Calling all HCPs who want to learn about managing MS during the COVID-19 epidemic. Please register for the following webinars via the MS Academy website. We plan to run a series of these over the coming weeks and months. The next one is on managing highly active and rapidly evolving severe MS in the current environment.
CoI: multiple
New UK guidelines for #MSCOVID19
If you live in the UK and have MS you may receive a letter from the NHS stating that you are potentially in the ‘extremely vulnerable group’ in relation to COVID-19. The reason for that is they are using GP databases and other sources of information to identify patients who may be on immunosuppressive therapy. If you receive one of these letters don’t be alarmed and please contact your MS Team for specific advice.

In my opinion, the only pwMS who should be classified as ‘extremely vulnerable group’ are those who have had HSCT and alemtuzumab in the last 3-6 months and are still immunodepleted or patients with severe disability who have swallowing problems and/or a history of recurrent chest infections.
You will have seen the UK Government have updated its guidance and is now “classifying people on immunosuppression as being extremely vulnerable, which probably includes pwMS on immunosuppressive DMTs. There are three reasons for this. (1) To protect you from potentially getting infected with SARS-CoV2 and (2) potentially getting more severe COVID-19 that needs hospitalisation and a potential ITU bed and ventilation. (3) There is also a potential risk of creating a population of super spreaders, which increases the risks to the general population. Immunosuppressed people may not be able to clear the virus quickly and hence shed more virus and for longer.
The current list of what is an immunosuppressive therapy is incomplete and was not drafted from an MS perspective. This is despite being a member of the subcommittee that was meant to help draft this guidance. I think it important to liaise with your own MS team about your own situation.
What about if you have MS and are an essential worker? If you can work from home, please work from home. If your job involves no contact with people then you may be able to continue working; however, please clear this with your organisation. If your job entails coming into contact with people and particularly people infected with SARS-CoV2 then you are going to have to self-isolate. This advice may seem harsh, but this is a war, a war against a virus, and it demands extraordinary sacrifices at an individual level for the good of society. This is not only about looking after your own health, but the health of the country.
The above may be relevant today and may change by tomorrow. If we don’t adhere to the Government’s advice, it will become a diktat tomorrow.
I have put together some slides to show how we think immunosuppression may affect the disease severity curve of COVID-19. Please note it is a may and not a definite as we don’t have evidence to back up these claims. I hope this is self-explanatory.
I predict that NHS letters will create a lot of anxiety so this is a warning not to panic. I am still collating this information on my COVID-19 & MS microsite.
CoI: multiple
Twitter is where all #MSCOVID19 action is happening
In my inbox this morning there were several emails from people with MS asking the same questions. What should I do; self-isolate or continue as is? Should I stop my DMT or continue it? Am I at increased risk of COVID-19 or not? If I get COVID-19 am I at risk of developing serious disease? Should I purchase a ventilator? I have symptoms of COVID-19 what should I do? Are there any patients with MS who have or have had COVID-19?
I am now creating a template email response directing them to my COVID-19 & MS microsite and saying if after reading the contents this doesn’t answer your question please ask your question(s) using the online portal so that when I make an attempt to answer it everyone else can learn from it.

