Rodriguez, N, Anjorin, A, Antilla, V, Antoniou, A, Awasthi, S, Baek, JH, Baekvad-Hansen, M, Bass, N, Bauer, M, Beins, EC, Bergen, SE, Birner, A, Pedersen, CB, Boen, E, Boks, MP, Bosch, R, Brum, M, Brumpton, BM, Brunkhorst-Kanaan, N, Budde, M, Bybjerg-Grauholm, J, Byerley, W, Cairns, M, Casas, M, Cervantes, P, Clarke, T-K, Cruceanu, C, Cuellar-Barboza, A, Cunningham, J, Curtis, D, Czerski, PM, Dale, AM, Dalkner, N, David, FS, Degenhardt, F, Djurovic, S, Dobbyn, AL, Douzenis, A, Elvsashagen, T, Escott-Price, V, Ferrier, IN, Fiorentino, A, Foroud, TM, Forty, L, Frank, J, Frei, O, Freimer, NB, Frisen, L, Gade, K, Garnham, J, Gelernter, J, Pedersen, MG, Gizer, IR, Gordon, SD, Gordon-Smith, K, Greenwood, TA, Grove, J, Guzman-Parra, J, Ha, K, Haraldsson, M, Hautzinger, M, Heilbronner, U, Hellgren, D, Herms, S, Hoffmann, P, Holmans, PA, Huckins, L, Jamain, S, Johnson, JS, Kalman, JL, Kamatani, Y, Kennedy, JL, Kittel-Schneider, S, Knowles, JA, Kogevinas, M, Koromina, M, Kranz, TM, Kranzler, HR, Kubo, M, Kupka, R, Kushner, SA, Lavebratt, C, Lawrence, J, Leber, M, Lee, H-J, Lee, PH, Levy, SE, Lewis, C, Liao, C, Lucae, S, Lundberg, M, MacIntyre, DJ, Maier, W, Maihofer, A, Malaspina, D, Maratou, E, Martinsson, L, Mattheisen, M, McCarroll, SA, McGregor, NW, McGuffin, P, McKay, JD, Medeiros, H, Medland, SE, Millischer, V, Montgomery, GW, Moran, JL, Morris, DW, Muhleisen, TW, O'Brien, N, O'Donovan, C, Loohuis, LMO, Oruc, L, Papiol, S, Pardinas, AF, Perry, A, Pfennig, A, Porichi, E, Potash, JB, Quested, D, Raj, T, Rapaport, MH, DePaulo, JR, Regeer, EJ, Rice, JP, Rivas, F, Rivera, M, Roth, J, Roussos, P, Ruderfer, DM, Sanchez-Mora, C, Schulte, EC, Senner, F, Sharp, S, Shilling, PD, Sigurdsson, E, Sirignano, L, Slaney, C, Smeland, OB, Sobell, JL, Hansen, CS, Artigas, MS, Spijker, AT, Stein, DJ, Strauss, JS, Swiatkowska, B, Terao, C, Thorgeirsson, TE, Toma, C, Tooney, P, Tsermpini, E-E, Vawter, MP, Vedder, H, Walters, JTR, Witt, SH, Xi, S, Xu, W, Yang, JMK, Young, AH, Young, H, Zandi, PP, Zhou, H, Zillich, L, Adolfsson, R, Agartz, I, Alda, M, Alfredsson, L, Babadjanova, G, Backlund, L, Baune, BT, Bellivier, F, Bengesser, S, Berrettini, WH, Blackwood, DHR, Boehnke, M, Borglum, AD, Breen, G, Carr, VJ, Catts, S, Corvin, A, Craddock, N, Dannlowski, U, Dikeos, D, Esko, T, Etain, B, Ferentinos, P, Frye, M, Fullerton, JM, Gawlik, M, Gershon, ES, Goes, F, Green, MJ, Grigoroiu-Serbanescu, M, Hauser, J, Henskens, F, Hillert, J, Hong, KS, Hougaard, DM, Hultman, CM, Hveem, K, Iwata, N, Jablensky, A, Jones, I, Jones, LA, Kahn, RS, Kelsoe, JR, Kirov, G, Landen, M, Leboyer, M, Lewis, CM, Li, QS, Lissowska, J, Lochner, C, Loughland, C, Martin, NG, Mathews, CA, Mayoral, F, McElroy, SL, McIntosh, AM, McMahon, FJ, Melle, I, Michie, P, Milani, L, Mitchell, PB, Morken, G, Mors, O, Mortensen, PB, Mowry, B, Muller-Myhsok, B, Myers, RM, Neale, BM, Nievergelt, CM, Nordentoft, M, Nothen, MM, ODonovan, MC, Oedegaard, KJ, Olsson, T, Owen, MJ, Paciga, SA, Pantelis, C, Pato, C, Pato, MT, Patrinos, GP, Perlis, RH, Posthuma, D, Ramos-Quiroga, JA, Reif, A, Reininghaus, EZ, Ribases, M, Rietschel, M, Ripke, S, Rouleau, GA, Saito, T, Schall, U, Schalling, M, Schofield, PR, Schulze, TG, Scott, LJ, Scott, RJ, Serretti, A, Weickert, CS, Smoller, JW, Stefansson, H, Stefansson, K, Stordal, E, Streit, F, Sullivan, PF, Turecki, G, Vaaler, AE, Vieta, E, Vincent, JB, Waldman, ID, Weickert, TW, Werge, T, Wray, NR, Zwart, J, Biernacka, JM, Nurnberger, J, Cichon, S, Edenberg, HJ, Stahl, EA, McQuillin, A, Di Florio, A, Ophoff, RA, and Andreassen, OA
- Abstract
Bipolar disorder is a heritable mental illness with complex etiology. We performed a genome-wide association study of 41,917 bipolar disorder cases and 371,549 controls of European ancestry, which identified 64 associated genomic loci. Bipolar disorder risk alleles were enriched in genes in synaptic signaling pathways and brain-expressed genes, particularly those with high specificity of expression in neurons of the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus. Significant signal enrichment was found in genes encoding targets of antipsychotics, calcium channel blockers, antiepileptics and anesthetics. Integrating expression quantitative trait locus data implicated 15 genes robustly linked to bipolar disorder via gene expression, encoding druggable targets such as HTR6, MCHR1, DCLK3 and FURIN. Analyses of bipolar disorder subtypes indicated high but imperfect genetic correlation between bipolar disorder type I and II and identified additional associated loci. Together, these results advance our understanding of the biological etiology of bipolar disorder, identify novel therapeutic leads and prioritize genes for functional follow-up studies.
- Published
- 2021
59. Comprehensive autoantigen panel to determine individual immune profiles in multiple sclerosis
- Author
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Thomas, O., Bronge, M., Hogelin, K. Asplund, Carvalho-Querioz, C., Nilsson, O., Kaiser, A., Holmgren, E., Gräslund, Torbjörn, Gafvelin, G., Olsson, T., Gronlund, H., Thomas, O., Bronge, M., Hogelin, K. Asplund, Carvalho-Querioz, C., Nilsson, O., Kaiser, A., Holmgren, E., Gräslund, Torbjörn, Gafvelin, G., Olsson, T., and Gronlund, H.
- Abstract
QC 20211206
- Published
- 2021
60. T cell reactivity screening reveals four novel CNS autoantigens in multiple sclerosis
- Author
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Bronge, M., Asplund Hogelin, K., Thomas, O. G., Ruhrmann, S., Carvalho-Querioz, C., Nilsson, O., Kaiser, A., Holmgren, E., Linnerbauer, M., Adzemovic, M. Z., Zeitelhofer, M., Hellström, Cecilia, Jelcic, I., Liu, Hailong, Nilsson, Peter, Hillert, J., Brundin, L., Fink, K., Martin, R., Tegel, Hanna, Gräslund, Torbjörn, Al Nimer, F., Guerreiro-Cacais, A. O., Khademi, M., Gafvelin, G., Olsson, T., Gronlund, H., Bronge, M., Asplund Hogelin, K., Thomas, O. G., Ruhrmann, S., Carvalho-Querioz, C., Nilsson, O., Kaiser, A., Holmgren, E., Linnerbauer, M., Adzemovic, M. Z., Zeitelhofer, M., Hellström, Cecilia, Jelcic, I., Liu, Hailong, Nilsson, Peter, Hillert, J., Brundin, L., Fink, K., Martin, R., Tegel, Hanna, Gräslund, Torbjörn, Al Nimer, F., Guerreiro-Cacais, A. O., Khademi, M., Gafvelin, G., Olsson, T., and Gronlund, H.
