Health Care Use Before Multiple Sclerosis Symptom Onset, 2025, Marta Ruiz-Algueró, MD, PhD et al

Mij

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Key Points
Question What are the patterns of health care use in the 25 years preceding the clinically determined onset of multiple sclerosis (MS)?

Findings In this cohort study of 2038 patients with MS and a matched cohort of 10 182 individuals without MS, all-cause physician visits were elevated 14 years before MS onset. Mental health–related visits and visits for ill-defined symptoms and signs were elevated 14 to 15 years before MS onset, followed by neurology and ophthalmology consultations (8-9 years before onset) and musculoskeletal, sensory, and nervous system visits (4-8 years before onset).

Meaning These findings suggest that MS may begin much earlier than previously recognized, with mental health–related issues as early indicators, highlighting opportunities for earlier identification and intervention.

Abstract
Importance
Health care use increases before multiple sclerosis (MS) onset. However, most studies have focused on the 5 to 10 years preceding the first demyelinating disease code from administrative data. Few studies have examined patterns before clinically determined MS symptom onset from clinical records.

Objective To examine health care use 25 years before MS symptom onset in a clinical cohort from British Columbia, Canada.

Design, Setting, and Participants This matched cohort study accessed data prospectively collected from January 1991 to September 2018. All data were released mid-2024 for analysis. The study was conducted in British Columbia using publicly funded universal health insurance data. Patients with MS were identified from MS clinic records and matched with up to 5 individuals randomly selected without replacement from the general population by sex, birth year, socioeconomic status, and postal code of residency.

Main Outcomes and Measures Linked clinical and administrative data were used to compare physician visit rates 25 years before MS onset using adjusted negative binomial models and 15 years before MS onset by International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD-9) chapter and physician specialty.

Results A total of 2038 patients with MS (mean [SD] age at symptom onset, 37.9 [10.9] years; 1508 female [74.0%]) and 10 182 matched individuals were included. All-cause physician visit rate ratios (RRs) for patients with MS were consistently elevated from 14 years before onset (adjusted RR [ARR], 1.19; 95% CI, 1.07-1.33), peaking the year before MS onset (ARR, 1.28; 95% CI, 1.21-1.35). The RRs for ill-defined symptoms and signs were consistently elevated 15 years before onset, exceeding 1.15 and peaking at 1.37 (95% CI, 1.19-1.56) the year before MS onset. Mental health–related RRs from 14 years before onset were significant (excluding years 7, 5, and 4), with RRs in the 3 years before MS onset ranging from 1.30 (95% CI, 1.05-1.58) to 1.38 (95% CI, 1.12-1.68). Sensory, musculoskeletal, and nervous system RRs were elevated 8, 5, and 4 years before onset, respectively, with, for example, a peak of 2.42 (95% CI, 1.90-3.07) for nervous system concerns the year before MS onset. By physician specialty, general practice visit RRs were significantly elevated in each of the 15 years before MS onset, reaching 1.23 (95% CI, 1.17-1.30) in the year before onset. Psychiatry visit RRs were elevated 12 years before onset (2.59; 95% CI, 1.23-5.47). Neurology and ophthalmology RRs were significantly higher up to 8 to 9 years before onset, peaking the year before MS onset at 5.46 (95% CI, 4.30-6.93) for neurology and 1.64 (95% CI, 1.30-2.08) for ophthalmology.

Conclusions and Relevance In this matched cohort study of people with and without MS, health care use was higher among patients with MS 14 to 15 years before MS symptom onset, suggesting that MS may have started earlier than previously thought. Mental health and psychiatric issues along with ill-defined signs and symptoms might be among the earliest features of the prodromal period preceding nervous system–related and neurologic visits by 7 to 11 years.
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Mental health and psychiatric issues along with ill-defined signs and symptoms might be among the earliest features of the prodromal period preceding nervous system–related and neurologic visits by 7 to 11 years.
I wonder how much this is influenced by symptoms being dismissed as «psychiatric»? I also wonder how many of these patients would have gotten an FND diagnosis prior to their MS diagnosis?
 
Mental health–related visits
But, is that really what they were? Or were they incorrectly coded this way? Which is by far the most plausible explanation.
Mental health and psychiatric issues along with ill-defined signs and symptoms might be among the earliest features of the prodromal period preceding nervous system–related and neurologic visits by 7 to 11 years.
Because it becomes very important when causative assertions are made as a result.

One thing I will never understand in this insane psychosomatic project is the total indifference to the validity of mental health data. So many claim to take mental health seriously, as serious as physical health, and yet they seem to have zero problem with invalid data polluting all mental health research, as if being incorrectly labelled as having mental health issues is not a problem, as a whole, when it comes to making conclusions out of population data, or for individuals, as misdiagnoses and delayed diagnoses remain a known problem for which absolutely nothing is being done to improve. For sure it will not be improved by this study making claims like this.

Everything points to the fact that almost no one in medicine actually take mental health seriously, pure virtue signalling for the most part, because then none of this would be happening. No serious professionals would ever be indifferent to issues they find important being made impossible to solve because it acts as a junk dumpster for unrelated issues. Niche, but it's basically like they're treating /dev/null as "this is also mental health data". What a freaking mess.
 
Mental health–related visits and visits for ill-defined symptoms and signs were elevated 14 to 15 years before MS onset, followed by neurology and ophthalmology consultations (8-9 years before onset) and musculoskeletal, sensory, and nervous system visits (4-8 years before onset).
Which could easily be explained as the routinely ignored or misinterpreted prodromal phase of MS, not the 'causally predisposing psychosocial factors' invariably claimed by psychosomatic campaigners and advocates.​
And everything @rvallee said in preceding comment.​
[Just seen your new signature. :thumbup:]​
 
Respectfully I think the right framing is not that patients with MS “see psychiatrists at triple the normal rate 12Y before symptoms,” it’s that doctors fail to recognize symptoms involving the brain as being MS for 12Y despite patients’ best efforts to get help.

 
Can’t wait for the «poorer mental health is a risk factor for developing MS»-spin. Or maybe they’ll try to tie it to adverse childhood experiences?

Edit: and of course he refuses to acknowledge the widespread neglect and gaslighting, says its often missed due to a lack of early biomarkers. Keep fooling yourself.
 
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