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Dive into the research topics where Lisanne J. Balk is active.

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Featured researches published by Lisanne J. Balk.


PLOS ONE | 2012

The OSCAR-IB Consensus Criteria for Retinal OCT Quality Assessment

Prejaas K. Tewarie; Lisanne J. Balk; Fiona Costello; Ari J. Green; Roland Martin; Sven Schippling; Axel Petzold

Background Retinal optical coherence tomography (OCT) is an imaging biomarker for neurodegeneration in multiple sclerosis (MS). In order to become validated as an outcome measure in multicenter studies, reliable quality control (QC) criteria with high inter-rater agreement are required. Methods/Principal Findings A prospective multicentre study on developing consensus QC criteria for retinal OCT in MS: (1) a literature review on OCT QC criteria; (2) application of these QC criteria to a training set of 101 retinal OCT scans from patients with MS; (3) kappa statistics for inter-rater agreement; (4) identification reasons for inter-rater disagreement; (5) development of new consensus QC criteria; (6) testing of the new QC criteria on the training set and (7) prospective validation on a new set of 159 OCT scans from patients with MS. The inter-rater agreement for acceptable scans among OCT readers (n = 3) was moderate (kappa 0·45) based on the non-validated QC criteria which were entirely based on the ophthalmological literature. A new set of QC criteria was developed based on recognition of: (O) obvious problems, (S) poor signal strength, (C) centration of scan, (A) algorithm failure, (R) retinal pathology other than MS related, (I) illumination and (B) beam placement. Adhering to these OSCAR-IB QC criteria increased the inter-rater agreement to kappa from moderate to substantial (0.61 training set and 0.61 prospective validation). Conclusions This study presents the first validated consensus QC criteria for retinal OCT reading in MS. The high inter-rater agreement suggests the OSCAR-IB QC criteria to be considered in the context of multicentre studies and trials in MS.


Lancet Neurology | 2016

Retinal thickness measured with optical coherence tomography and risk of disability worsening in multiple sclerosis: a cohort study

Elena H. Martinez-Lapiscina; Sam Arnow; James A. Wilson; Shiv Saidha; Jana Lizrova Preiningerova; Timm Oberwahrenbrock; Alexander U. Brandt; Luis E. Pablo; Simone Guerrieri; Ines Gonzalez; Olivier Outteryck; Ann-Kristin Mueller; Phillip Albrecht; Wesley Chan; Sebastian Lukas; Lisanne J. Balk; Clare L. Fraser; J. L. Frederiksen; Jennifer Resto; Teresa C. Frohman; Christian Cordano; Irati Zubizarreta; Magi Andorra; Bernardo Sanchez-Dalmau; Albert Saiz; Robert A. Bermel; Alexander Klistorner; Axel Petzold; Sven Schippling; Fiona Costello

BACKGROUND Most patients with multiple sclerosis without previous optic neuritis have thinner retinal layers than healthy controls. We assessed the role of peripapillary retinal nerve fibre layer (pRNFL) thickness and macular volume in eyes with no history of optic neuritis as a biomarker of disability worsening in a cohort of patients with multiple sclerosis who had at least one eye without optic neuritis available. METHODS In this multicentre, cohort study, we collected data about patients (age ≥16 years old) with clinically isolated syndrome, relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis, and progressive multiple sclerosis. Patients were recruited from centres in Spain, Italy, France, Germany, Czech Republic, Netherlands, Canada, and the USA, with the first cohort starting in 2008 and the latest cohort starting in 2013. We assessed disability worsening using the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS). The pRNFL thickness and macular volume were assessed once at study entry (baseline) by optical coherence tomography (OCT) and was calculated as the mean value of both eyes without optic neuritis for patients without a history of optic neuritis or the value of the non-optic neuritis eye for patients with previous unilateral optic neuritis. Researchers who did the OCT at baseline were masked to EDSS results and the researchers assessing disability with EDSS were masked to OCT results. We estimated the association of pRNFL thickness or macular volume at baseline in eyes without optic neuritis with the risk of subsequent disability worsening by use of proportional hazards models that included OCT metrics and age, disease duration, disability, presence of previous unilateral optic neuritis, and use of disease-modifying therapies as covariates. FINDINGS 879 patients with clinically isolated syndrome (n=74), relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (n=664), or progressive multiple sclerosis (n=141) were included in the primary analyses. Disability worsening occurred in 252 (29%) of 879 patients with multiple sclerosis after a median follow-up of 2·0 years (range 0·5-5 years). Patients with a pRNFL of less than or equal to 87 μm or less than or equal to 88 μm (measured with Spectralis or Cirrus OCT devices) had double the risk of disability worsening at any time after the first and up to the third years of follow-up (hazard ratio 2·06, 95% CI 1·36-3·11; p=0·001), and the risk was increased by nearly four times after the third and up to the fifth years of follow-up (3·81, 1·63-8·91; p=0·002). We did not identify meaningful associations for macular volume. INTERPRETATION Our results provide evidence of the usefulness of monitoring pRNFL thickness by OCT for prediction of the risk of disability worsening with time in patients with multiple sclerosis. FUNDING Instituto de Salud Carlos III.


