Personalized treatment decision algorithms for the clinical application of serum neurofilament light chain in multiple sclerosis: A modified Delphi Study.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
July 2025
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Contributor
Yaldizli, Özgür | |
Benkert, Pascal | |
Achtnichts, Lutz | |
Bar-Or, Amit | |
Bohner-Lang, Viviane | |
Bridel, Claire | |
Comabella, Manuel | |
Disanto, Giulio | |
Finkener, Sebastian | |
Gobbi, Claudio | |
Granziera, Cristina | |
Herwerth, Marina | |
Horakova, Dana | |
Khalil, Michael | |
Kunz, Philipp | |
Lalive, Patrice | |
Linker, Ralf | |
Lorscheider, Johannes | |
Oechtering, Johanna | |
Pettypool, Victoria | |
Piehl, Fredrik | |
Pot, Caroline | |
Théaudin, Marie | |
Tintore, Mar | |
Tur, Carmen | |
Uffer, Denis | |
Uginet, Marjolaine | |
Vehoff, Jochen | |
Wiendl, Heinz | |
Ziemssen, Tjalf | |
Zecca, Chiara | |
Leppert, David | |
Derfuss, Tobias | |
Hemkens, Lars G | |
Janiaud, Perrine | |
Kuhle, Jens |
Subject(s)
Series
Multiple Sclerosis Journal
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1477-0970
1352-4585
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
40296363
Uncontrolled Keywords
Description
Background
Serum neurofilament light (sNfL) chain levels, a sensitive measure of disease activity in multiple sclerosis (MS), are increasingly considered for individual therapy optimization yet without consensus on their use for clinical application.
Objective
We here propose treatment decision algorithms incorporating sNfL levels to adapt disease-modifying therapies (DMTs).Methods
We conducted a modified Delphi study to reach consensus on algorithms using sNfL within typical clinical scenarios. sNfL levels were defined as "high" (>90th percentile) vs "normal" (<80th percentile), based on normative values of control persons. In three rounds, 10 international and 18 Swiss MS experts, and 3 patient consultants rated their agreement on treatment algorithms. Consensus thresholds were defined as moderate (50%-79%), broad (80%-94%), strong (≥95%), and full (100%).
Results
The Delphi provided 9 escalation algorithms (e.g. initiating treatment based on high sNfL), 11 horizontal switch (e.g. switching natalizumab to another high-efficacy DMT based on high sNfL), and 3 de-escalation (e.g. stopping DMT or extending intervals in B-cell depleting therapies).
Conclusion
The consensus reached on typical clinical scenarios provides the basis for using sNfL to inform treatment decisions in a randomized pragmatic trial, an important step to gather robust evidence for using sNfL to inform personalized treatment decisions in clinical practice.
Serum neurofilament light (sNfL) chain levels, a sensitive measure of disease activity in multiple sclerosis (MS), are increasingly considered for individual therapy optimization yet without consensus on their use for clinical application.
Objective
We here propose treatment decision algorithms incorporating sNfL levels to adapt disease-modifying therapies (DMTs).Methods
We conducted a modified Delphi study to reach consensus on algorithms using sNfL within typical clinical scenarios. sNfL levels were defined as "high" (>90th percentile) vs "normal" (<80th percentile), based on normative values of control persons. In three rounds, 10 international and 18 Swiss MS experts, and 3 patient consultants rated their agreement on treatment algorithms. Consensus thresholds were defined as moderate (50%-79%), broad (80%-94%), strong (≥95%), and full (100%).
Results
The Delphi provided 9 escalation algorithms (e.g. initiating treatment based on high sNfL), 11 horizontal switch (e.g. switching natalizumab to another high-efficacy DMT based on high sNfL), and 3 de-escalation (e.g. stopping DMT or extending intervals in B-cell depleting therapies).
Conclusion
The consensus reached on typical clinical scenarios provides the basis for using sNfL to inform treatment decisions in a randomized pragmatic trial, an important step to gather robust evidence for using sNfL to inform personalized treatment decisions in clinical practice.
File(s)
File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
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yaldizli-et-al-2025-personalized-treatment-decision-algorithms-for-the-clinical-application-of-serum-neurofilament.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 2.02 MB | published |