- Abstract
QC 20211206
- Published
- 2021
61. Trajectories of processing speed, disability, and their connections, over the years following disease modulatory treatment initiation among relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis patients
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Longinetti, E., Englund, S., Burman, J., Fogdell-Hahn, A., Gunnarsson, Martin, Hillert, J., Langer-Gould, A., Lycke, J., Nilsson, P., Salzer, J., Svenningsson, A., Vrethem, M., Olsson, T., Piehl, F., Frisell, T., Longinetti, E., Englund, S., Burman, J., Fogdell-Hahn, A., Gunnarsson, Martin, Hillert, J., Langer-Gould, A., Lycke, J., Nilsson, P., Salzer, J., Svenningsson, A., Vrethem, M., Olsson, T., Piehl, F., and Frisell, T.
- Abstract
Introduction: Data on how processing speed of relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis patients (RRMS) evolve over time and its association with disability progression is scarce. We analysed the COMparison Between All immunoTherapies for Multiple Sclerosis (CombatMS; NCT03193866), a nationwide observational drug trial in RRMS. Objectives: Identify trajectories of processing speed and disability and their connections after disease modulatory treatment (DMT) start within the RRMS population.Describe patient characteristics associated with trajectory groups. Aim: Model trajectories of processing speed and disability. Methods: We assessed trajectories of oral Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT) and expanded disability status scale (EDSS) from first DMT start using a group-based modeling approach among 1,800 RRMS patients followed 2010-2021. We investigated predictors of trajectories using group membership assignments as a multinomial outcome and calculated conditional probabilities linking membership across the trajectories. Results: We identified four trajectories of processing speed: low SDMT score (mean starting values; MSV=36.7, standard deviation; SD=8.4)-stable (13%), medium score (MSV =50.8, SD=6.7)-minor decrease (52%), medium/high score (MSV=62.9, SD=8.6)-minor decrease (32%), and high score (MSV= 75.2, SD=9.7)-moderate decrease (3%), and four trajectories of disability: no disability-stable (23%), minimal signs-minor increase (45%), minimal disability-moderate increase (27%), and relatively severe disability-moderate increase (5%). Patients with natalizumab as first DMT were less likely to belong to the medium and high processing speed trajectories, relative to the low SDMT score-stable one. Sex, age at DMT start, and geographical region of treatment were associated with medium and high processing speed and with minimal signs and minimal dis-ability trajectories. There was 0% probability of belonging to the relatively severe disability-moderate increase EDSS tra
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- 2021
62. Clinical effectiveness and safety of teriflunomide for patients treated at least 48 months in the Swedish post-market surveillance study 'Immunomodulation and Multiple Sclerosis Epidemiology 4' (IMSE 4)
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Rosengren, V., Ekström, E., Forsberg, L., Kågström, S., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Sundström, P., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., Olsson, T., Rosengren, V., Ekström, E., Forsberg, L., Kågström, S., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Sundström, P., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., and Olsson, T.
- Abstract
Background: Teriflunomide (TFM) is an oral therapy for relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) included in the Swedish post-market surveillance study “Immunomodulation and Multiple Sclerosis Epidemiology” (IMSE). Objectives: To assess the safety and effectiveness of TFM with focus on patients treated at least 48 months. Methods: Descriptive data of Extended Disability Status Scale (EDSS), Multiple Sclerosis Severity Scale (MSSS), Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT), Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale (MSIS-29), European Quality of Life - 5 Dimensions Test (EQ-5D), Visual Analog Scale (VAS) and Adverse Events (AEs) is obtained from the nationwide Swedish Neuro Registry (NeuroReg). Effectiveness measures were assessed using Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test and drug survival using Kaplan-Meier curve. Results: 645 patients were included in the IMSE 4 study from March 2014 to April 2021, 70% were female, mean age at treatment start was 46 years and mean treatment duration was 31 months. The most common prior treatment was interferon beta or glatiramer acetate (34%) and 17% were treatment naïve. One- two- and three- year drug survival rates were 74%, 59% and 49% respectively. 340 patients (53%) have discontinued treatment with main reasons for discontinuation being AEs (41%) and lack of effect (40%). Of 68 reported AEs, 20 were serious. For both serious and non-serious AEs, skin and subcutaneous tissue disorders were the most common (25% and 21%, respectively). At the cut-off date, 168 patients had been treated for at least 48 months. This cohort had a mean age of 48 years at treatment start and a mean treatment duration of 65 months. The majority (64%) had switched from interferon or glatiramer acetate and 12% were treatment naïve. Significant improvement in mean values at 48 months of treatment compared to baseline were noted for SDMT in the 48-month cohort (49.1 ± 8.2 to 50.5 ± 10.0, n=35, p=0.049) while a minor worsening were noted for EDSS (2.2 ± 1.7 to 2.6 ± 2.0, n=37
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- 2021
63. Clinical effectiveness and safety of dimethyl fumarate for patients treated at least 5 years in the Swedish post-market surveillance study 'Immunomodulation and Multiple Sclerosis Epidemiology 5' (IMSE 5)
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Rosengren, V., Ekström, E., Forsberg, L., Kågström, S., Berglund, A., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Sundström, P., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., Olsson, T., Rosengren, V., Ekström, E., Forsberg, L., Kågström, S., Berglund, A., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Sundström, P., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., and Olsson, T.
- Abstract
Background: Dimethyl fumarate (DMF) is an oral therapy for relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS). DMF is included in the Swedish post-market surveillance study “Immunomodulation and Multiple Sclerosis Epidemiology” (IMSE). Objectives: To assess the effectiveness and safety of DMF with focus on patients treated at least 60 months. Methods: Descriptive data of Extended Disability Status Scale (EDSS), Multiple Sclerosis Severity Scale (MSSS), Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT), Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale (MSIS-29), European Quality of Life - 5 Dimensions Test (EQ-5D), Visual Analog Scale (VAS) and Adverse Events (AEs) is obtained from the nationwide Swedish Neuro Registry (NeuroReg). Effectiveness measures were assessed using the Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test and drug survival using the Kaplan-Meier curve.Results: 2466 DMF-treated patients were included between March 2014 and April 2021 with an overall drug survival rate of 41.2% and a mean treatment duration of 34 months. The main reasons for discontinuation were AEs (49%) and lack of effect (30%). 198 AEs were reported of which 62 were serious. For both serious and non-serious AEs reported, gastrointestinal disorders were the most common (19% and 27%, respectively). 588 patients had continuous treatment for at least 60 months. This cohort had a mean age of 42.1 years and a mean treatment duration of 72.4 months. The majority (63%) had switched from interferon or glatiramer acetate and 22% were treatment naïve. Significant improvements in mean values at 60 months of treatment compared to baseline were noted for MSSS in the 60-month cohort (p<0.001). MSIS-29 Psychological showed a tendency for improvement while all other tests remained stable after 5 years of treatment. Number of relapses per 1000 patients years were improved from 198.9 before DMF treatment start to 27.9 during treatment with DMF. 69 patients (12%) have discontinued DMF treatment in the 60 month cohort with a mean treatment duration of 67
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- 2021
64. Real-world longitudinal data of peginterferon beta-1a from the Swedish national post-marketing surveillance study (IMSE 6) - effectiveness and safety profile
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Ekström, E., Rosengren, V., Kågström, S., Forsberg, L., Berglund, A., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Sundström, P., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., Olsson, T., Ekström, E., Rosengren, V., Kågström, S., Forsberg, L., Berglund, A., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Sundström, P., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., and Olsson, T.
