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Featured researches published by Murat Terzi.


Annals of Neurology | 2015

Switch to Natalizumab versus Fingolimod in Active Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis

Tomas Kalincik; Dana Horakova; Tim Spelman; Vilija Jokubaitis; Maria Trojano; Alessandra Lugaresi; Guillermo Izquierdo; Csilla Rozsa; Pierre Grammond; Raed Alroughani; Pierre Duquette; Marc Girard; Eugenio Pucci; Jeannette Lechner-Scott; Mark Slee; Ricardo Fernandez-Bolanos; Francios Grand'Maison; Raymond Hupperts; Freek Verheul; Suzanne J. Hodgkinson; Celia Oreja-Guevara; D. Spitaleri; Michael Barnett; Murat Terzi; Roberto Bergamaschi; Pamela A. McCombe; J. L. Sanchez-Menoyo; Magdolna Simó; Tünde Csépány; Garbor Rum

In patients suffering multiple sclerosis activity despite treatment with interferon β or glatiramer acetate, clinicians often switch therapy to either natalizumab or fingolimod. However, no studies have directly compared the outcomes of switching to either of these agents.


Multiple Sclerosis Journal | 2012

Clinical And Radiological Characteristics Of Tumefactive Demyelinating Lesions: Follow-up Study

Ayse Altintas; B Petek; N Isik; Murat Terzi; F Bolukbasi; M Tavsanli; Sabahattin Saip; Cavit Boz; T Aydin; O Arici-Duz; F Ozer; A. Siva

Background: Demyelinating lesions over 20 mm in size, referred to as tumefactive demyelinating lesions, can be misdiagnosed as being either a tumor or an abscess. Although some radiological characteristics can help make a differential diagnosis easier, a cerebral biopsy may still be necessary. Objective: Our objective was to assess the clinical characteristics of tumefactive lesions, with or without a diagnosis of multiple sclerosis (MS), and present follow-up data for 54 patients with tumefactive lesions. Methods: Demographic, clinical, radiological and laboratory data were gathered and treatment responses were evaluated in a total of 54 patients from five medical centers. Result: Twenty-nine patients were diagnosed with tumefactive lesions at the onset, whereas 25 patients were diagnosed with tumefactive lesions after a diagnosis of MS. Median follow-up was 38.12 months. At final examination, 19 of the patients with a tumefactive lesion diagnosis at the onset eventually developed relapsing–remitting MS, while 10 remained with the condition as a clinically isolated syndrome. The tumefactive lesions studied were mostly focal, with closed-ring enhancement. We found that oligoclonal band positivity was less frequent in the patients with tumefactive onset. Conclusion: Although our demographic data were similar to formerly collected Turkish MS data, we found that the distribution of the patients’ clinical course differed if there was an absence of primary progressive MS and that there was a lower frequency of secondary progressive MS cases in our group of patients. We believe that less frequent oligoclonal band positivity and the difference we witnessed in the clinical course of disease in our study groups suggest that there is a need for further studies to compare all the biological and immunological differences between MS and tumefactive lesion cases, in order to reveal whether there are different pathogenetic mechanisms involved.


JAMA Neurology | 2015

Comparison of Switch to Fingolimod or Interferon Beta/Glatiramer Acetate in Active Multiple Sclerosis

Anna He; Tim Spelman; Vilija Jokubaitis; Eva Havrdova; Dana Horakova; Maria Trojano; Alessandra Lugaresi; Guillermo Izquierdo; Pierre Grammond; Pierre Duquette; Marc Girard; Eugenio Pucci; Gerardo Iuliano; Raed Alroughani; Celia Oreja-Guevara; Ricardo Fernandez-Bolanos; Francois Grand'Maison; Patrizia Sola; D. Spitaleri; Franco Granella; Murat Terzi; Jeannette Lechner-Scott; Vincent Van Pesch; Raymond Hupperts; J. L. Sanchez-Menoyo; Suzanne J. Hodgkinson; Csilla Rozsa; Freek Verheul; Helmut Butzkueven; Tomas Kalincik

