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Title: Absence of JC polyomavirus in stool samples of patients with multiple sclerosis despite high anti-JCV antibodies in serum. Author: Schweitzer F, Ladwig A, Opala S, Laurent S, Schroeter M, Goelz S, Fink GR, Wieland U, Silling S, Warnke C. Journal: Mult Scler Relat Disord; 2024 Jul; 87():105664. PubMed ID: 38735204. Abstract: BACKGROUND: Natalizumab is an effective treatment for relapsing multiple sclerosis (MS). During therapy, individuals are at increased risk of developing progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML). So far, the relevant reservoir for PML-type JC polyomavirus (JCV) remains elusive. We here tested if the detection of JCV-DNA in stool of persons with MS treated with natalizumab could be a future tool for PML risk assessment. METHODS: The presence of JCV-DNA in stool, urine, and whole blood of MS patients treated with natalizumab and known serum anti-JCV antibodies index values (IV) was studied. Different DNA extraction methods, real-time (RT) and droplet digital (dd) PCR techniques were compared. JCV isolates were screened for PML-associated variants by sequencing. RESULTS: Thirty MS patients treated with natalizumab were screened. For 21 patients, blood, stool, and urine samples were available. These patients were stratified according to their serum anti-JCV antibody IV (high (>1.5, n = 12); medium (1.5-0.9, n = 2); low (<0.9, n = 1); negative (n = 6)). JCV-DNA could not be detected in the whole blood or stool samples. Four urine samples had measurable JCV-DNA, ranging from 1.71×104-1.07×108 international units (IU)/mL detected by RT-PCR, corresponding to 4.62×104-9.85×106 copies/mL measured by ddPCR. All JCV variants were wild-type and derived from patients with high antibody IV. CONCLUSION: Stool-specific DNA extraction methods provided the highest quality of DNA, while the sensitivity of ddPCR and RT- PCR was comparable. Our findings do not support assessing stool samples for PML risk stratification in persons with MS. Further studies are needed to explore where PML-associated viral variants arise.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]