- Abstract
Background: Subcutaneous peginterferon beta-1a (PegIFN) was approved for relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) in Europe 2014. Phase II and III studies have shown that PegIFN reduces relapse rate and disability progression. PegIFN were included in the Swedish “Immunomodulation and Multiple Sclerosis Epidemiology Study” (IMSE 6) due to the importance of studying the long-term safety and effectiveness. Objectives: To follow-up the long-term safety and effectiveness of PegIFN in a real-world setting. Methods: Data was obtained from the Swedish Neuro Registry (NeuroReg). All clinical measures; Extended Disability Status Scale (EDSS), Multiple Sclerosis Severity Scale (MSSS), Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT), Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale (MSIS-29), European Quality of Life - 5 Dimensions Test (EQ-5D), Visual Analog Scale (VAS) were assessed using the Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test and drug survival using the Kaplan-Meier curve. Results: 393 patients (78% female; 86% RRMS) were included in IMSE 6 between June 2015 and April 2021. Mean age at treatment start was 42 years, mean treatment duration was 23 months. 25% were treatment naïve and 47% switched from other injectables prior PegIFN. The one- and two-year drug survival rate was 58% and 41% respectively, and 31% overall. In total, 271 patients discontinued their PegIFN treatment at some time point, mainly due to adverse events (51%) and lack of effect (26%). Most patients switched to rituximab (37%). During the entire treatment period 54% were relapse-free and 8% had only one relapse (36% missing data). In patients treated at least 24 months tendencies of improve-ments were seen for SDMT and EQ-5D. MSIS-PSYCH showed significantly worsened results (21.2 ± 18.6 to 24.3 ± 19.3, n=46). EDSS, MSSS, MSIS-PHYS and VAS scores remained stable. 25 adverse events (AEs) have been reported to Swedish Medical Product Agency (MPA). 6 of these were classified as serious where general disorders and administration site, and skin
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- 2021
65. The long-term safety and effectiveness of natalizumab (IMSE 1) - Real-world data from a Swedish nationwide pharmaco-epidemiological study
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Ekström, E., Rosengren, V., Kågström, S., Forsberg, L., Berglund, A., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Sundström, P., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., Olsson, T., Ekström, E., Rosengren, V., Kågström, S., Forsberg, L., Berglund, A., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Sundström, P., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., and Olsson, T.
- Abstract
Background: Natalizumab (NTZ) is a highly effective disease modulatory treatment for relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS). Post-marketing surveillance is important for evaluation of long-term safety and effectiveness in a real-world setting. The “Immunomodulation and Multiple Sclerosis Epidemiology Study” (IMSE 1) was initiated upon NTZ launch in Sweden (August 2006). Objective: To follow-up the long-term effectiveness and safety of NTZ in a real-world setting. Methods: IMSE 1 includes patients starting NTZ treatment. Data is collected from the nationwide Swedish Neuroregistry. Adverse events (AEs), JC-virus status (JCV) and clinical effectiveness measures Extended Disability Status Scale (EDSS), Multiple Sclerosis Severity Scale (MSSS), Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale (MSIS-29) and Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT) are registered prospectively. Results: 3476 patients (75% female; 81% RRMS) were included from August 2006 until April 2021. Mean age at treatment start was 36 years and mean treatment duration was 51.3 months. 1190 patients were currently treated with NTZ at cut-off and 13% of these were JCV positive (JCV+) with a mean JCV index at 1.07 ± 0.97. 2470 patients (71%) discontinued their NTZ treatment at some time point where the main reason was JCV+ (40%). Most of these patients switched to rituximab (39%). The number of relapses per 1,000 patient years were reduced from 380 before treatment start to 73 during treatment (25% missing data). 61% were relapse-free and 12% had only one relapse during the entire treatment period. All clinical measures showed improvement in mean between baseline and 132 months. Improvements on MSSS, MSIS-29 and SDMT were statistically significant. 117 Serious AEs had been reported to the Swedish Medical Product Agency and included nine cases (2 fatal) of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML). Eight of these nine cases had been reported between year 2008 and 2012, and one in 2018. 17 patients died within 6 mo
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- 2021
66. A Swedish nationwide pharmaco-epidemiological study of the long-term safety and effectiveness of alemtuzumab (IMSE 3)
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Ekström, E., Rosengren, V., Kågström, S., Forsberg, L., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Sundström, P., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., Olsson, T., Ekström, E., Rosengren, V., Kågström, S., Forsberg, L., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Sundström, P., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., and Olsson, T.
- Abstract
Background: Alemtuzumab (ALZ) is a modulatory drug for patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS). Post-marketing surveillance is important to assess the long-term safety and effectiveness in a real-world setting where ALZ was included into the Swedish post-market surveillance study “Immunomodulation and Multiple Sclerosis Epidemiology Study 3” (IMSE 3) upon launch in Sweden (March 2014). Objective: To follow up the effectiveness and long-term safety of ALZ in a real-world setting. Methods: Swedish MS patients are registered in the nationwide Swedish Neuro Registry (NeuroReg). IMSE 3 includes patients starting ALZ treatment with annual clinical measures obtained from NeuroReg; Extended Disability Status Scale (EDSS), Multiple Sclerosis Severity Scale (MSSS), Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT), Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale (MSIS-29), European Quality of Life – 5 Dimension Test (EQ-5D) and Visual Analogue Scale (VAS). The Wilcoxon signed-rank test was used to assess changes in effectiveness. Results: 118 patients (59% female; 95% RRMS) have been included in IMSE 3 between March 2014 and April 2021. Mean age at treatment start was 34 years. At cut-off date 85 patients had been treated with ALZ with at least 48 months of follow-up. Mean values at baseline compared to 48 months showed significant improvements for MSSS and SDMT while EQ-5D, EDSS, MSIS-29 and VAS scores showed tendencies of improvement. The largest proportion of the entire cohort switched from natalizumab (39%) or were treatment naïve (14%) prior ALZ. The number of relapses per 1,000 patient years decreased from 441 before ALZ initiation to 84 during ALZ treatment (16% missing data). 36 adverse events (AEs) were reported to the Swedish Medical Products Agency. 23 were classified as serious and the most common AEs categories were infections and infestations and blood and lymphatic system disorders (23% respectively). For non-serious events endocrine disorders (43%) was the most common c
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- 2021
67. Clinical effectiveness and safety of cladribine tablets for patients treated at least 12 months in the swedish post-market surveillance study 'immunomodulation and multiple sclerosis epidemiology 10' (IMSE 10)
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Rosengren, V., Ekström, E., Forsberg, L., Kågström, S., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Sundström, P., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., Olsson, T., Rosengren, V., Ekström, E., Forsberg, L., Kågström, S., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Sundström, P., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., and Olsson, T.
- Abstract
Background: Cladribine is a deoxyadenosine analogue prodrug that selectively induces immune reconstitution by targeting B- and T-lymphocytes. Cladribine tablets (CladT) are administered in two courses, 12 months apart, for patients with relapsing multiple sclerosis (RMS). CladT are included in the Swedish post-market surveillance study “Immunomodulation and Multiple Sclerosis Epidemiology” (IMSE). Objective: To assess the safety and effectiveness of CladT with focus on patients treated at least 12 months. Methods: Descriptive data of Extended Disability Status Scale (EDSS), Multiple Sclerosis Severity Scale (MSSS), Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT), Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale (MSIS-29), European Quality of Life-5 Dimensions Test (EQ-5D), Visual Analog Scale (VAS), relapses and Adverse Events (AEs) is obtained from the nationwide Swedish Neuro Registry (NeuroReg). Effectiveness measures were assessed using the Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test and relapse rates were tested using the paired samples T-test. Results: 140 patients were included in the IMSE 10 study since the Swedish market launch in April 2018 with a one year drug survival rate of 96.5%. 6 patients discontinued treatment, of which 2 later restarted. 18 AEs were reported of which 5 were serious. The most common AE reported were infection and infestation (8 reports). 22% of the patients was treated with CladT as their first MS drug. 18% were treated with natalizumab and 11% with dimethyl fumarate prior to CladT. 83 patients were treated for at least 12 months. Relapse data was available for 47 of 83 patients in the 12-month cohort. The number of relapses decreased significantly from 249.6 per 1,000 patient years before treatment start to 53.5 during treatment. Only 5 patients in this cohort experienced a relapse during treatment.Significant improvements in mean values at 12 months of treatment compared to baseline were noted for MSSS (p=0.007) and VAS (p=0.029) for the 12-month cohort. All other tests remai
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- 2021
68. Epstein-Barr virus and multiple sclerosis: interaction with HLA
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Sundqvist, E, Sundström, P, Lindén, M, Hedström, A K, Aloisi, F, Hillert, J, Kockum, I, Alfredsson, L, and Olsson, T
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- 2012
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69. Swedish natalizumab (Tysabri) multiple sclerosis surveillance study
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Piehl, Fredrik, Holmén, C., Hillert, J., and Olsson, T.