IMPORTANCE After multiple sclerosis (MS) relapse while a patient is receiving an injectable disease-modifying drug, many physicians advocate therapy switch, but the relative effectiveness of different switch decisions is often uncertain. OBJECTIVE To compare the effect of the oral immunomodulator fingolimod with that of all injectable immunomodulators (interferons or glatiramer acetate) on relapse rate, disability, and treatment persistence in patients with active MS. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Matched retrospective analysis of data collected prospectively from MSBase, an international, observational cohort study. The MSBase cohort represents a population of patients with MS monitored at large MS centers. The analyzed data were collected between July 1996 and April 2014. Participants included patients with relapsing-remitting MS who were switching therapy to fingolimod or injectable immunomodulators up to 12 months after on-treatment clinical disease activity (relapse or progression of disability), matched on demographic and clinical variables. Median follow-up duration was 13.1 months (range, 3-80). Indication and attrition bias were controlled with propensity score matching and pairwise censoring, respectively. Head-to-head analyses of relapse and disability outcomes used paired, weighted, negative binomial models or frailty proportional hazards models adjusted for magnetic resonance imaging variables. Sensitivity analyses were conducted. EXPOSURES Patients had received fingolimod, interferon beta, or glatiramer acetate for a minimum of 3 months following a switch of immunomodulatory therapy. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Annualized relapse rate and proportion of relapse-free patients, as well as the proportion of patients without sustained disability progression. RESULTS Overall, 379 patients in the injectable group were matched to 148 patients in the fingolimod group. The fingolimod group had a lower mean annualized relapse rate (0.31 vs 0.42; 95% CI, 0.02-0.19; P=.009), lower hazard of first on-treatment relapse (hazard ratio [HR], 0.74; 95% CI, 0.56-0.98; P=.04), lower hazard of disability progression (HR, 0.53; 95% CI, 0.31-0.91; P=.02), higher rate of disability regression (HR, 2.0; 95% CI, 1.2-3.3; P=.005), and lower hazard of treatment discontinuation (HR, 0.55; P=.04) compared with the injectable group. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Switching from injectable immunomodulators to fingolimod is associated with fewer relapses, more favorable disability outcomes, and greater treatment persistence compared with switching to another injectable preparation following on-treatment activity of MS.


Brain | 2015

Defining reliable disability outcomes in multiple sclerosis.

Tomas Kalincik; Gary Cutter; Tim Spelman; Vilija Jokubaitis; Eva Havrdova; Dana Horakova; Maria Trojano; Guillermo Izquierdo; Marc Girard; Pierre Duquette; Alexandre Prat; Alessandra Lugaresi; Francois Grand'Maison; Pierre Grammond; Raymond Hupperts; Celia Oreja-Guevara; Cavit Boz; Eugenio Pucci; Roberto Bergamaschi; Jeannette Lechner-Scott; Raed Alroughani; Vincent Van Pesch; Gerardo Iuliano; Ricardo Fernandez-Bolanos; Cristina Ramo; Murat Terzi; Mark Slee; D. Spitaleri; Freek Verheul; Edgardo Cristiano

Prevention of irreversible disability is currently the most important goal of disease modifying therapy for multiple sclerosis. The disability outcomes used in most clinical trials rely on progression of Expanded Disability Status Scale score confirmed over 3 or 6 months. However, sensitivity and stability of this metric has not been extensively evaluated. Using the global MSBase cohort study, we evaluated 48 criteria of disability progression, testing three definitions of baseline disability, two definitions of progression magnitude, two definitions of long-term irreversibility and four definitions of event confirmation period. The study outcomes comprised the rates of detected progression events per 10 years and the proportions of the recorded events persistent at later time points. To evaluate the ratio of progression frequency and stability for each criterion, we calculated the proportion of events persistent over the five subsequent years once progression was achieved. Finally, we evaluated the clinical and demographic determinants characterising progression events and, for those that regressed back to baseline, determinants of their subsequent regression. The study population consisted of 16 636 patients with the minimum of three recorded disability scores, totalling 112 584 patient-years. The progression rates varied between 0.41 and 1.14 events per 10 years, with the length of required confirmation interval as the most important determinant of the observed variance. The concordance among all tested progression criteria was only 17.3%. Regression of disability occurred in 11-34% of the progression events over the five subsequent years. The most important determinant of progression stability was the length of the confirmation period. For the most accurate set of the progression criteria, the proportions of 3-, 6-, 12- or 24-month confirmed events persistent over 5 years reached 70%, 74%, 80% and 89%, respectively. Regression post progression was more common in younger patients, relapsing-remitting disease course, and after a smaller change in disability, and was inflated by higher visit frequency. These results suggest that the disability outcomes based on 3-6-month confirmed disability progression overestimate the accumulation of permanent disability by up to 30%. This could lead to spurious results in short-term clinical trials, and the issue may be magnified further in cohorts consisting predominantly of younger patients and patients with relapsing-remitting disease. Extension of the required confirmation period increases the persistence of progression events.