Neurology | 2013

Spinal cord lesions in patients with clinically isolated syndrome A powerful tool in diagnosis and prognosis

Madeleine H. Sombekke; Mike P. Wattjes; Lisanne J. Balk; Jessica M. Nielsen; Hugo Vrenken; Bernard M. J. Uitdehaag; Chris H. Polman; Frederik Barkhof

ABSTRACT Objective: Spinal cord (SC) lesions are frequently found in multiple sclerosis (MS), but are rare in healthy aging and cerebrovascular patients. Our aim was to analyze the contribution of SC involvement in clinically isolated syndrome (CIS) in diagnosing MS according the McDonald 2010 criteria and in predicting conversion to clinically definite MS (CDMS). Methods: We prospectively followed monofocal, relapsing onset CIS patients with either SC or brain symptom onset (including optic neuritis). MRI of the brain and SC were performed shortly after onset and patients were followed for 24 to 119 months (median 64 months). SC MRI findings were assessed for their contribution to the McDonald 2010 diagnostic criteria and their effect on conversion to CDMS. Results: One hundred twenty-one patients were included (63 spinal CIS). Based on the brain scan only, 36 patients fulfilled the McDonald criteria; by including SC findings, 6 additional patients fulfilled these criteria. To diagnose 1 additional nonspinal CIS patient, the number needed to scan is 7. In nonspinal CIS patients that did not fulfill McDonald brain MRI criteria (n = 42), presence of an SC lesion was associated with a higher risk of conversion to CDMS (odds ratio: 14.4; 95% confidence interval: 2.6–80.0) and shorter time to conversion to CDMS (hazard ratio: 51.4; 95% confidence interval: 5.5–476.3). Conclusions: Presence of SC lesions facilitates diagnosing MS and is predictive for conversion to CDMS, especially in patients with nonspinal CIS who do not fulfill brain MRI criteria. We therefore recommend performing an SC scan in patients with nonspinal CIS who do not fulfill McDonald brain MRI criteria.


Neurology | 2016

The APOSTEL recommendations for reporting quantitative optical coherence tomography studies.

Andrés Cruz-Herranz; Lisanne J. Balk; Timm Oberwahrenbrock; Shiv Saidha; Elena H. Martinez-Lapiscina; Wolf A. Lagrèze; Joel S. Schuman; Pablo Villoslada; Peter A. Calabresi; Laura J. Balcer; Axel Petzold; Ari J. Green; Friedemann Paul; Alexander U. Brandt; Philipp Albrecht

Objective: To develop consensus recommendations for reporting of quantitative optical coherence tomography (OCT) study results. Methods: A panel of experienced OCT researchers (including 11 neurologists, 2 ophthalmologists, and 2 neuroscientists) discussed requirements for performing and reporting quantitative analyses of retinal morphology and developed a list of initial recommendations based on experience and previous studies. The list of recommendations was subsequently revised during several meetings of the coordinating group. Results: We provide a 9-point checklist encompassing aspects deemed relevant when reporting quantitative OCT studies. The areas covered are study protocol, acquisition device, acquisition settings, scanning protocol, funduscopic imaging, postacquisition data selection, postacquisition data analysis, recommended nomenclature, and statistical analysis. Conclusions: The Advised Protocol for OCT Study Terminology and Elements recommendations include core items to standardize and improve quality of reporting in quantitative OCT studies. The recommendations will make reporting of quantitative OCT studies more consistent and in line with existing standards for reporting research in other biomedical areas. The recommendations originated from expert consensus and thus represent Class IV evidence. They will need to be regularly adjusted according to new insights and practices.