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- 2011
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70. RGMA and IL21R show association with experimental inflammation and multiple sclerosis
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Nohra, R, Beyeen, A D, Guo, J P, Khademi, M, Sundqvist, E, Hedreul, M T, Sellebjerg, F, Smestad, C, Oturai, A B, Harbo, H F, Wallström, E, Hillert, J, Alfredsson, L, Kockum, I, Jagodic, M, Lorentzen, J, and Olsson, T
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- 2010
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71. Genetic variants of CC chemokine genes in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis
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Öckinger, J, Stridh, P, Beyeen, A D, Lundmark, F, Seddighzadeh, M, Oturai, A, Sørensen, P S, Lorentzen, Å R, Celius, E G, Leppä, V, Koivisto, K, Tienari, P J, Alfredsson, L, Padyukov, L, Hillert, J, Kockum, I, Jagodic, M, and Olsson, T
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- 2010
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72. Multiple loci comprising immune-related genes regulate experimental neuroinflammation
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Marta, M, Stridh, P, Becanovic, K, Gillett, A, Öckinger, J, Lorentzen, J C, Jagodic, M, and Olsson, T
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- 2010
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73. Effects of geometrical discontinuities on distributed passive intermodulation in printed lines
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Shitvov, A.P., Olsson, T., El Banna, B., Zelenchuk, D.E., and Schuchinsky, A.G.
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Electric power distribution -- Analysis ,Modulation (Electronics) -- Methods ,Circuit printing -- Design and construction ,Printed circuits -- Design and construction ,Printed circuit board ,Business ,Computers ,Electronics ,Electronics and electrical industries - Published
- 2010
74. Multiple sclerosis clinical course and cardiovascular disease risk – Swedish cohort study
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Roshanisefat, H., Bahmanyar, S., Hillert, J., Olsson, T., and Montgomery, S.
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- 2014
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75. The HLA locus contains novel foetal susceptibility alleles for congenital heart block with significant paternal influence
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Meisgen, S., Östberg, T., Salomonsson, S., Ding, B., Eliasson, H., Mälarstig, A., Alfredsson, L., Klareskog, L., Hamsten, A., Olsson, T., Axelsson, T., Gadler, F., Jonzon, A., Sonesson, S.-E., Kockum, I., and Wahren-Herlenius, M.
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- 2014
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76. The CSF JCV antibody index for diagnosis of natalizumab-associated PML: OS2124
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Warnke, C., von Geldern, G., Markwerth, P., Dehmel, T., Hoepner, R., Gold, R., Pawlita, M., Kümpfel, T., Mäurer, M., Stangel, M., Wegner, F., Hohlfeld, R., Straeten, V., Limmroth, V., Weber, T., Hermsen, D., Kleinschnitz, C., Hartung, H.-P., Wattjes, M. P., Svenningson, A., Major, E., Olsson, T., Kieseier, B. C., and Adams, O.
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- 2014
77. The new era of multiple sclerosis therapy
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Olsson, T.
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- 2014
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78. Risks of neurological and immune-related diseases, including narcolepsy, after vaccination with Pandemrix: a population- and registry-based cohort study with over 2 years of follow-up
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Persson, I., Granath, F., Askling, J., Ludvigsson, J. F., Olsson, T., and Feltelius, N.
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- 2014
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79. Review: The future of cell therapies and brain repair: Parkinsonʼs disease leads the way
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Petit, G. H., Olsson, T. T., and Brundin, P.
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- 2014
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80. Cerebrospinal fluid anti-myelin antibodies are related to magnetic resonance measures of disease activity in multiple sclerosis
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Vogt, M.H.J., Teunissen, C.E., Iacobaeus, E., Heijnen, D.A.M., Breij, E.C. W., Olsson, T., Brundin, L., Killestein, J., and Dijkstra, Christine D.
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Cerebrospinal fluid -- Research ,Cerebrospinal fluid -- Physiological aspects ,Magnetic resonance imaging -- Usage ,Antibodies -- Research ,Antibodies -- Physiological aspects ,Viral antibodies -- Research ,Viral antibodies -- Physiological aspects ,Multiple sclerosis -- Diagnosis ,Health ,Psychology and mental health - Published
- 2009
81. Multiple sclerosis genomic map implicates peripheral immune cells and microglia in susceptibility
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Patsopoulos, NA, Baranzini, SE, Santaniello, A, Shoostari, P, Cotsapas, C, Wong, G, Beecham, AH, James, T, Replogle, J, Vlachos, IS, McCabe, C, Pers, TH, Brandes, A, White, C, Keenan, B, Cimpean, M, Winn, P, Panteliadis, IP, Robbins, A, Andlauer, TFM, Zarzycki, O, Dubois, B, Goris, A, Sondergaard, HB, Sellebjerg, F, Sorensen, PS, Ullum, H, Thorner, LW, Saarela, J, Cournu-Rebeix, I, Damotte, V, Fontaine, B, Guillot-Noel, L, Lathrop, M, Vukusic, S, Berthele, A, Pongratz, V, Gasperi, C, Graetz, C, Grummel, V, Hemmer, B, Hoshi, M, Knier, B, Korn, T, Lill, CM, Luessi, F, Muhlau, M, Zipp, F, Dardiotis, E, Agliardi, C, Amoroso, A, Barizzone, N, Benedetti, MD, Bernardinelli, L, Cavalla, P, Clarelli, F, Comi, G, Cusi, D, Esposito, F, Ferre, L, Galimberti, D, Guaschino, C, Leone, MA, Martinelli, V, Moiola, L, Salvetti, M, Sorosina, M, Vecchio, D, Zauli, A, Santoro, S, Mancini, N, Zuccala, M, Mescheriakova, J, van Duijn, C, Bos, SD, Celius, EG, Spurkland, A, Comabella, M, Montalban, X, Alfredsson, L, Bomfim, IL, Gomez-Cabrero, D, Hillert, J, Jagodic, M, Linden, M, Piehl, F, Jelcic, I, Martin, R, Sospedra, M, Baker, A, Ban, M, Hawkins, C, Hysi, P, Kalra, S, Karpe, F, Khadake, J, Lachance, G, Molyneux, P, Neville, M, Thorpe, J, Bradshaw, E, Caillier, SJ, Calabresi, P, Cree, BAC, Cross, A, Davis, M, de Bakker, PWI, Delgado, S, Dembele, M, Edwards, K, Fitzgerald, K, Frohlich, IY, Gourraud, PA, Haines, JL, Hakonarson, H, Kimbrough, D, Isobe, N, Konidari, I, Lathi, E, Lee, MH, Li, T, An, D, Zimmer, A, Madireddy, L, Manrique, CP, Mitrovic, M, Olah, M, Patrick, E, Pericak-Vance, MA, Piccio, L, Schaefer, C, Weiner, H, Lage, K, Scott, RJ, Lechner-Scott, J, Leal, R, Moscato, P, Booth, DR, Stewart, GJ, Vucic, S, Pame, G, BamettO, M, Mason, D, GriffithS, L, Broadley, S, Tajouri, L, Baxter, A, Slee, M, Taylor, BV, Charlesworth, J, Kilpatrick, TJ, Rubio, J, Jokubaitis, V, Wiley, J, Butzkueven, H, Leslie, S, Motyer, A, Stankovich, J, Carroll, WM, Kermode, AG, Edrin, M, Barclay, M, Peyrin-Biroulet, L, Chamaillard, M, Colombe, JF, Cottone, M, Croft, A, D'Inca, R, Halfvarson, J, Hanigan, K, Henderson, P, Hugot, JP, Karban, A, Kennedy, NA, Khan, MA, Lemann, M, Levine, A, Massey, D, Milla, M, Motoey, GW, Ng, SME, Oikonomnou, J, Peeters, H, Proctor, DD, Rahier, JF, Roberts, R, Rutgeerts, P, Seibold, F, Stronati, L, Taylor, KM, Torkvist, L, Ublick, K, Van