There appears to be an increasing number of patients with MS who have or have had COVID-19 that are being reported on Twitter. The following are some of the relevant tweets. If you know of any other cases please let us know.
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsMy two cases: 30-year-old male on interferon beta 1a and a 50-year-old female on fingolimod. They are completely recovered now!
— Paolo Preziosa (@paolopreziosa) March 21, 2020
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsCase of a 59 y/o female on Rituximab (last infusion 5 months ago) doing well after #covid19. #MSCOVID19 @GavinGiovannoni @drbarrysinger
— Marina Creed APRN, MSCN (@MarinaC_Dyb) March 17, 2020
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsI have had a patient Covid+ with tecfidera with mild symptoms and doing well. We didn't stop the treatment , the lymphocytes number was ok
— Celia Oreja-Guevara (@C_OrejaGuevara) March 21, 2020
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsProbable COVID-19 case on cladribine with lymphocytes 0.5. Full recovery at home without hospital admission. #MSCOVID19
— Dr Niall MacDougall (@dr_niall) March 20, 2020
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsI have one. 40yo women recently diagnosed with RRMS (had not yet received DMT). High fever, dry cough and shortness of breath due to bilateral neumonia. Grade 4 lymphopenia and elevated C-reactive protein in the blood. Treatment with Kaletra and Dolquine has been initiated.
— Susana Sainz de la Maza (@S_SainzdelaMaza) March 15, 2020
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsCase of a 59 y/o female on Rituximab (last infusion 5 months ago) doing well after #covid19. #MSCOVID19 @GavinGiovannoni @drbarrysinger
— Marina Creed APRN, MSCN (@MarinaC_Dyb) March 17, 2020
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsI just received good news from one #MS patient receiving s.c. Interferon beta 1a that recovered from #COVID2019! He just complained fever (<38) and mild cough for 4 days!! He is at home now completely asymptomatic
— Paolo Preziosa (@paolopreziosa) March 18, 2020
Great!! #MSCOVID19
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsin Rome we have one male patient positive to Coronavirus. Treated with Natalizumab (14 infusions done), actually just fever, under observation but not hospitalized. One positive female on DMF hospitalized due to fever and dyspnoea, good recovery in few days
— Giovanna Borriello (@GiovannaBorri19) March 17, 2020
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsHave one patient with ocrelizumab infected. Doing fine. Flu-like symptoms but doing well
— NeuroImmunology Club (@NeuroImmunology) March 15, 2020
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsHave one patient with ocrelizumab infected. Doing fine. Flu-like symptoms but doing well
— NeuroImmunology Club (@NeuroImmunology) March 15, 2020
CoI: multiple
Yin-yang – day 2 COVID-19 lockdown
The yin and yang of COVID-19.

I have spent day 2 of London’s lockdown doing MS-related webinars; i.e. attending meetings virtually. For every negative, there is a positive, the yin-and-yang of COVID-19.
Environmental activists are claiming SARS-CoV2/COVID19 is simply nature’s way of fighting back. We have pushed planet earth and its environment to the brink and it is responding as predicted.
The fact that academics such as me are working differently has to be a good thing. Do you agree? This is something I am very aware of and is one of the reasons why we started triMS-online; virtual conferences are clearly the way we are going to exchange information in the future. Our MS Academy webinar on “Managing MS remotely during the COVID-19 pandemic” takes things one step further, i.e. how can we revolutionise the management of MS and do as much as possible remotely.

The combined value of the world’s stock markets is related to global GDP, which in turn represents global consumption. The fact that the major stock markets have crashed by over 30% the world’s global consumption energy and other resources will be plummeting. This is forcing us to work differently. Is this not a good thing?
We may all be anxious and worried about the crisis we are in at present, but it will pass. This virus (SARS-CoV2) is virulent, but not that virulent. A global pandemic of SARS and MERS, with the same level of infectivity as SARS-CoV2, would have been an order of magnitude worse. Maybe we should be saying this pandemic could have been much worse.
I think we will look at back 2019 and 2020 as being the turning point when the world realised we need to take the environment seriously. The images of Australia burning and COVID-19 sweeping across the world is telling us that we are going to have to do things differently in the future.
COVID-19 is forcing us to work differently, which happens to be more environmentally-friendly, and is challenging the Victorian model of healthcare. One very positive thing that may come out of this epidemic is that we may just prevent ourselves from going beyond the environmental tipping point.
Despite my environmental optimism, this does not help you in the here and now, which is why I have spent the better part of the last 3 days getting my MS-Selfie (www.ms-selfie.org) website off the ground and answering your questions about COVID-19. I have addressed the next batch of questions, but as I answer questions more come in so apologies if I haven’t got to your questions yes. Once I am redeployed, which I expect to happen in about a week’s time, I may not have time to do any online activities.

