Cognitive reserve is a determinant of social and occupational attainment in patients with pediatric and adult onset multiple sclerosis.

2020 
BACKGROUND: There is limited information on socio-professional attainment in pediatric-onset multiple sclerosis (POMS) compared with adult-onset MS (AOMS). OBJECTIVES: To assess socio-professional outcomes in POMS and AOMS and variables influencing these outcomes. METHODS: One-hundred-fifteen AOMS and 111 POMS patients underwent neuropsychological testing (Brief Repeatable Battery, Stroop test), assessment of cognitive reserve (CR) (education, National Adult reading Test -NART, Barratt Simplified Measure of Social Status), fatigue (Fatigue Severity Scale), depression (Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale), socio-professional performance (Work and Social Adjustment Scale -WSAS). Prognostic factors were assessed using logistic and linear multivariable regression analyses. RESULTS: 34.5% of patients showed CI without significant differences between AOMS and POMS. Cognitively impaired patients were older (p=0.024), had higher EDSS scores (p=0.041) and lower IQ (p<0.001) compared with cognitively preserved patients. Better WSAS scores were associated with younger age (p=0.007), lower EDSS (p<0.001) and higher educational levels (p=0.001). Fourteen POMS (13%) and six AOMS (5%) achieved a lower educational level compared with their parents (p=0.06). POMS exhibiting a lower than expected educational level, had a lower median IQ compared with the remaining subjects (101 vs 106.5; p=0.03). Unemployment rate was predicted by higher disability (p=0.044) and lower educational levels (p<0.001). Occupational complexity was positively correlated to educational level (<0.001) and NART scores (<0.040). CONCLUSION: This study underscores the complex relationships between cognition and educational, socioeconomic and professional attainment in MS and supports a protective role of CR in both POMS and AOMS.
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