Lancet Neurology | 2017

Treatment effectiveness of alemtuzumab compared with natalizumab, fingolimod, and interferon beta in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis: a cohort study

Tomas Kalincik; J William L Brown; Neil Robertson; Mark Willis; Neil Scolding; Claire M Rice; Alastair Wilkins; Owen R. Pearson; Tjalf Ziemssen; Michael Hutchinson; Christopher McGuigan; Vilija Jokubaitis; Tim Spelman; Dana Horakova; Eva Havrdova; Maria Trojano; Guillermo Izquierdo; Alessandra Lugaresi; Alexandre Prat; Marc Girard; Pierre Duquette; Pierre Grammond; Raed Alroughani; Eugenio Pucci; Patrizia Sola; Raymond Hupperts; Jeannette Lechner-Scott; Murat Terzi; Vincent Van Pesch; Csilla Rozsa

BACKGROUND Alemtuzumab, an anti-CD52 antibody, is proven to be more efficacious than interferon beta-1a in the treatment of relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis, but its efficacy relative to more potent immunotherapies is unknown. We compared the effectiveness of alemtuzumab with natalizumab, fingolimod, and interferon beta in patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis treated for up to 5 years. METHODS In this international cohort study, we used data from propensity-matched patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis from the MSBase and six other cohorts. Longitudinal clinical data were obtained from 71 MSBase centres in 21 countries and from six non-MSBase centres in the UK and Germany between Nov 1, 2015, and June 30, 2016. Key inclusion criteria were a diagnosis of definite relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis, exposure to one of the study therapies (alemtuzumab, interferon beta, fingolimod, or natalizumab), age 65 years or younger, Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) score 6·5 or lower, and no more than 10 years since the first multiple sclerosis symptom. The primary endpoint was annualised relapse rate. The secondary endpoints were cumulative hazards of relapses, disability accumulation, and disability improvement events. We compared relapse rates with negative binomial models, and estimated cumulative hazards with conditional proportional hazards models. FINDINGS Patients were treated between Aug 1, 1994, and June 30, 2016. The cohorts consisted of 189 patients given alemtuzumab, 2155 patients given interferon beta, 828 patients given fingolimod, and 1160 patients given natalizumab. Alemtuzumab was associated with a lower annualised relapse rate than interferon beta (0·19 [95% CI 0·14-0·23] vs 0·53 [0·46-0·61], p<0·0001) and fingolimod (0·15 [0·10-0·20] vs 0·34 [0·26-0·41], p<0·0001), and was associated with a similar annualised relapse rate as natalizumab (0·20 [0·14-0·26] vs 0·19 [0·15-0·23], p=0·78). For the disability outcomes, alemtuzumab was associated with similar probabilities of disability accumulation as interferon beta (hazard ratio [HR] 0·66 [95% CI 0·36-1·22], p=0·37), fingolimod (1·27 [0·60-2·70], p=0·67), and natalizumab (0·81 [0·47-1·39], p=0·60). Alemtuzumab was associated with similar probabilities of disability improvement as interferon beta (0·98 [0·65-1·49], p=0·93) and fingolimod (0·50 [0·25-1·01], p=0·18), and a lower probability of disability improvement than natalizumab (0·35 [0·20-0·59], p=0·0006). INTERPRETATION Alemtuzumab and natalizumab seem to have similar effects on annualised relapse rates in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis. Alemtuzumab seems superior to fingolimod and interferon beta in mitigating relapse activity. Natalizumab seems superior to alemtuzumab in enabling recovery from disability. Both natalizumab and alemtuzumab seem highly effective and viable immunotherapies for multiple sclerosis. Treatment decisions between alemtuzumab and natalizumab should be primarily governed by their safety profiles. FUNDING National Health and Medical Research Council, and the University of Melbourne.


Journal of Clinical Neuroscience | 2010

Changes in bone mineral density and bone metabolism markers in premenopausal women with multiple sclerosis and the relationship to clinical variables