CoI: multiple
COVID-19 Microsite and Q&A
Just to let you know the COVID-19 & MS microsite (MS-Selfie) is now live. I also started to respond to questions via the Q&A page. Hopefully, by curating information in one place, it will stop the repetition of questions and allow pwMS to learn from each other.

I have a backlog of over 50 questions to plough through but will try to get them done over the next few days.

CoI: multiple
Why are Australian and New Zealand MSologists so sensible?
It never ceases to amaze me how practical, level-headed and together the Australian MSology community is. The following Australian COVID-19 guidelines are the best I have seen to date and in line with my thoughts on this subject.

CoI: multiple
#COVIDMS Managing MS remotely during the COVID-19 pandemic
We had to postpone one of our MS Academy foundation courses this week due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In its place, we are doing a series of webinars. The first one was held yesterday morning with an overview of COVID-19 and how it is forcing us to be creative in managing MS over the next few weeks and months.

The following is my presentation and you can download the slides from my DIY-SlideShare site. I am aware that the MS Academy will be uploading the webinar to YouTube in the next few weeks.
I also spent yesterday designing and populating a #MSCOVID19 microsite written and a beta version is live. It is a work in progress, but over the next few days and weeks, it will become more comprehensive. I will be answering questions and presenting cases studies on the site. I have already had 20+ questions posted via the site and will work on getting these answered an online today.
CoI: multiple
#COVIDMS COVID-19 Q&A
I am getting a continuous stream of questions about MS and COVID-19 infection. The following is an example of the kind of questions that are being asked.
- Does MS increase my chance of getting COVID-19 infection?
- Does MS increase my chance of getting severe COVID-19 infection?
- Does COVID-19 cause MS to relapse?
- Should I self-isolate because I have MS?
- Should I stop my DMT if I become infected with COVID-19?
- Can you recommend a good source of information to keep me updated on COVID-19 infection and MS?
- Should I avoid attending my hospital appointments?
- What about my blood/urine monitoring; should I suspend monitoring during the epidemic?
- Are there any people with MS who have had COVID-19 infection?
- What is a safe lymphocyte count?
- Am I at increased risk because I am on DMT x, y or z?
We are providing answers piecemeal and I get a sense we need to collate them somewhere.

Do you think we should collate these questions into a separate COVID-19 microsite, blog post or blog page? What is the most accessible and searchable format for people with MS? I am aware that a blog creates problems.
Post-script – 18 March 2020
In response to the demand, I am in the process of creating additional pages to our microsite MS-SELFIE, which refers to MS self-management. The Q&A will be in the form of typical questions and anonymised real-life case scenarios. I think the latter is very important in illustrating the subtleties and complexities of clinical practice.
CoI: multiple
#COVIDMS COVID-19 and Ondine’s curse
As a non-virologist, I have been relying on basic principles to make recommendations, and predictions, about what may happen to someone with MS who is infected with COVID-19. However, over time an observational evidence-base will emerge that will either confirm or refute some of these predictions.