Multiple Sclerosis Journal | 2014

Magnetic resonance imaging correlates of physical disability in relapse onset multiple sclerosis of long disease duration.

H. Kearney; Maria A. Rocca; Paola Valsasina; Lisanne J. Balk; Jaume Sastre-Garriga; J. Reinhardt; Serena Ruggieri; Alex Rovira; Christoph Stippich; Ludwig Kappos; Till Sprenger; Paola Tortorella; Marco Rovaris; Claudio Gasperini; Xavier Montalban; Jeroen J. G. Geurts; Chris H. Polman; F. Barkhof; Massimo Filippi; Daniel R. Altmann; Olga Ciccarelli; Dh Miller; Declan Chard

Background: Understanding long-term disability in multiple sclerosis (MS) is a key goal of research; it is relevant to how we monitor and treat the disease. Objectives: The Magnetic Imaging in MS (MAGNIMS) collaborative group sought to determine the relationship of brain lesion load, and brain and spinal cord atrophy, with physical disability in patients with long-established MS. Methods: Patients had a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan of their brain and spinal cord, from which we determined brain grey (GMF) and white matter (WMF) fractional volumes, upper cervical spinal cord cross-sectional area (UCCA) and brain T2-lesion volume (T2LV). We assessed patient disability using the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS). We analysed associations between EDSS and MRI measures, using two regression models (dividing cohort by EDSS into two and four sub-groups). Results: In the binary model, UCCA (p < 0.01) and T2LV (p = 0.02) were independently associated with the requirement of a walking aid. In the four-category model UCCA (p < 0.01), T2LV (p = 0.02) and GMF (p = 0.04) were independently associated with disability. Conclusions: Long-term physical disability was independently linked with atrophy of the spinal cord and brain T2 lesion load, and less consistently, with brain grey matter atrophy. Combinations of spinal cord and brain MRI measures may be required to capture clinically-relevant information in people with MS of long disease duration.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2014

A dam for retrograde axonal degeneration in multiple sclerosis

Lisanne J. Balk; Jos W. R. Twisk; Steenwijk; Marita Daams; Prejaas K. Tewarie; J. Killestein; Bernard M. J. Uitdehaag; Chris H. Polman; Axel Petzold

Objective Trans-synaptic axonal degeneration is a mechanism by which neurodegeneration can spread from a sick to a healthy neuron in the central nervous system. This study investigated to what extent trans-synaptic axonal degeneration takes place within the visual pathway in multiple sclerosis (MS). Methods A single-centre study, including patients with long-standing MS and healthy controls. Structural imaging of the brain (MRI) and retina (spectral-domain optical coherence tomography) were used to quantify the extent of atrophy of individual retinal layers and the primary and secondary visual cortex. Generalised estimation equations and multivariable regression analyses were used for comparisons. Results Following rigorous quality control (OSCAR-IB), data from 549 eyes of 293 subjects (230 MS, 63 healthy controls) were included. Compared with control data, there was a significant amount of atrophy of the inner retinal layers in MS following optic neuritis (ON) and also in absence of ON. For both scenarios, atrophy stopped at the level of the inner nuclear layer. In contrast, there was significant localised atrophy of the primary visual cortex and secondary visual cortex in MS following ON, but not in MS in absence of ON. Interpretation These data suggest that retrograde (trans-synaptic) axonal degeneration stops at the inner nuclear layer, a neuronal network capable of plasticity. In contrast, there seems to be no neuroplasticity of the primary visual cortex, rendering the structure vulnerable to anterograde (trans-synaptic) degeneration.