Tülay Terzi; Murat Terzi; Berna Tander; Ferhan Canturk; Musa Onar

Bone mineral density (BMD) is affected in young adults with multiple sclerosis (MS), which leads to disabling disease. We aimed to show changes that were independent of immobilization by measuring BMD and laboratory markers of bone metabolism in mobile MS patients. We compared a total of 52 premenopausal female patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) to 41 women of similar age who had no risk factors for osteoporosis. The lumbar and femur BMD were measured using the dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) method. The urine concentration of serum 25-hydroxycholecalciferol (25-OH vit D(3)), and pyridinoline and deoxypyridinoline were also measured. The concentration of serum osteocalcin was measured to determine the speed of bone metabolism. The mean age of patients (+/- standard deviation [SD]) was 36.1+/-7.4. The average Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) score was 2.2+/-1.8. The concentration of 25-OH vit D(3) and osteocalcin was lower, whereas the concentration of parathyroid hormone (PTH), alkaline phosphatase (ALP), pyridinoline and deoxypyridinoline was higher in the patient group. In the patient group, lumbar 2-4 BMD, T score and Z score and femur neck and trochantor BMD, T score and Z score were significantly lower than in the control group. There was a significant negative relationship between: the disease period and L 2-4 BMD, T score and Z scores; and the femoral neck BMD, T score and Z scores. There was a significant relationship between the total Functional Independence Measure score and the femoral neck, femoral trochanter BMD, T score, and Z score. There was a significant negative relationship between the average EDSS, L 2-4 and all the DXA measurements obtained from the femur. There was a significant relationship between the 25-OH vit D(3) concentration and L 2-4 T score and Z score from the DXA measurements obtained from the femur. There were no significant relationships between osteocalcin, pyridinoline, deoxypyridinoline levels and the BMD measurements. Therefore, the duration of the disease and decrease in functional capacity are the main factors that affect BMD in MS. Apart from the decrease in functional capacity, 25-OH vit D(3) deficiency and secondary PTH increase contribute to the BDM changes observed in MS.


General Hospital Psychiatry | 2013

Psychiatric symptoms in patients with multiple sclerosis.

Gökhan Sarısoy; Murat Terzi; Kübra Gümüş; Ozan Pazvantoğlu

OBJECTIVES This study was intended to identify general psychiatric symptoms in multiple sclerosis (MS) patients and to determine the distribution of these psychiatric symptoms by type of MS and degree of disability. METHODS One hundred fifty-two volunteers, 76 MS patients and 76 healthy controls, matched in terms of age, gender, marital status, years spent in education and income, were included. Psychiatric symptoms were measured using the Symptom Checklist-90-R, Beck Depression Inventory, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, Padua Inventory, Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale and Eating Attitude Test. Degree of disability was determined using the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS). In addition to being compared between the patient and control groups, scale scores were also compared between groups established on the basis of relapsing-remitting or progressive forms of MS, neurological disability and ambulatory ability. Correlations were determined between EDSS scores and psychiatric scale scores. RESULTS In addition to symptoms of depression, anxiety and sleep impairment in MS patients, we also determined that less studied symptoms such as somatization, obsession, compulsion, interpersonal sensitivity, anger-hostility, phobic anxiety, paranoid ideation, psychoticism, low self-esteem and distorted eating attitudes were also more frequent compared to the healthy controls. Some symptoms were also more prevalent in progressive MS patients compared to relapsing-remitting subjects. Symptoms increase as degree of disability rises and ambulatory capacity declines. CONCLUSION Depressive, anxious and sleep impairment symptoms are not the only ones seen in MS patients; other psychiatric symptoms are also common. Further studies are needed to investigate the frequency and causes of these little-investigated symptoms. As seen in patients with a progressive course and greater neurological disability, more psychiatric symptoms develop in patients with more severe disease.


Multiple Sclerosis Journal | 2016

The effect of oral immunomodulatory therapy on treatment uptake and persistence in multiple sclerosis

Matthew Warrender-Sparkes; Tim Spelman; Guillermo Izquierdo; Maria Trojano; Alessandra Lugaresi; Francois Grand'Maison; Eva Havrdova; Dana Horakova; Cavit Boz; Celia Oreja-Guevara; Raed Alroughani; Gerardo Iuliano; Pierre Duquette; Marc Girard; Murat Terzi; Raymond Hupperts; Pierre Grammond; Thor Petersen; Ricardo Fernandez-Bolanos; Marcela Fiol; Eugenio Pucci; Jeannette Lechner-Scott; Freek Verheul; Edgardo Cristiano; Vincent Van Pesch; Tatjana Petkovska-Boskova; Fraser Moore; Ilya Kister; Roberto Bergamaschi; Maria Laura Saladino

Objective: We aimed to analyse the effect of the introduction of fingolimod, the first oral disease-modifying therapy, on treatment utilisation and persistence in an international cohort of patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). Methods: MSBASIS, a prospective, observational sub-study of the MSBase registry, collects demographic, clinical and paraclinical data on patients followed from MS onset (n=4718). We conducted a multivariable conditional risk set survival analysis to identify predictors of treatment discontinuation, and to assess if the introduction of fingolimod has altered treatment persistence. Results: A total of 2640 patients commenced immunomodulatory therapy. Following the introduction of fingolimod, patients were more likely to discontinue all other treatments (hazard ratio 1.64, p<0.001) while more patients switched to fingolimod than any other therapy (42.3% of switches). Patients switched to fingolimod due to convenience. Patients treated with fingolimod were less likely to discontinue treatment compared with other therapies (p<0.001). Female sex, country of residence, younger age, a high Expanded Disability Status Scale score and relapse activity were all independently associated with higher rates of treatment discontinuation. Conclusion: Following the availability of fingolimod, patients were more likely to discontinue injectable treatments. Those who switched to fingolimod were more likely to do so for convenience. Persistence was improved on fingolimod compared to other medications.


