Multiple sclerosis and sarcoidosis: A case for coexistence. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Background: Patients with biopsy-proven systemic sarcoidosis who develop a chronic CNS disorder are often presumed to have neurosarcoidosis (NS), however, the possibility of comorbid neurologic disease, such as MS, must be considered if presentation and course are not typical for NS. Methods: Retrospective chart review across 4 academic MS centers was undertaken to identify patients with diagnosis of MS (2017 McDonald criteria) and biopsy-confirmed extraneural sarcoidosis. Data were abstracted from each chart using a case report form that systematically queried for demographic, clinical, and paraclinical characteristics relevant to NS and MS. Results: Ten patients met our inclusion criteria (mean age 47.7 [±5.9] years; 80% female). Noncaseating granulomas consistent with sarcoidosis were found on biopsy in all cases (lung 7/10, mediastinum 2/10, liver 1/10, spleen 1/10, and skin 1/10). Diagnosis of MS was based on clinical history of MS-like relapses and MRI findings characteristic of demyelination and typical disease evolution during follow-up (average of 7 years). No patient developed features of NS that could be considered a "red flag" against the diagnosis of MS (such as meningeal enhancement, hydrocephalus, and pituitary involvement). All patients were treated with disease-modifying therapy for MS. Conclusions: We propose a rational diagnostic approach to patients with sarcoidosis who may have comorbid MS. When the clinical picture is equivocal, the presence of multiple "MS-typical lesions" and the absence of any "NS-typical lesions" on MRI favor diagnosis of MS. Close follow-up is required to ascertain whether clinical and radiologic disease evolution and response to MS therapies conform to the proposed diagnosis of MS.

authors

  • Tyshkov, Charles
  • Pawate, Siddharama
  • Bradshaw, Michael J
  • Kimbrough, Dorlan J
  • Chitnis, Tanuja
  • Gelfand, Jeffrey M
  • Ryerson, Lana Zhovtis
  • Kister, Ilya

publication date

  • June 1, 2019

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC6615652

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85070517076

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1212/CPJ.0000000000000629

PubMed ID

  • 31341709

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 9

issue

  • 3