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Putting shared decision-making into practice

 

Three elements
Decision aids
Use of patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs)
Switching therapy
SDM: strengths and limitations

The concept of shared decision-making (SDM) has gained momentum in recent years as the preferred approach to MS care. The emergence of SDM two decades ago can be traced back to an acknowledgement of the greater role patients wanted to play in their care decisions, in part due to the recognition that patients’ treatment goals may differ from those of the clinician (Kumar et al. Patient Prefer Adherence 2021;15:1515-1527); and a proliferation of treatments that were similar so that medication choices were preference-sensitive. The advent of social media provided a further spur to patients’ notions of empowerment and participatory medicine (Kantor et al. Neurol Ther 2018;7:37-49). Read More

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CLINICAL CASES IN MS – AN OLDER PATIENT WITH STABLE DISEASE

 

Click here to watch Dr. Courtney Casserly discuss the case and the responses to the survey.

Janet, 58, currently works full-time running an animal grooming business. She is married with two adult children.  She was diagnosed in 1997 with RRMS after presenting with two mild relapses. MRI at that time revealed a low T2 burden of disease. She was initially hesitant about starting treatment. In 2003, she initiated therapy with interferon-beta-1b after experiencing a moderately-severe relapse with some residual disability. EDSS was 1.5. Read More

The end of MS phenotypes?

 

The International Advisory Committee on Clinical Trials in Multiple Sclerosis is recommending that the clinical course descriptions of MS – relapsing-remitting (RRMS), secondary-progressive (SPMS) and primary-progressive (PPMS) – be discarded in favour of a more biology-based approach (Kuhlmann et al. Lancet Neurol 2022; epublished November 18, 2022). Read More

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MS Awards 2022 – Oddities and Observations

 

MS Prodromedary Prize
A study in Saudi Arabia found that the most important risk factor for the development of MS was consumption of camel milk (odds ratio 2.50) (Alkhawajah et al. Neuroepidemiology 2022;56:97-103). Read More

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