Fifteen-year longitudinal population-based study of very late-diagnosed multiple sclerosis: Epidemiological and clinical insights

•Long-term follow-up of a population-based VLOMS cohort over 15 years.•Aging and comorbidities may accelerate disability in VLOMS.•Older age at diagnosis is the strongest predictor of progression.•92 % of patients reached EDSS 6 within 6.3 years of diagnosis.•Mortality reached 32 %, with a mean surv...

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Published inMultiple sclerosis and related disorders Vol. 103; p. 106701
Main Authors Solaro, Claudio, Pretti, Novella, Uccelli, Michele Messmer
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 01.11.2025
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ISSN2211-0348
2211-0356
2211-0356
DOI10.1016/j.msard.2025.106701

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Summary:•Long-term follow-up of a population-based VLOMS cohort over 15 years.•Aging and comorbidities may accelerate disability in VLOMS.•Older age at diagnosis is the strongest predictor of progression.•92 % of patients reached EDSS 6 within 6.3 years of diagnosis.•Mortality reached 32 %, with a mean survival of 10 years post-diagnosis. The epidemiology of Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is evolving with increasing incidence and prevalence in older individuals, but data on very late-onset MS (VLOMS, ≥60 years) remains limited. This study evaluates clinical features, disease progression, and long-term disability accumulation in VLOMS subjects from the Genoa MS cohort. Among 530 incident MS cases (1998–2007), 38 (7.2 %) were diagnosed at ≥60 years. Data were collected and analyzed over a 15-year follow-up. At diagnosis, the mean age was 65 years, with 22 females (57.9 %). 24 (63 %) had primary progressive MS (mean EDSS 3.8), and 14 (37 %) had relapsing-remitting MS (mean EDSS 3.0). Of the latter, 11 (79 %) converted to secondary progressive MS within a mean of 3.7 years. Overall, 35 (92 %) subjects reached EDSS 6 within a mean of 6.3 years. Number of comorbidities at diagnosis strongly related to the probability of being alive at last follow-up. 16 subjects received DMT, and only three remained on treatment at last follow-up. Mortality was 32 %, with a mean survival of 10 years from diagnosis. VLOMS presents a severe disease course with rapid disability accumulation. Age at diagnosis remains the strongest predictor of disease progression, highlighting the need for tailored management strategies.
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ISSN:2211-0348
2211-0356
2211-0356
DOI:10.1016/j.msard.2025.106701