One thing I would not have predicted is Twitter being the platform for some of the early reports. Four patients with MS two on ocrelizumab, one on oral cladribine and other post alemtuzumab have acquired the infection and are apparently doing well. This is good news and congruent with expectations based on the mode of action of these DMTs. Both ocrelizumab and oral cladribine are predominantly anti-B cell therapies and only have a small impact on the T-cell compartment, which is the immunological compartment that is critical for fighting viruses. Anti-viral immunity post-alemtuzumab appears to be normal post immune reconstitution.
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsOne patient with infection shortly after w1 in year 2 of Cladribine. Similar symptoms as others otherwise healthy so far #MSCOVID19
— Elisabeth G. Celius (@CeliusElisabeth) March 16, 2020
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsWoman/29yo no comorbidities. Two cycles of Ocrevus. Cero B cells. Flu symptoms without any sign of severity or complication so far (started fever on Wednesday)
— NeuroImmunology Club (@NeuroImmunology) March 16, 2020
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsWe have one infected patient on Ocrelizumab and another one on Alemtuzumab. So far (one week), they are both at home with mild symptoms and recovering. Best regards from Albacete (Spain) #MSCOVID19
— AlbaceteEM (@EM_Albacete) March 16, 2020
It will be interesting to know what the antibody responses to COVID-19 will be in these patients. A serological or antibody test is urgently needed; this will allow us to test whether or not people have been exposed to the virus. I predict that despite these patients being in anti-B cell therapies they will have detectable anti-COVID-19 antibodies. The reason I say this is that both these agents are unlikely to block antibody responses completely; we already know this for ocrelizumab and as cladribine only depletes B-cells by about 90% it is likely to be similar. The immune system is remarkably resilient and there are deep tissue compartments that are relatively protected from ocrelizumab and cladribine. The latter is supported by data from phase 3 and extension trials and now real-life data, which show that severe viral infections are not a major problem in patients ocrelizumab or cladribine.
An anti-COVID-19 serology test will allow seroepidemiology studies to be performed, which will allow us to determine how many people have had asymptomatic or undiagnosed mild COVID-19 disease. Variants of this assay will also be fundamental to testing a vaccine. We will need to know which anti-COVID-19 antibodies are neutralizing, i.e. capable of preventing infection, and which are not. The effective vaccine will probably only have two or three COVID-19 components (antigens or antigen-epitopes) and hence the presence of these epitope-specific antibodies and the absence of antibodies against other COVID-19 antigens will be able to differentiate between vaccine immunity and wild-type infection.
The following is a list of hypotheses or questions that will need to be answered once we have the tools at hand.
- What is the asymptomatic infection rate in people with multiple sclerosis?
- Which DMTs prevent COVID-19 seroconversion after vaccination? I suspect none of the DMTs will suppress seroconversion completely, but based on other vaccine studies ocrelizumab and fingolimod and other S1P modulators will blunt the response.
- Do people with MS on DMTs who are infected become superspreaders, i.e. continue to shed the virus in large amounts for longer periods of time? I predict that natalizumab will be the most likely DMT to do this. This is because it reduces lymphocyte trafficking into mucosal sites that may blunt antiviral responses, which will allow the virus to continue reproducing and being shed in oral and respiratory tract secretions and faeces.
- When an effective antiviral emerges will it reduce or prevent prolonged viral shedding? The corollary to this is the question of whether pwMS on interferon-beta or teriflunomide shed less virus because these classes of DMT are antiviral?
- Are people with MS on DMTs more likely to get severe COVID-19 infection? At the moment we are assuming that immunosuppressed patients will do worse. But this assumption may not necessarily be correct. It appears that severe infection may in fact be due to the immunological response to the virus and that by suppressing the immune response you dampen-down the damage in the lungs. This is why several anti-inflammatory therapies, for example, anti-IL6 and fingolimod, are currently being tested in acute COVID-19 infection.
- How neurotropic is COVID-19 and will MS DMTs, in particular natalizumab, increase the neurotropism of the virus (ability to infect the CNS)? Natalizumab, by partially blocking immune surveillance of the CNS, may create a viral niche that will allow the virus to escape immune detection and cause encephalitis. This is analogous to what happens with PML. This remains my major concern for pwMS on natalizumab.
