CIDP With and Without Monoclonal Gammopathy of Undetermined Significance (MGUS): Comparison of Clinical Phenotype, Diagnostic Features, and Treatment Response
R. van Veen, A. E. Baars, I. N. van Doorn, M. Michael, S. R. M. Bus, M. C. Broers, W. L. van der Pol, P. A. Van Doorn, J. Drenthen, C. Verhamme, J. M. I. Vos, I. N. van Schaik, H. S. Goedee, L. Wieske, B. C. Jacobs, F. Eftimov

TL;DR
This study compares CIDP patients with and without MGUS to see how it affects their symptoms and treatment outcomes.
Contribution
The study identifies the prevalence of IgG MGUS in CIDP and its weak association with specific clinical features.
Findings
IgG paraproteinemia is more common in CIDP than in controls.
CIDP patients with IgG MGUS show different clinical features like more sensory deficits.
Treatment response rates are similar between CIDP patients with and without MGUS.
Abstract
Monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) occurs in some patients with chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP), but its impact on clinical phenotype and treatment response remains unclear. We assessed the prevalence of paraproteinemia in CIDP and compared disease features between CIDP patients with and without MGUS. We used data from the International CIDP Outcome Study (ICOS), a prospective cohort study. We compared the prevalence and causes of paraproteinemia in CIDP to matched disease controls (axonal polyneuropathy or motor neuron disease) and compared disease features and treatment responses between CIDP patients with and without MGUS. Treatment response, defined as a ≥ 1‐point improvement on the modified Rankin scale, was retrospectively assessed. IgG paraproteinemia was more common in CIDP than in controls (9%, 17/193 vs. 3%, 6/192; p = 0.03).…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPeripheral Neuropathies and Disorders · Amyloidosis: Diagnosis, Treatment, Outcomes · Multiple Sclerosis Research Studies