Brain and Language | 2011

Does long term use of piracetam improve speech disturbances due to ischemic cerebrovascular diseases

Levent Güngör; Murat Terzi; Musa Onar

Aphasia causes significant disability and handicap among stroke survivors. Language therapy is recommended for aphasic patients, but not always available. Piracetam, an old drug with novel properties, has been shown to have mild beneficial effects on post-stroke aphasia. In the current study, we investigated the effects of 6 months treatment with piracetam on aphasia following stroke. Thirty patients with first-ever ischemic strokes and related aphasia were enrolled in the study. The scores for the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS), Barthel Index (BI), modified Rankin Scale (mRS), and Gülhane Aphasia Test were recorded. The patients were scheduled randomly to receive either 4.8 g piracetam daily or placebo treatment for 6 months. At the end of 24 weeks, clinical assessments and aphasia tests were repeated. The level of improvement in the clinical parameters and aphasia scores was compared between the two groups. All patients had large lesions and severe aphasia. No significant difference was observed between the piracetam and placebo groups regarding the improvements in the NIHSS, BI and mRS scores at the end of the treatment. The improvements observed in spontaneous speech, reading fluency, auditory comprehension, reading comprehension, repetition, and naming were not significantly different in the piracetam and placebo groups, the difference reached significance only for auditory comprehension in favor of piracetam at the end of the treatment. Piracetam is well-tolerated in patients with post-stroke aphasia. Piracetam taken orally in a daily dose of 4.8 g for 6 months has no clear beneficial effect on post-stroke language disorders.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2016

Higher latitude is significantly associated with an earlier age of disease onset in multiple sclerosis

Chunrong Tao; Steve Simpson; Ingrid van der Mei; Leigh Blizzard; Eva Havrdova; Dana Horakova; Vahid Shaygannejad; Alessandra Lugaresi; Guillermo Izquierdo; Maria Trojano; Pierre Duquette; Marc Girard; Franois Grand'Maison; Pierre Grammond; Raed Alroughani; Murat Terzi; Celia Oreja-Guevara; Seyed Aidin Sajedi; Gerardo Iuliano; Patrizia Sola; Jeannette Lechner-Scott; Vincent Van Pesch; Eugenio Pucci; Roberto Bergamaschi; Michael Barnett; Cristina Ramo; Bhim Singhal; D. Spitaleri; Mark Slee; Freek Verheul

Background Age at onset (AAO) in multiple sclerosis (MS) is an important marker of disease severity and may have prognostic significance. Understanding what factors can influence AAO may shed light on the aetiology of this complex disease, and have applications in the diagnostic process. Methods The study cohort of 22 162 eligible patients from 21 countries was extracted from the MSBase registry. Only patients with MS aged ≥16 years were included. To reduce heterogeneity, only centres of largely European descent were included for analysis. AAO was defined as the year of the first symptom suggestive of inflammatory central nervous system demyelination. Predictors of AAO were evaluated by linear regression. Results Compared with those living in lower latitudes (19.0–39.9°), onset of symptoms was 1.9 years earlier for those at higher latitudes (50.0–56.0°) (p=3.83×10−23). A reciprocal relationship was seen for ambient ultraviolet radiation (UVR), with a significantly increasing AAO for patients with MS per each quartile increment of ambient UVR (p=1.56×10−17). We found that the AAO of female patients was ∼5 months earlier than male patients (p=0.002). AAO of progressive-onset patients with MS were ∼9 years later than relapsing-onset patients (p=1.40×10−265). Conclusions An earlier AAO in higher latitude regions was found in this worldwide European-descent cohort and correlated inversely with variation in latitudinal UVR. These results suggest that environmental factors which act at the population level may significantly influence disease severity characteristics in genetically susceptible populations.

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Marc Girard

Université de Montréal

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Musa Onar

Ondokuz Mayıs University

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Eva Havrdova

Charles University in Prague

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