Limbergen, J, Van Gossum, A, Vatn, MH, Zhang, H, Zhang, W, Donnelly, P, Barroso, I, Blackwe, JM, Bramon, E, Brown, MA, Casas, JP, Corvin, A, Deloukas, P, Duncanson, A, Jankowski, J, Markus, HS, Mathew, CG, Palmer, CNA, Plomin, R, Rautanen, A, Sawcer, SJ, Trembath, RC, Viswanathan, AC, Wood, NW, Spencer, CCA, Band, G, Bellenguez, C, Freeman, C, Hellenthal, G, Giannoulatou, E, Pirinen, M, Pearson, R, Strange, A, Sul, Z, Vukcevic, DA, Langford, C, Hunt, SE, Edkins, S, Gwilliam, R, Blackburn, H, Bumpstead, SJ, Dronov, S, Gillman, M, Gray, E, Hammond, N, Jayakumar, A, McCann, OT, Liddle, J, Potter, SC, Ravindrarajah, R, Ricketts, M, Waller, M, Weston, P, Widaa, S, Whittaker, P, Compston, A, Hafler, D, Harbo, HF, Hauser, SL, Stewart, G, D'Alfonso, S, Hadjigeorgiou, G, Taylor, B, Barcellos, LF, Booth, D, Hintzen, R, Kockum, I, Martinelli-Boneschi, F, McCauley, JL, Oksenberg, JR, Oturai, A, Sawcer, S, Ivinson, AJ, Olsson, T, De Jager, PL, Patsopoulos, Na, Baranzini, Se, Santaniello, A, Shoostari, P, Cotsapas, C, Wong, G, Beecham, Ah, James, T, Replogle, J, Vlachos, I, Mccabe, C, Pers, Th, Brandes, A, White, C, Keenan, B, Cimpean, M, Winn, P, Panteliadis, Ip, Robbins, A, Andlauer, Tfm, Zarzycki, O, Dubois, B, Goris, A, Sondergaard, Hb, Sellebjerg, F, Sorensen, P, Ullum, H, Thorner, Lw, Saarela, J, Cournu-Rebeix, I, Damotte, V, Fontaine, B, Guillot-Noel, L, Lathrop, M, Vukusic, S, Berthele, A, Pongratz, V, Gasperi, C, Graetz, C, Grummel, V, Hemmer, B, Hoshi, M, Knier, B, Korn, T, Lill, Cm, Luessi, F, Muhlau, M, Zipp, F, Dardiotis, E, Agliardi, C, Amoroso, A, Barizzone, N, Benedetti, Md, Bernardinelli, L, Cavalla, P, Clarelli, F, Comi, G, Cusi, D, Esposito, F, Ferre, L, Galimberti, D, Guaschino, C, Leone, Ma, Martinelli, V, Moiola, L, Salvetti, M, Sorosina, M, Vecchio, D, Zauli, A, Santoro, S, Mancini, N, Zuccala, M, Mescheriakova, J, van Duijn, C, Bos, Sd, Celius, Eg, Spurkland, A, Comabella, M, Montalban, X, Alfredsson, L, Bomfim, Il, Gomez-Cabrero, D, Hillert, J, Jagodic, M, Linden, M, Piehl, F, Jelcic, I, Martin, R, Sospedra, M, Baker, A, Ban, M, Hawkins, C, Hysi, P, Kalra, S, Karpe, F, Khadake, J, Lachance, G, Molyneux, P, Neville, M, Thorpe, J, Bradshaw, E, Caillier, Sj, Calabresi, P, Cree, Bac, Cross, A, Davis, M, de Bakker, Pwi, Delgado, S, Dembele, M, Edwards, K, Fitzgerald, K, Frohlich, Iy, Gourraud, Pa, Haines, Jl, Hakonarson, H, Kimbrough, D, Isobe, N, Konidari, I, Lathi, E, Lee, Mh, Li, T, An, D, Zimmer, A, Madireddy, L, Manrique, Cp, Mitrovic, M, Olah, M, Patrick, E, Pericak-Vance, Ma, Piccio, L, Schaefer, C, Weiner, H, Lage, K, Scott, Rj, Lechner-Scott, J, Leal, R, Moscato, P, Booth, Dr, Stewart, Gj, Vucic, S, Pame, G, Bametto, M, Mason, D, Griffiths, L, Broadley, S, Tajouri, L, Baxter, A, Slee, M, Taylor, Bv, Charlesworth, J, Kilpatrick, Tj, Rubio, J, Jokubaitis, V, Wiley, J, Butzkueven, H, Leslie, S, Motyer, A, Stankovich, J, Carroll, Wm, Kermode, Ag, Edrin, M, Barclay, M, Peyrin-Biroulet, L, Chamaillard, M, Colombe, Jf, Cottone, M, Croft, A, D'Inca, R, Halfvarson, J, Hanigan, K, Henderson, P, Hugot, Jp, Karban, A, Kennedy, Na, Khan, Ma, Lemann, M, Levine, A, Massey, D, Milla, M, Motoey, Gw, Ng, Sme, Oikonomnou, J, Peeters, H, Proctor, Dd, Rahier, Jf, Roberts, R, Rutgeerts, P, Seibold, F, Stronati, L, Taylor, Km, Torkvist, L, Ublick, K, Van Limbergen, J, Van Gossum, A, Vatn, Mh, Zhang, H, Zhang, W, Donnelly, P, Barroso, I, Blackwe, Jm, Bramon, E, Brown, Ma, Casas, Jp, Corvin, A, Deloukas, P, Duncanson, A, Jankowski, J, Markus, H, Mathew, Cg, Palmer, Cna, Plomin, R, Rautanen, A, Sawcer, Sj, Trembath, Rc, Viswanathan, Ac, Wood, Nw, Spencer, Cca, Band, G, Bellenguez, C, Freeman, C, Hellenthal, G, Giannoulatou, E, Pirinen, M, Pearson, R, Strange, A, Sul, Z, Vukcevic, Da, Langford, C, Hunt, Se, Edkins, S, Gwilliam, R, Blackburn, H, Bumpstead, Sj, Dronov, S, Gillman, M, Gray, E, Hammond, N, Jayakumar, A, Mccann, Ot, Liddle, J, Potter, Sc, Ravindrarajah, R, Ricketts, M, Waller, M, Weston, P, Widaa, S, Whittaker, P, Compston, A, Hafler, D, Harbo, Hf, Hauser, Sl, Stewart, G, D'Alfonso, S, Hadjigeorgiou, G, Taylor, B, Barcellos, Lf, Booth, D, Hintzen, R, Kockum, I, Martinelli-Boneschi, F, Mccauley, Jl, Oksenberg, Jr, Oturai, A, Sawcer, S, Ivinson, Aj, Olsson, T, De Jager, Pl, Neurology, and Immunology
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0301 basic medicine ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Quantitative Trait Loci ,Inheritance Patterns ,Cell Cycle Proteins ,Genome-wide association study ,Biology ,Major histocompatibility complex ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Major Histocompatibility Complex ,Transcriptome ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immune system ,Gene Frequency ,Autoimmune Process ,medicine ,Humans ,RNA-Seq ,X chromosome ,Genetics ,Chromosomes, Human, X ,Multidisciplinary ,Microglia ,Multiple sclerosis ,GTPase-Activating Proteins ,Chromosome Mapping ,Genomics ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Genetic Loci ,Case-Control Studies ,biology.protein ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Genetic roots of multiple sclerosis The genetics underlying who develops multiple sclerosis (MS) have been difficult to work out. Examining more than 47,000 cases and 68,000 controls with multiple genome-wide association studies, the International Multiple Sclerosis Genetics Consortium identified more than 200 risk loci in MS (see the Perspective by Briggs). Focusing on the best candidate genes, including a model of the major histocompatibility complex region, the authors identified statistically independent effects at the genome level. Gene expression studies detected that every major immune cell type is enriched for MS susceptibility genes and that MS risk variants are enriched in brain-resident immune cells, especially microglia. Up to 48% of the genetic contribution of MS can be explained through this analysis. Science , this issue p. eaav7188 ; see also p. 1383
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- 2019
82. Neurofilament light chain as a marker for cortical atrophy in multiple sclerosis without radiological signs of disease activity
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Ineichen, B. V., primary, Moridi, T., additional, Ewing, E., additional, Ouellette, R., additional, Manouchehrinia, A., additional, Stawiarz, L., additional, Ferreira, D., additional, Muehlboeck, S. J., additional, Kuhle, J., additional, Westman, E., additional, Leppert, D., additional, Hillert, J., additional, Olsson, T., additional, Kockum, I., additional, Piehl, F., additional, and Granberg, T., additional
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- 2021
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83. Replication of the association between variants in WFS1 and risk of type 2 diabetes in European populations
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Franks, P. W., Rolandsson, O., Debenham, S. L., Fawcett, K. A., Payne, F., Dina, C., Froguel, P., Mohlke, K. L., Willer, C., Olsson, T., Wareham, N. J., Hallmans, G., Barroso, I., and Sandhu, M. S.
