# Aerobic capacity moderates the association between cervical cord atrophy and clinical disability in mildly disabled multiple sclerosis patients

**Authors:** Matteo Albergoni, Paolo Preziosa, Alessandro Meani, Chiara Dallari, Paola Valsasina, Maria A Rocca, Massimo Filippi

PMC · DOI: 10.1177/13524585251318647 · Multiple Sclerosis (Houndmills, Basingstoke, England) · 2025-02-14

## TL;DR

Higher aerobic capacity can reduce the effect of spinal cord damage on disability in people with mild multiple sclerosis.

## Contribution

This study shows that aerobic capacity moderates the relationship between cervical cord atrophy and disability in mild MS patients.

## Key findings

- Spinal cord atrophy is linked to higher disability in MS patients with low aerobic capacity.
- Aerobic capacity reduces the negative impact of spinal cord damage on disability in mild MS.
- The nMUCCA × aerobic capacity interaction was statistically significant in MS patients.

## Abstract

Spinal cord volume loss is associated with clinical disability in multiple sclerosis (MS). Aerobic capacity may mitigate the impact of central nervous system (CNS) damage accumulation, exerting beneficial effects on MS-related disability.

We investigated whether aerobic capacity could moderate the association between spinal cord atrophy and clinical disability in MS.

In this cross-sectional analysis, expanded disability status scale (EDSS), peak of oxygen consumption (VO2peak), brain volumetric measures, and the normalized mean upper cervical cord area (nMUCCA) were collected from 51 MS patients and 33 healthy controls (HCs). Low aerobic capacity was defined as having a VO2peak z-score less than –1.64 standard deviations. In MS patients, we explored whether the association between nMUCCA and EDSS is moderated by the level of aerobic capacity.

The relationship between nMUCCA and EDSS was moderated by aerobic capacity, with a significant nMUCCA × aerobic capacity interaction (β = −0.099, 95% bootstrapped confidence interval [CI] = [−0.172; −0.014], p = 0.012). Lower nMUCCA was significantly associated with higher EDSS score in MS patients with low aerobic capacity (β = −0.073, p < 0.001), but not in those with high aerobic capacity (β = 0.026, p = 0.417).

In MS patients with mild disability, higher aerobic capacity can potentially mitigate the negative impact of spinal cord damage on clinical disability.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** multiple sclerosis (MONDO:0005301)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** MS (MESH:D009103), Spinal cord volume loss (MESH:D013118), clinical disability (MESH:D009069), central nervous system (CNS) damage (MESH:D002493), cervical cord atrophy (MESH:D002575)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12008468/full.md

## References

33 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12008468/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12008468