In relation to neurotropism, the review paper below is quite sobering; it is extrapolating data on the SARS coronavirus epidemic to COVID-19 and suggests that a lot of the respiratory distress we see from COVID-19 is due to brainstem encephalitis. The hypothesis is that COVID-19 infects small nerves in the lung and other mucosal surfaces. The nerves then transport the virus up their fibres and across synapses into the neurons within the brains of people infected with COVID-19. This so-called retrograde and trans-synaptic transmission of viruses is well described, for example with rabies and other coronaviruses. Once the COVID-19 gets to the brain it destroys nerves cells. In relation to their hypothesis, they suggest the virus damages the respiratory centre in the brainstem that is responsible for the automatic reflex that drives involuntary breathing. If the respiratory centre is damaged you then develop central sleep apnoea; in other words, if you go to sleep you stop breathing and die. This is also referred to as Ondine’s curse or central hypoventilation syndrome.
In their paper, Li and colleagues describe a survivor: “According to the complaints of a survivor, the medical graduate student (24 years old) from Wuhan University, she must stay awake and breathe consciously and actively during the intensive care. She said that if she fell asleep, she might die because she had lost her natural breath”. This description is typical of central sleep apnoea or Ondine’s curse.
I think it is too early to accept the central apnoea hypothesis to explain at least part of the COVID-19 respiratory distress syndrome. This will require specific clinical studies on patients in intensive care units to see if they have central sleep apnoea and imaging and post-mortem studies to see if COVID-19 causes brainstem encephalitis. Based on the importance of this hypothesis I suspect intensive care clinicians, neurologists, neuroradiologists, virologists and pathologists are on the case and testing the hypothesis below using several different paradigms.
If any pwMS have read this paper and are alarmed please don’t be. Like everything in medicine and science, their observations have to be confirmed. At the moment it doesn’t change much except the urgency of the need for an effective anti-COVID-19 antiviral. Ideally, any antiviral will also need to penetrate the CNS, in the event that COVID-19 causes encephalitis. I am also reassured that the one case report of COVID-19 encephalitis reported from China appears to have done well and recovered spontaneously.
Importantly, this article does not change any of the general advice we are giving to pwMS. Please be vigilant about hand hygiene and avoid high-risk travel and contacts. This epidemic will eventually pass. It is important that we learn as much as possible from the pandemic for the future.
Li et al. The neuroinvasive potential of SARS‐CoV2 may be at least partially responsible for the respiratory failure of COVID‐19 patients. Journal of Medical Virology Received: 14 February 2020, accepted: 24 February 2020 DOI: 10.1002/jmv.25728
Following the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS‐CoV) and Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS‐CoV), another highly pathogenic coronavirus named SARS‐CoV‐2 (previously known as 2019‐nCoV) emerged in December 2019 in Wuhan, China, and rapidly spreads around the world. This virus shares highly homological sequence with SARS‐CoV and causes acute, highly lethal pneumonia coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) with clinical symptoms similar to those reported for SARS‐CoV and MERS‐CoV. The most characteristic symptom of patients with COVID‐19 is respiratory distress, and most of the patients admitted to the intensive care could not breathe spontaneously. Additionally, some patients with COVID‐19 also showed neurologic signs, such as headache, nausea, and vomiting. Increasing evidence shows that coronaviruses are not always confined to the respiratory tract and that they may also invade the central nervous system inducing neurological diseases. The infection of SARS‐CoV has been reported in the brains from both patients and experimental animals, where the brainstem was heavily infected. Furthermore, some coronaviruses have been demonstrated able to spread via a synapse‐connected route to the medullary cardiorespiratory center from the mechanoreceptors and chemoreceptors in the lung and lower respiratory airways. In light of the high similarity between SARS‐CoV and SARS‐CoV2, it is quite likely that the potential invasion of SARS‐CoV2 is partially responsible for the acute respiratory failure of patients with COVID‐19. Awareness of this will have important guiding significance for the prevention and treatment of the SARS‐CoV‐2‐induced respiratory failure.
Acknowledgements: I would like to thank one of our blog readers for bringing this paper to my attention.
Disclaimer: Please note this post, as with all of my blog posts, represents my personal opinions and not the views of my colleagues at Barts-MS.
CoI: multiple
NASA – Neurology Association of South Africa 2020
I am about to fly back from ZA (Zuid Afrika) as we have always referred to it in the past. I had a wonderful few days with my colleagues and old friends from University. Thank you for your kind, and as always incredible, hospitality. If the NASA meeting was to be held a week later it would have almost certainly have been cancelled. As South Africa goes into lockdown from the coronavirus epidemic I should count myself lucky to be getting onto a flight back to the UK tonight.

As promised you can download my presentations from my NASA 2020 DIT-SlideShare site.
CoI: multiple