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- 2008
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84. Inflammation-related plasma and CSF biomarkers for multiple sclerosis
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Huang, J, Khademi, M, Fugger, L, Lindhe, Ö, Novakova, L, Axelsson, M, Malmeström, C, Constantinescu, C, Lycke, J, Piehl, F, Olsson, T, and Kockum, I
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Inflammation/blood ,EXPRESSION ,Adult ,Chemokine CCL11 ,Male ,Proteomics ,Proximity extension assay ,BLOOD ,Multiple Sclerosis ,multiple sclerosis ,PLACEBO-CONTROLLED TRIAL ,Severity of Illness Index ,cerebrospinal fluid ,Cohort Studies ,Young Adult ,Immunology and Inflammation ,CEREBROSPINAL-FLUID ,extension assay ,Humans ,Chemokine CCL11/analysis ,NATALIZUMAB ,Inflammation ,Chemokine CCL20 ,Multiple Sclerosis/blood ,DISABILITY ,proximity ,Reproducibility of Results ,biomarkers ,NEUROFILAMENT ,Chemokine CCL20/blood ,MULTIPLE-SCLEROSIS ,Middle Aged ,Biological Sciences ,Prognosis ,CHEMOKINES ,Case-Control Studies ,T-CELLS ,proximity extension assay ,Female ,Biomarkers/blood - Abstract
Significance Molecular biomarkers for multiple sclerosis have so far mainly been limited to measures in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Here, we identified additional biomarkers for multiple sclerosis, 2 in plasma as well as 10 in CSF. Furthermore, we identified 2 biomarkers: eotaxin-1 (CCL11), associated with disease duration and progression in both CSF and plasma, and plasma CCL20 which showed association with disease severity. However, these findings will require further validation. The capability of measuring biomarkers for multiple sclerosis may assist in the monitoring of patients during routine clinical care such as assessing treatment response but may also allow researchers to more accurately characterize pathological processes of inflammation and neurodegeneration in both the CNS and periphery of patients with multiple sclerosis., Effective biomarkers for multiple sclerosis diagnosis, assessment of prognosis, and treatment responses, in particular those measurable in blood, are largely lacking. We have investigated a broad set of protein biomarkers in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and plasma using a highly sensitive proteomic immunoassay. Cases from two independent cohorts were compared with healthy controls and patients with other neurological diseases. We identified and replicated 10 cerebrospinal fluid proteins including IL-12B, CD5, MIP-1a, and CXCL9 which had a combined diagnostic efficacy similar to immunoglobulin G (IgG) index and neurofilament light chain (area under the curve [AUC] = 0.95). Two plasma proteins, OSM and HGF, were also associated with multiple sclerosis in comparison to healthy controls. Sensitivity and specificity of combined CSF and plasma markers for multiple sclerosis were 85.7% and 73.5%, respectively. In the discovery cohort, eotaxin-1 (CCL11) was associated with disease duration particularly in patients who had secondary progressive disease (PCSF < 4 × 10−5, Pplasma < 4 × 10−5), and plasma CCL20 was associated with disease severity (P = 4 × 10−5), although both require further validation. Treatment with natalizumab and fingolimod showed different compartmental changes in protein levels of CSF and peripheral blood, respectively, including many disease-associated markers (e.g., IL12B, CD5) showing potential application for both diagnosing disease and monitoring treatment efficacy. We report a number of multiple sclerosis biomarkers in CSF and plasma for early disease detection and potential indicators for disease activity. Of particular importance is the set of markers discovered in blood, where validated biomarkers are lacking.
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- 2020
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85. Modeling initial strain distribution in soft tissues with application to arteries
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Olsson, T. and Klarbring, J. Stålhand A.
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- 2006
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86. Cancer Risk for Fingolimod, Natalizumab, and Rituximab in Multiple Sclerosis Patients
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Alping, P., Askling, J., Burman, J., Fink, K., Fogdell-Hahn, A., Gunnarsson, M., Hillert, J., Langer-Gould, A., Lycke, J., Nilsson, P., Salzer, J., Svenningsson, A., Vrethem, Magnus, Olsson, T., Piehl, F., Frisell, T., Alping, P., Askling, J., Burman, J., Fink, K., Fogdell-Hahn, A., Gunnarsson, M., Hillert, J., Langer-Gould, A., Lycke, J., Nilsson, P., Salzer, J., Svenningsson, A., Vrethem, Magnus, Olsson, T., Piehl, F., and Frisell, T.
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Objective: Novel, highly effective disease-modifying therapies have revolutionized multiple sclerosis (MS) care. However, evidence from large comparative studies on important safety outcomes, such as cancer, is still lacking. Methods: In this nationwide register-based cohort study, we linked data from the Swedish MS register to the Swedish Cancer Register and other national health care and census registers. We included 4,187 first-ever initiations of rituximab, 1,620 of fingolimod, and 1,670 of natalizumab in 6,136 MS patients matched for age, sex, and location to 37,801 non-MS general population subjects. Primary outcome was time to first invasive cancer. Results: We identified 78 invasive cancers among treated patients: rituximab 33 (incidence rate [IR] per 10,000 person-years = 34.4, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 23.7–48.3), fingolimod 28 (IR = 44.0, 95% CI = 29.2–63.5), and natalizumab 17 (IR = 26.0, 95% CI = 15.1–41.6). The general population IR was 31.0 (95% CI = 27.8–34.4). Adjusting for baseline characteristics, we found no difference in risk of invasive cancer between rituximab, natalizumab, and the general population but a possibly higher risk with fingolimod compared to the general population (hazard ratio [HR] = 1.53, 95% CI = 0.98–2.38) and rituximab (HR = 1.68, 95% CI = 1.00–2.84). Interpretation: In this first large comparative study of 3 highly effective MS disease-modifying therapies, no increased risk of invasive cancer was seen with rituximab and natalizumab, compared to the general population. However, there was a borderline-significant increased risk with fingolimod, compared to both the general population and rituximab. It was not possible to attribute this increased risk to any specific type of cancer, and further studies are warranted to validate these findings.
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- 2020
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87. A swedish post-market surveillance study of the long-term effectiveness and safety of alemtuzumab (imse 3) for patients treated for at least 36 months
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Leandersson, Å., Kågström, S., Forsberg, L., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Sundström, P., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., Olsson, T., Leandersson, Å., Kågström, S., Forsberg, L., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Sundström, P., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., and Olsson, T.
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Background: Alemtuzumab (ALZ) is an approved disease-modi-fying therapy (DMT) for relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS). Post-marketing surveillance is important to assess the long-term safety and effectiveness in a real-world setting. ALZ has therefore been included into the Swedish post-market surveillance study “Immunomodulation and Multiple Sclerosis Epidemiology Study” (IMSE) upon launch in Sweden (March 2014). Objectives: To track effectiveness and long-term safety of ALZ in a real-world setting, with focus on patients treated with ALZ for at least 36 months. Methods: Swedish MS patients are registered into the nationwide Swedish MS Registry (NeuroReg). IMSE 3 includes all patients starting ALZ treatment with annual clinical measures obtained from NeuroReg; Extended Disability Status Scale (EDSS), Multiple Sclerosis Severity Scale (MSSS), Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT), Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale (MSIS-29), European Quality of Life – 5 Dimension Test (EQ-5D) and Visual Analogue Scale (VAS). Results: A total of 118 patients (59% female; 95% RRMS) were included in IMSE 3 between March 2014 and June 2020. Out of 118 patients, 93 had been treated for at least 36 months (62% female), of which 10 patients had switched to another DMT. Mean age at treatment start for patients treated ⩾ 36 months was 34 years and mean treatment duration was 54 months. Mean number of drugs prior ALZ initiation was 2.4. Most of the patients (40%, n=37) switched to ALZ from natalizumab or were treatment naïve (13%, n=12) prior ALZ. The mean num-ber of relapses was reduced from 0.72 one year before ALZ initiation to 0.10 during the first treatment year, followed by 0.08 the second treatment year and 0.06 the third year of ALZ treatment (n=79, 15% missing data). In patients treated ⩾ 36 months significant improvements in mean baseline compared to 36 months were seen for MSSS (3.3 ± 2.7 to 2.3 ± 2.3, n=44) and EQ-5D (0.7 ± 0.3 to 0.8 ± 0.3, n=50), while SDMT showed signific
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- 2020
88. A swedish post-market surveillance study of the long-term effectiveness and safety of teriflunomid (IMSE 4) for patients treated at least 36 months
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Forsberg, L., Kågström, S., Leandersson, Å., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., Olsson, T., Forsberg, L., Kågström, S., Leandersson, Å., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., and Olsson, T.
