CHICAGO – Preliminary data from a series of multiple sclerosis patients who underwent percutaneous transluminal venoplasty to treat chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency suggest that the treatment was safe and offered significant disease-specific and quality of life improvements.
The results of the controversial treatment on 125 patients in the series will need to be validated with future randomized, blinded, controlled trials that evaluate endovascular and surgical options, Dr. Manish Mehta said at the Vascular Annual Meeting.
 Photo credit: Images courtesy Dr. Manish Mehta
(Left to right) Internal jugular vein stenosis, angioplasty, completion angiogram.
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The patient series follows Dr. Paolo Zamboni’s identification in 2009 of stenoses in the internal jugular veins and azygous vein of patients with MS (J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatry 2009;80:392-9).
"Dr. Zamboni’s theory has been that stasis of blood can cause reflux, and reflux can cause propagation and [can] break down the blood-brain barrier," Dr. Mehta said. The resulting microbleeds can allow red blood cells to escape into the brain matter, leading to hemosiderin deposits that can act as the inflammatory mediators of an autoimmune response, he said.
Although Dr. Zamboni, a vascular surgeon and professor of surgery at the University of Ferrara (Italy), observed a strong association between chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI) and MS, it is unclear if the relationship between CCSVI and MS is causative, or if CCSVI might play a role in the etiology of the disease.
In 2009, Dr. Zamboni also reported on a series of 65 patients who had significant improvements in functional composite scores and quality of life at 1 year (J. Vasc. Surg. 2009;50;1348-58.e1-3).
The preliminary data that Dr. Mehta presented at the meeting came from the LIBERATION study, which is designed to assess the utility of percutaneous transluminal venoplasty for individuals with CCSVI and MS. It’s a prospective, randomized, double-blind study that is currently enrolling 600 patients.
Because there is a learning curve involved with the assessment and technique, the researchers included a prospective longitudinal arm as part of the study. Dr. Mehta of the Albany (N.Y.) Medical College and the director of endovascular services for the Vascular Group PLLC, presented preliminary results on this group of patients.
|  Dr. Manish Mehta
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In the study, investigators performed venograms to identify stenoses of 50% or greater in internal jugular and azygous veins in the patients, all of whom underwent venoplasty. Neurologists and other clinicians evaluated the patients at baseline, and then at 1 month, 3 months, and every 6 months thereafter.
The 125 patients included in the study had a mean age of 47 years, and 62% were female. Relapsing-remitting MS accounted for 54% of the patients, followed by secondary-progressive MS in 34% and primary-progressive MS in 12%.
The patients had a total of 230 lesions altogether, 90% of which involved the internal jugular veins; the majority of these were at the origin. The remaining 10% of patients had stenoses in their azygous veins.