Brain | 2012

Microcystic macular oedema confirmed, but not specific for multiple sclerosis

Lisanne J. Balk; Joep Killestein; Chris H. Polman; Bernard M. J. Uitdehaag; Axel Petzold

Sir, a potentially new sign in multiple sclerosis was described in Brain (Gelfland et al. , 2012). This new sign, microcystic macular oedema, is intriguing because it is considered to indicate breakdown of the blood-retinal barrier with or without microglial inflammation (Gelfland et al. , 2012). There are earlier reports on vascular instability and leakage during inflammation in multiple sclerosis readily seen as sheathing of the retinal veins (Rucker, 1944). Not commented on in the article, but clearly visible from the images (Figs 1A, 3A, B and C in Gelfland et al. , 2012), microcystic macular oedema occurs in areas without vascular sheathing. In fact, in most cases microcystic oedema is seen remote to the inner retinal vasculature (Figs 1A and 3A–C in Gelfland et al. , 2012). Why does microcystic oedema predominantly affect retinal layers close to the very tight inner blood retinal barrier? Are there alternative pathological features to be considered? One possibility could be Muller cell pathology. Like astrocytes in the brain, Muller cells are responsible for maintaining tissue homeostasis. Muller cells transverse all retinal layers orthogonal …


Lancet Neurology | 2017

Retinal layer segmentation in multiple sclerosis: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Axel Petzold; Laura J. Balcer; Peter A. Calabresi; Fiona Costello; Teresa C. Frohman; Elliot M. Frohman; Elena H Martinez-Lapiscina; Ari J. Green; Randy H. Kardon; Olivier Outteryck; Friedemann Paul; Sven Schippling; P. Vermersch; Pablo Villoslada; Lisanne J. Balk; Orhan Aktas; Philipp Albrecht; Jane Ashworth; Nasrin Asgari; Laura Balcer; Graeme Black; Daniel Boehringer; Raed Behbehani; Leslie Benson; Robert A. Bermel; Jacqueline Bernard; Alexander U. Brandt; Jodie Burton; Jonathan Calkwood; Christian Cordano

BACKGROUND Structural retinal imaging biomarkers are important for early recognition and monitoring of inflammation and neurodegeneration in multiple sclerosis. With the introduction of spectral domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT), supervised automated segmentation of individual retinal layers is possible. We aimed to investigate which retinal layers show atrophy associated with neurodegeneration in multiple sclerosis when measured with SD-OCT. METHODS In this systematic review and meta-analysis, we searched for studies in which SD-OCT was used to look at the retina in people with multiple sclerosis with or without optic neuritis in PubMed, Web of Science, and Google Scholar between Nov 22, 1991, and April 19, 2016. Data were taken from cross-sectional cohorts and from one timepoint from longitudinal studies (at least 3 months after onset in studies of optic neuritis). We classified data on eyes into healthy controls, multiple-sclerosis-associated optic neuritis (MSON), and multiple sclerosis without optic neuritis (MSNON). We assessed thickness of the retinal layers and we rated individual layer segmentation performance by random effects meta-analysis for MSON eyes versus control eyes, MSNON eyes versus control eyes, and MSNON eyes versus MSON eyes. We excluded relevant sources of bias by funnel plots. FINDINGS Of 25 497 records identified, 110 articles were eligible and 40 reported data (in total 5776 eyes from patients with multiple sclerosis [1667 MSON eyes and 4109 MSNON eyes] and 1697 eyes from healthy controls) that met published OCT quality control criteria and were suitable for meta-analysis. Compared with control eyes, the peripapillary retinal nerve fibre layer (RNFL) showed thinning in MSON eyes (mean difference -20·10 μm, 95% CI -22·76 to -17·44; p<0·0001) and in MSNON eyes (-7·41 μm, -8·98 to -5·83; p<0·0001). The macula showed RNFL thinning of -6·18 μm (-8·07 to -4·28; p<0·0001) in MSON eyes and -2·15 μm (-3·15 to -1·15; p<0·0001) in MSNON eyes compared with control eyes. Atrophy of the macular ganglion cell layer and inner plexiform layer (GCIPL) was -16·42 μm (-19·23 to -13·60; p<0·0001) for MSON eyes and -6·31 μm (-7·75 to -4·87; p<0·0001) for MSNON eyes compared with control eyes. A small degree of inner nuclear layer (INL) thickening occurred in MSON eyes compared with control eyes (0·77 μm, 0·25 to 1·28; p=0·003). We found no statistical difference in the thickness of the combined outer nuclear layer and outer plexiform layer when we compared MSNON or MSON eyes with control eyes, but we found a small degree of thickening of the combined layer when we compared MSON eyes with MSNON eyes (1·21 μm, 0·24 to 2·19; p=0·01). INTERPRETATION The largest and most robust differences between the eyes of people with multiple sclerosis and control eyes were found in the peripapillary RNFL and macular GCIPL. Inflammatory disease activity might be captured by the INL. Because of the consistency, robustness, and large effect size, we recommend inclusion of the peripapillary RNFL and macular GCIPL for diagnosis, monitoring, and research. FUNDING None.


