Apart from the previously cited spectrums (
Anti-AQP4 diseases,
Anti-MOG, and
Anti-NF) there is a long list of MS variants, with possibly different pathogenesis, which are still idiopathic and considered inside the MS-spectrum.
Pseudotumefactive variants Most atypical variants appear as
tumefactive or pseudotumefactive variants (lesions whose size is more than , with mass effect, oedema and/or ring enhancement) Some cases of the following have shown anti-MOG auto-antibodies and therefore they represent MS cases only partially. •
Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis or ADEM, a closely related disorder in which a known virus or vaccine triggers autoimmunity against myelin. Around 40% of the ADEM cases are due to an "anti-MOG associated encephalomyelitis". and is sometimes considered a synonym for
Tumefactive multiple sclerosis •
Balo concentric sclerosis, an unusual presentation of plaques forming concentrenic circles, which can sometimes get better spontaneously. •
Schilder disease or diffuse myelinoclastic sclerosis: is a rare disease that presents clinically as a pseudotumoural demyelinating lesion; and is more common in children. •
Solitary sclerosis: This variant was proposed (2012) by Mayo Clinic researchers. though it was also reported by other groups more or less at the same time. It is defined as isolated demyelinating lesions which produce a progressive myelopathy similar to primary progressive MS.
Atypical lesion location variants Also the location of the lesions can be used to classify variants:
Myelocortical multiple sclerosis Myelocortical multiple sclerosis (MCMS), proposed variant with demyelination of spinal cord and cerebral cortex but not of cerebral white matter. Several atypical cases could belong here. See the early reports of MCMS.
AQP4-negative Optic-spinal MS Real
Optic-spinal MS (OSMS) without anti-AQP4 antibodies, has been consistently reported, and it is classified into the MS spectrum. OSMS has its own specific immunological biomarkers The whole picture is under construction and several reports exists about overlapping conditions.
Pure spinal MS Pure spinal multiple sclerosis: Patients with clinical and paraclinical features suggestive of cord involvement of multiple sclerosis (MS)-type albeit not rigidly fulfilling the McDonald criteria Some inflammatory conditions are associated with the presence of scleroses in the CNS.
Optic neuritis (monophasic and recurrent) and
Transverse myelitis (monophasic and recurrent)
LHON associated MS LHON associated MS (LHON-MS), a presentation of LHON with MS-like CNS damage, and therefore a subtype of MS according to McDonalds definition. They represent around 5% of the cases which is suspected to be immunogenetically different. Their evolution is better than standard MS patients, •
Oligoclonal IgM positive MS, with
immunoglobulin-M Bands (IgM-Bands), which accounts for a 30-40% of the MS population and has been identified as a predictor of MS severity. It has been reported to have a poor response to interferon-beta but a better response to glatimer acetate instead • '''OCB's types:''' OCBs are made up of activated B-cells. It seems that the molecular targets for the OCB's are patient-specific.
Radiologically atypical variants Inside well defined MS (Lesions disseminated in time and space with no other explanation) there are atypical cases based in radiological or metabolic criteria. A four-groups classification has been proposed: • Tumefactive demyelinating lesion (TDL)-onset MS • Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM)-like MS •
Multiple sclerosis with cavitary lesions: Atypical multiple sclerosis cases similar to
vanishing white matter disease but etiologically different from both. Lesions similar to
vanishing white matter disease • infiltrative • megacystic • Baló-like • ring-like lesions
Atypical clinical courses In 1996, the US National Multiple Sclerosis Society (NMSS) Advisory Committee on Clinical Trials in Multiple Sclerosis (ACCTMS) standardized four clinical courses for MS (Remitent-Recidivant, Secondary Progressive, Progressive-Relapsing and Primary progressive). Later, some reports state that those "types" were artificially made up trying to classify RRMS as a separate disease so that the number of patients was low enough to get the interferon approved by the FDA under the orphan drugs act.
Highly Active MS As of 2019, HAMS is defined as an RRMS phenotype with one or more of the following characteristics: being linked to
Connexin 43 autoantibodies with
pattern III lesions (distal oligodendrogliopathy) and being responsive to
plasma exchange In very rapidly progressive multiple sclerosis the use of immunosuppressive therapy (mitoxantrone/cyclophosphamide), rituximab, autologous haematopoietic stem cell therapy or combination therapy should be considered carefully. ==Under research==