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Background: Teriflunomid (TFM) is an oral therapy for relaps-ing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS), which has been included in the Swedish post-market surveillance study “Immunomodulation and Multiple Sclerosis Epidemiology” (IMSE). Objectives: To assess the long-term safety and effectiveness of TFM for patients treated in a real-world setting over time. Methods: A large majority of MS patients are registered into the nationwide Swedish Neuro Registry (NeuroReg). The IMSE 4 study obtains descriptive data of adverse events (AEs), Extended Disability Status Scale (EDSS), Multiple Sclerosis Severity Scale (MSSS), Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT), Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale (MSIS-29), European Quality of Life - Five Dimensions Test (EQ-5D) and Visual Analog Scale (VAS) from NeuroReg. Effectiveness measures were assessed using the Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test and drug survival using the Kaplan-Meier curve. Results: 609 TFM-treated patients had been included in the IMSE 4 study from March 2014 to June 2020, 70% were female and mean age at treatment start was 46 years. Mean treatment duration was 27 months and 89% of the patients had RRMS. The most common prior treatment was interferon beta or glatiramer acetate (39%) and 17% of the patients were treatment naïve. The overall one- two- and three- year drug survival rates were 73%, 59% and 48% respectively. 307 (50%) patients had discontinued treatment at some point, of which 34% started rituximab treatment (36% had no new treatment registered). The most common rea-sons for discontinuation were AEs (42%) and lack of effect (40%). 204 patients had been continuously treated with TFM for ⩾36 months and significant changes in mean baseline values compared to values at 36 months were noted only for EDSS (2.0 ± 1.6 to 2.3 ± 1.8, n=49). All other clinical measures were stable. A total of 68 AEs were reported of which 20 events were classified as serious (S). The most common AE category was skin and subcutaneous tissue disord
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- 2020
89. Reliability and construct validity of five life domains in the adolescent drug abuse diagnosis instrument in a sample of Swedish adolescent girls in special residential care
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Klingstedt, Marie-Louise, Wångby-Lundh, M., Olsson, T., Ferrer-Wreder, L., Klingstedt, Marie-Louise, Wångby-Lundh, M., Olsson, T., and Ferrer-Wreder, L.
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Aim: This cross-sectional study investigates the psychometric properties of the Swedish edition of the Adolescent Drug Abuse Diagnosis (ADAD), and specifically examines the internal consistency and construct validity of five life domains reported by female adolescents in special residential care in Sweden (N = 780; Mage = 16 years old). Methods: Principal component analysis and entropy-based analysis were used to test construct validity. Conclusion: Results indicate that ADAD may be able to reliably distinguish between areas that are important targets for intervention.
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- 2020
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90. Central nervous system infections in adolescence and MS risk after age 20 years
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Smith, K., Xu, Yin, Hiyoshi, Ayako, Piehl, F., Olsson, T., Montgomery, Scott, Smith, K., Xu, Yin, Hiyoshi, Ayako, Piehl, F., Olsson, T., and Montgomery, Scott
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Background: Infectious agents in MS etiology have been previously investigated. Theories of pathogenic mechanisms include molecular mimicry or activation of macrophages and natural killer cells with subsequent infiltration of the blood brain barrier. Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection often signaled by infectious mononucleosis (IM) is a notable MS risk factors, but other infections including Chlamydia pneumoniae, among others, are also associated with MS. Adolescence is a potentially critical period for susceptibility MS and asso-ciations with exposures in adolescence such as concussion, pneumonia, BMI, and EBV/IM have been found. No studies to our knowledge have examined CNS infection as a risk factor for MS. Objectives: To determine if CNS infection in childhood (age 0-11 years) or adolescence (age 11-20) is associated with MS risk after age 20 years. Methods: A cohort born in Sweden between 1970-1994 followed until 31 December 2014, was identified using the Total Population Register, excluding those diagnosed with MS before age 20 years (y) (N=2,422,969). ICD codes from the National Patient Register identified diagnoses of MS after age 20y (n=4,022) (two or more diagnoses), and CNS infection (bacterial and viral) before age 20y. Diagnoses of IM, pneumonia, and other bacterial or viral infections were identified. Infections were classified as present/absent at 0-10y or 11-20y. Cox regression was used to determine associations of CNS infection with MS, with follow-up from age 20y to first MS diagnosis, adjusting for gastrointestinal, genitourinary, respiratory, skin, other infections, sex and parental socioeconomic position. Results: CNS infection before age 11y was not associated with MS. CNS infection in adolescence was statistically significantly associated with increased MS risk producing an adjusted hazard ratio of 2.80 (95%CI 1.90-4.12). Excluding encephalomyelitis (as this includes acute disseminated encephalitis, often a precursor of MS) the estimate was 1.
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- 2020
91. A swedish post-market surveillance study : long-term effectiveness and safety of cladribine tablets (IMSE 10) for patients treated at least 12 months
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Forsberg, L., Kågström, S., Leandersson, Å., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Sundström, P., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., Olsson, T., Forsberg, L., Kågström, S., Leandersson, Å., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Sundström, P., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., and Olsson, T.
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Background: Cladribine is a deoxyadenosine analogue prodrug. Cladribine tablets (CT) are administered in two courses, 12 months apart, for patients with relapsing multiple sclerosis (RMS). CT are included in the Swedish post-market surveillance study “Immunomodulation and Multiple Sclerosis Epidemiology” (IMSE). Objectives: To assess the safety and effectiveness of CT in a real-world setting with focus on patients treated at least 12 months. Methods: Descriptive data of Extended Disability Status Scale (EDSS), Multiple Sclerosis Severity Scale (MSSS), Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT), Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale (MSIS-29), European Quality of Life - 5 Dimensions Test (EQ-5D), Visual Analog Scale (VAS), relapses and Adverse Events (AEs) is obtained from the nationwide Swedish Neuro Registry (NeuroReg). Effectiveness measures were assessed using the Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test and relapse rates were tested using the paired samples T-test. Results: 85 patients were included in the IMSE 10 study since CT were introduced on the Swedish market in April 2018. 42 patients were treated for at least 12 months. Five AEs were reported since the study start, four were classified as infections and infestations. 25 % of the entire cohort was treated with CT as their first MS drug. 13 % were treated with natalizumab and 12 % with dimethyl fumarate prior to CT. Five AEs were reported since the study start, four were classified as infections and infestations. Relapse data was available for 27/42 patients in the 12-month cohort. The number of reported relapses decreased significantly from 208.6 per 1,000 patient years before treatment start to 83.6 during treatment. Only three patients in this cohort experienced a relapse during treatment of which two were during the first treatment year. Significant improvements in mean values at 12 months of treatment compared to baseline were noted for MSSS for the 12-month cohort (n=17). All other tests remained stable but significantly uncha
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- 2020
92. Real-world data of peginterferon beta-1a from a swedish national post-marketing surveillance study (IMSE 6) - effectiveness and safety profile
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Kågström, S., Leandersson, Å., Forsberg, L., Berglund, A., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Sundström, P., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., Olsson, T., Kågström, S., Leandersson, Å., Forsberg, L., Berglund, A., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Sundström, P., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., and Olsson, T.
- Abstract
Background: Subcutaneous peginterferon beta-1a (PegIFN) was approved for relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) in Europe 2014. The clinical trial program showed that PegIFN reduced the relapse rate and proportion with disability progression compared to placebo. At its launch in Sweden, PegIFN was included in the Swedish “Immunomodulation and Multiple Sclerosis Epidemiology Study” (IMSE 6), providing possibilities to track long-term effectiveness and safety in a population-based setting. Objectives: To follow-up the long-term effectiveness and safety of PegIFN treatment in Swedish patients in a real-world context. Methods: Data was obtained from the nationwide Swedish Neuro Registry (NeuroReg) between June 2015 and May 2020. Effectiveness measures were assessed using the Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test and drug survival using the Kaplan-Meier curve. Results: A total of 364 patients (78% female; 87% RRMS; mean age at treatments start 43 years) were followed up to 57 months (mean 20 months), of which 200 (55%) patients had been treated for at least 12 months. The majority of the patients had switched from other injectables (164 patients, 45%) or were treatment naïve (90 patients, 25%) prior to treatment with PegIFN. Over the dura-tion of the follow-up, 68% (247/364) patients discontinued their PegIFN treatment for various reasons (60% adverse events, 24% lack of effect) and switched mainly to rituximab (105 patients, 43%). The overall drug survival was 32%, 40% for men and 30% for women. The one- and two-year drug survival rate was 57% and 40%, respectively. The mean number of relapses were reduced from 0.35 one year before treatment start to 0.11 one year after (35% missing data). All clinical effectiveness measures (Extended Disability Status Scale (EDSS), Multiple Sclerosis Severity Scale (MSSS), Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale (MSIS-29), European Quality of Life – 5-Dimension test (EQ-5D), Visual Analogue Score (VAS) and Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT)) remai
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- 2020
93. A swedish post-market surveillance study : long-term effectiveness and safety of dimethyl fumarate (imse 5) for patients treated at least 36 months: on-demand eposters p0001-p0286
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Forsberg, L., Kågström, S., Leandersson, Å., Berglund, A., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Sundström, P., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., Olsson, T., Forsberg, L., Kågström, S., Leandersson, Å., Berglund, A., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Sundström, P., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., and Olsson, T.
