Latest News

PIRA – can it be applied to NMOSD?

 

Progression independent of relapse activity (PIRA) was a term coined a decade ago to describe the insidious disability worsening that occurs in multiple sclerosis during relapse-free periods due to neurodegenerative processes such as smouldering inflammation. A new study reports that 2.5% of patients with neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMOSD) also have PIRA events during long-term follow-up (Kang et al. Neurol Neuroimmunol Neuroinflamm 2026;13:e200533). Read More

Adjunctive therapy in focal epilepsy – highlights from AES 2025

 

Real-world use of cenobamate
New phase III data
Effect on mortality
Co-administration with cannabidiol

The International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) published its updated classification of epileptic seizures earlier this year, maintaining four seizure classes (Focal, Generalized, Unknown, Unclassified) and 21 seizure types (Beniczky et al. Epilepsia 2025;66:1804-1823). For example, focal seizures may be classified as focal preserved consciousness (FPC), focal impaired consciousness (FIC) or focal-to-bilateral tonic-clonic seizures (FBTC). Consciousness was defined by awareness (i.e. recall of events) and responsiveness. The basic descriptors are whether seizures have observable manifestations or not.
Read More

High-efficacy DMTs for MS: the year in review

 

Click here to complete the interactive survey on DMTs.
Once you submit your responses, you will be able to view all of your colleagues’ responses.

Early use of HE-DMTs
Use in pregnancy
Noteworthy studies in 2025
Switching between anti-CD20 agents

The year 2025 saw an increasing early use of high-efficacy disease-modifying therapies (HE-DMT) in patients with multiple sclerosis, either as the first-choice agent or for the first switch. The rationale for this change in practice patterns derived from the accumulating efficacy and safety data from clinical trials, database analyses and real-world studies on the use of anti-CD20 monoclonal antibodies.
Read More

TOPICS: