Potassium channel autoantibody may be detectable in blood years before multiple sclerosis symptoms appear

For the study, 16 healthy blood donors who were later diagnosed with multiple sclerosis  were compared to 16 healthy blood donors of the same age and sex who did not develop MS. Scientists looked for a specific antibody to KIR4.1. (KCNJ10 gene )  Samples were collected between two and nine months before the first symptoms of MS appeared.
Next, researchers looked at antibody levels in the blood at additional time points up to six years before and then after disease onset in those who had the KIR4.1 antibody in their blood.
All of the healthy controls tested negative for the KIR4.1 antibody. Of those who later developed MS, seven people tested positive for the antibodies, two showed borderline activity and seven were negative.
In the study, KIR4.1 antibodies were found in the people with pre-clinical MS several years before the first clinical attack. Concentrations of the antibody varied at different time points during pre-MS in individual people.
"The next step is to confirm these findings in larger groups and determine how many years before onset of disease the antibody response develops"

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