To systematically review Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV) titers as prognostic biomarkers in MS.
EBV is a necessary but insufficient factor in the pathophysiology of multiple sclerosis (MS). EBV antibodies to the nuclear antigen (EBNA1) and viral capsid antigen (VCA) rise rapidly prior to disease manifestations, and their absence could be used clinically given a high negative predictive value. It is unclear whether EBV titers act as prognostic, monitoring, or pharmacodynamic/response biomarkers. Significant literature on this topic exists but has not been synthesized. We hypothesized that EBV titers against the nuclear (EBNA1) and capsid (VCA) antigens are potential prognostic and monitoring biomarkers in MS, and that the patient population, MS clinical phenotype, and EBV assay method may play important roles in explaining variability among study outcomes.
We performed a systemic query in PubMed and EMBASE from inception to April 1, 2022. After removal of duplicates, records were screened by abstract. Remaining full text articles were reviewed. Clinical and MRI data were extracted from full text articles for comparison and synthesis.
Heterogeneous methodology limited generalization and meta-analysis. EBV titers are unlikely to represent prognostic biomarkers in MS. The areas of highest promise relate to diagnostic exclusion and pharmacodynamic/disease response. The use of EBV titers as biomarkers in clinical practice remains additionally limited by a lack of methodological precision, reliability, and validation.