- Julian, Laura;
- Serafin, Dana;
- Charvet, Leigh;
- Ackerson, Joseph;
- Benedict, Ralph;
- Braaten, Ellen;
- Brown, Tanya;
- O’Donnell, Ellen;
- Parrish, Joy;
- Preston, Thomas;
- Zaccariello, Michael;
- Belman, Anita;
- Chitnis, Tanuja;
- Gorman, Mark;
- Ness, Jayne;
- Patterson, Marc;
- Rodriguez, Moses;
- Waubant, Emmanuelle;
- Weinstock-Guttman, Bianca;
- Yeh, Ann;
- Krupp, Lauren B
In the largest sample studied to date, we measured cognitive functioning in children and adolescents with pediatric multiple sclerosis (n = 187) as well as those with clinically isolated syndrome (n = 44). Participants were consecutively enrolled from six United States Pediatric Multiple Sclerosis Centers of Excellence. Participants had a mean of 14.8 ± 2.6 years of age and an average disease duration of 1.9 ± 2.2 years. A total of 65 (35%) children with multiple sclerosis and 8 (18%) with clinically isolated syndrome met criteria for cognitive impairment. The most frequent areas involved were fine motor coordination (54%), visuomotor integration (50%), and speeded information processing (35%). A diagnosis of multiple sclerosis (odds ratio = 3.60, confidence interval = 1.07, 12.36, P = .04) and overall neurologic disability (odds ratio = 1.47, confidence interval = 1.10, 2.10, P = .03) were the only independent predictors of cognitive impairment. Cognitive impairment may occur early in these patients, and prompt recognition is critical for their care.