- Abstract
Background: Dimethyl fumarate (DMF) is an oral therapy for relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS). DMF is included in the Swedish post-market surveillance study “Immunomodulation and Multiple Sclerosis Epidemiology” (IMSE). Objectives: To assess the effectiveness and safety of DMF with focus on patients treated at least 36 months in the IMSE study. Methods: Descriptive data of Extended Disability Status Scale (EDSS), Multiple Sclerosis Severity Scale (MSSS), Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT), Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale (MSIS-29), European Quality of Life - 5 Dimensions Test (EQ-5D), Visual Analog Scale (VAS) and Adverse Events (AEs) is obtained from the nationwide Swedish Neuro Registry (NeuroReg). Effectiveness measures were assessed using the Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test and drug survival using the Kaplan-Meier curve. Results: 2349 DMF-treated patients were included between March 2014 and June 2020 with an overall drug survival rate of 45%. The main reasons for discontinuation were AEs (50%) and lack of effect (30%). 186 AEs were reported to the Swedish Medical Products Agency, of which 59 were serious. A total of 8 patients have died during DMF treatment or within 6 months of treatment discontinuation. 36 month cohort: 940 patients had con-tinuous treatment for at least 36 months. This cohort had a mean age of 42 years and a mean treatment duration of 56 months. The majority (50%) had switched from interferon or glatiramer ace-tate, and (24%) were treatment naïve (TN). Significant improve-ments in mean values at 36 months of treatment compared to baseline for the 36-month cohort were noted for MSSS, SDMT, MSIS-29 Psychological, EQ-5D and VAS. When TN patients were solely assessed (n=230) improvements were noted for all above mentioned measures as well as MSIS-29 Psychological. The remaining patients in the cohort; treatment experienced patients (n=710) displayed significant improvements only for MSSS, MSIS-29 Psychological and EQ-5D. TN patients had a
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- 2020
94. Efficacy and safety in patients treated with natalizumab for at least 10 years - real-world data from a swedish national surveillance study (IMSE 1)
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Kågström, S., Leandersson, Å., Forsberg, L., Berglund, A., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Sundström, P., Martin, C., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., Olsson, T., Kågström, S., Leandersson, Å., Forsberg, L., Berglund, A., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Sundström, P., Martin, C., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., and Olsson, T.
- Abstract
Background: Natalizumab (NTZ) is a highly effective disease modulatory treatment for relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS). Post-marketing surveillance is important for evalua-tion of long-term safety and effectiveness in a real-world setting. To this end, the “Immunomodulation and Multiple Sclerosis Epidemiology Study” (IMSE 1) was initiated upon NTZ launch in Sweden (August 2006). Objectives: To follow-up the long-term effectiveness and safety of NTZ in a real-world setting, with focus on patients treated at least 10 years. Methods: IMSE 1 includes patients starting NTZ treatment and data is collected from the nationwide Swedish Neuro Registry (NeuroReg). Adverse events (AEs), JC-virus status (JCV) and clinical effectiveness measures are registered in NeuroReg pro-spectively. Effectiveness measures were assessed using the Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test. Results: A total of 3291 patients were included in the IMSE 1 study from August 2006 until June 2020 (72% female; mean age 36 years; 80% RRMS; mean treatment duration 50 months). 171/3291 patients (5%) had been treated for at least 120 months (73% female; men age 36 years; 87% RRMS; mean treatment duration 139 months). A total of 64% (110/171) were treated with interferons or glatiramer acetate prior to NTZ treatment. Over the duration of follow-up discontinued 21% (35/171) their NTZ treat-ment of which 46% (16/35) discontinued due to JCV positive (JCV+). In total, 27% (46/171) of these patients were JCV+ with a mean JCV index of 1.2±1.0 (4% missing data). The mean num-ber of relapses were reduced from 0.84 one year before NTZ treat-ment start to 0.00 during the first treatment year (12% missing data). All clinical effectiveness measures (Extended Disability Status Scale (EDSS), Multiple Sclerosis Severity Scale (MSSS), Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale (MSIS-29) and Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT)) showed improvement in mean between baseline and 120 months. However, only MSSS, MSIS-29 psy-chological and SDMT
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- 2020
95. Relation of edss to patient-reported outcome measurements in ms : real-world data from a swedish nationwide study of fingolimod (imse 2)
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Leandersson, Å., Kågström, S., Forsberg, L., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Sundström, P., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., Olsson, T., Leandersson, Å., Kågström, S., Forsberg, L., Hillert, J., Nilsson, P., Dahle, C., Svenningsson, A., Lycke, J., Landtblom, A. -M, Burman, J., Martin, C., Sundström, P., Gunnarsson, Martin, Piehl, F., and Olsson, T.
- Abstract
Background: Fingolimod (FGL) is an oral disease-modifying therapy (DMT) for patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis, introduced in Sweden 2011. Already from launch, FGL was included in the Swedish “Immunomodulation and Multiple Sclerosis Epidemiology Study” (IMSE) in order to enable long-term surveillance of effectiveness and safety aspects in a large population-based cohort. Objectives: To assess the relation between Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) and patient-reported outcome measurements (PROMS) in patients treated with FGL. Methods: Swedish MS patients are registered into the nation-wide Swedish MS Registry. Demographic data, EDSS and the Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale (MSIS-29), Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT), European Quality of Life - 5 Dimensions Test (EQ-5D), Visual Analog Scale (VAS) were collected for FGL patients who agreed to participate in the IMSE 2 study. Spearman rank correlation were used to determine associations between EDSS and PROMS. Results: From September 2011 until June 2020, 1670 MS patients (68% female) were included in IMSE 2. Mean age at treatment start was 39 years and mean treatment duration in the entire cohort was 44 months (M). Out of 1670 patients, 560 (63% female) had been treated with FGL for at least 60 M. Mean age was 40 years and mean treatment duration 81 M. Significant (p<0.05) correla-tions was found between EDSS and all PROMs. The strongest correlation was found between the physical component of MSIS-29 for both baseline (r=0.60, n=778) and 60 M (r=0.64, n=109). Also, for both EQ-5D and VAS, Spearman coefficient indicates a moderate correlation for baseline (EQ-5D; r=-0.48, n=744 and VAS; -0.43, n=706) and 60 M (EQ-5D; r=-0.47, n=102 and VAS; -0.48, n=102) respectively. The correlation between EDSS and SDMT and the psychological component of MSIS-29, both indi-cated a weak correlation for baseline (SDMT; r=-0.28, n=771 and MSIS-29 psychological; r=0.28, n=778). For 60 M the correla-tions were
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- 2020
96. Erratum: VAV1 regulates experimental autoimmune arthritis and is associated with anti-CCP negative rheumatoid arthritis
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Guerreiro-Cacais, A O, Norin, U, Gyllenberg, A, Berglund, R, Beyeen, A D, Petit-Teixeira, E, Cornélis, F, Saoudi, A, Fournié, G J, Holmdahl, R, Alfredsson, L, Klareskog, L, Jagodic, M, Olsson, T, Kockum, I, and Padyukov, L
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- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
97. Two genes encoding immune-regulatory molecules (LAG3 and IL7R) confer susceptibility to multiple sclerosis
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Zhang, Z, Duvefelt, K, Svensson, F, Masterman, T, Jonasdottir, G, Salter, H, Emahazion, T, Hellgren, D, Falk, G, Olsson, T, Hillert, J, and Anvret, M
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
98. Electron choreography at the attosecond time scale
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Unzicker, B, primary, Vaughan, J, additional, Burrows, S, additional, Tatum, B, additional, Arthur, D, additional, Olsson, T, additional, Jain, S, additional, Hart, T, additional, Stringer, P, additional, and Laurent, G M, additional
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
99. User evaluation of mobile augmented reality in architectural planning
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Olsson, T, primary, Savisalo, A, additional, Hakkarainen, M, additional, and Woodward, C, additional
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- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
100. A Palaeolithic-type diet causes strong tissue-specific effects on ectopic fat deposition in obese postmenopausal women
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Ryberg, M., Sandberg, S., Mellberg, C., Stegle, O., Lindahl, B., Larsson, C., Hauksson, J., and Olsson, T.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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