Multiple Sclerosis Journal | 2014

Disease course heterogeneity and OCT in multiple sclerosis

Lisanne J. Balk; Prejaas K. Tewarie; J. Killestein; Chris H. Polman; Bernard M. J. Uitdehaag; Axel Petzold

Background: The heterogeneity of the disease course in multiple sclerosis (MS) remains a challenge for patient management and clinical trials. Objective: The objective of this paper is to investigate the relationship between disease course heterogeneity and retinal layer thicknesses in MS. Methods: A total of 230 MS patients and 63 healthy control subjects were included. Spectral-domain OCT scanning of the peripapillary and macular regions was performed, followed by automated eight-layer segmentation. Generalised estimation equations were used for comparisons. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were calculated for distinguishing a benign from a typical disease course. Results: Primary progressive patients showed relative preservation of inner retinal layers, compared to the relapsing onset MS types. Only in MS eyes without optic neuritis did patients with typical MS show more severe thinning of the inner retinal layers (RNFL to INL) compared to patients with a benign disease course, even after an average disease course of 20 years. Conclusion: The thicknesses, particularly of the innermost retinal layers (RNFL, GCC), were significantly related to the heterogeneous disease course in MS. The relative preservation of these layers in primary progressive and benign MS suggests rather limited susceptibility of the retina to neurodegeneration, which may be relevant for future neurodegenerative treatment trials employing OCT as a secondary outcome measure in primary progressive MS.


Multiple Sclerosis Journal | 2016

Multi-parametric structural magnetic resonance imaging in relation to cognitive dysfunction in long-standing multiple sclerosis

Marita Daams; Martijn D. Steenwijk; Menno M. Schoonheim; Mike P. Wattjes; Lisanne J. Balk; Prejaas K. Tewarie; J. Killestein; Bernard M. J. Uitdehaag; Jeroen J. G. Geurts; Frederik Barkhof

Background: Cognitive deficits are common in multiple sclerosis. Most previous studies investigating the imaging substrate of cognitive deficits in multiple sclerosis included patients with relatively short disease durations and were limited to one modality/brain region. Objective: To identify the strongest neuroimaging predictors for cognitive dysfunction in a large cohort of patients with long-standing multiple sclerosis. Methods: Extensive neuropsychological testing and multimodal 3.0T MRI was performed in 202 patients with multiple sclerosis and 52 controls. Cognitive scores were compared between groups using Z-scores. Whole-brain, white matter, grey matter, deep grey matter and lesion volumes; cortical thickness, (juxta)cortical and cerebellar lesions; and extent and severity of diffuse white matter damage were measured. Stepwise linear regression was used to identify the strongest predictors for cognitive dysfunction. Results: All cognitive domains were affected in patients. Patients showed extensive atrophy, focal pathology and damage in up to 75% of the investigated white matter. Associations between imaging markers and average cognition were two times stronger in cognitively impaired patients than in cognitively preserved patients. The final model for average cognition consisted of deep grey matter DGMV volume and fractional anisotropy severity (adjusted R²=0.490; p<0.001). Conclusion: From all imaging markers, deep grey matter atrophy and diffuse white matter damage emerged as the strongest predictors for cognitive dysfunction in long-standing multiple sclerosis.

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Axel Petzold

Moorfields Eye Hospital

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Friedemann Paul

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Ari J. Green

University of California

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