Brigham: A new study led by investigators at Brigham and Women’s Hospital
(BWH) reports the discovery of a genetic variant that is associated with
a patient’s
likelihood of responding to interferon-beta, one of the medications used
in treating multiple sclerosis (MS). Published in the Annals of Neurology
on May 14, the study also presents evidence that the affected gene, SLC9A9, may have a broader role in regulating the development and activity of
certain immune cells that play important roles in inflammatory diseases like MS.
A proportion of MS patients experience disease activity despite
treatment. The early identification of the most effective drug for a
given individual is
critical to impact long-term outcome and to move toward a
personalized treatment approach.
To find predictive indicators of a patient’s response to treatment,
the team, which included researchers from the Ospedale San Raffaele in
Milan, Italy,
performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) in MS patients from
Brigham and Women’s Hospital, San Raffaele Hospital and seven academic
MS centers in
France, all of whom were being treated with the drug
interferon-beta. The variant most predictive of whether or not a patient
would respond to the drug was
found in the gene SLC9A9.
“This study highlights the fact that genetic variation has a role in
the course of a patient’s disease in MS, but that this role is modest
and will require
much larger studies to be understood in detail,” said Philip De Jager,
MD, PhD, who directs the
Program in Translational NeuroPsychiatric Genomics at the Ann Romney
Center for Neurologic Diseases at BWH. “We need to expand this type of
international,
collaborative science.”
Discovered in Italian patients, the observation was replicated in
other Italian patients as well as patients in Boston and patients in
France. “Further
work is now needed to validate our results in other collections of
patients, particularly patients treated with other MS medications, to
evaluate whether
the effect of the genetic variant is limited to interferon beta
treatment or is relevant to other clinical MS treatments,” said Filippo
Martinelli-Boneschi, MD, PhD, of San Raffaele Scientific Institute.
The variant detected has a confirmed but weak role in MS. However,
laboratory work in this report shows that the loss of the SLC9A9 gene leads
immune cells to become much more likely to provoke damaging immune reactions.
“Manipulations of this gene in mice and in human cells will lead us
to better understand mechanisms that are involved in the autoimmune
response that
causes MS,” said Wassim Elyaman, PhD, an investigator in the Program
in Translational NeuroPsychiatric Genomics at the Ann Romney Center for
Neurologic
Diseases at BWH.
A large, ongoing study of MS patients called CLIMB, based out of the
Partners Multiple Sclerosis Center, was integral to the current work
and will continue
to follow patients over the course of treatment to identify
predictors of future disease course and the effectiveness of treatments.
This work was supported by Giovani Ricercatori 2007 of the Italian
Ministry of Health, and by grants R01 NS067305, JF2138A1, and
RC2GM093080. Additional
support was provided by the National MS Society, Fondazione Italiana
Sclerosi, the French MS society Association pour la recherche sur la
sclerose en
plaques, the Club francophone de la SEP, and the Reseau francais
pour la genetique de la SEP. De Jager is a recipient of the prestigious
Harry Weaver
Neuroscience Scholar of the National MS Society.
Citation: Federica Esposito et al.: A Pharmacogenetic Study Implicates SLC9A9 in Multiple Sclerosis Disease Activity. Ann Neurol 2015; DOI:
10.1002/ana.24429.