Personalized medicine requires a patient-oriented approach with the exact classification of the disease being determined by the underlying pathophysiological processes. In particular, the optimal treatment of multiple sclerosis (MS) requires personalized treatment that goes beyond the pure concept of precision medicine; however, due to the lack of robust biomarkers beyond cranial magnetic resonance imaging and a lacking detailed understanding of some aspects of MS pathogenesis, this approach is not yet fully implemented. Important questions for a better therapeutic stratification of MS patients are: (1) when does MS start? (2) Does the spectrum of MS really span multiple diseases? (3) When does the progressive phase of the disease begin? (4) In which phase of the disease is there a therapeutic window for immunotherapy? Recent findings indicate that MS represents a spectrum of diseases and that there is a therapeutic delay of several years, on which the optimal treatment effect of a disease-modifying treatment depends. For a personalized treatment of MS it is important to determine the exact disease stage of the patient and to react to the development or increase of focal inflammatory activity in a timely manner.
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