Trygve Holmøy1,2, Antonie G Beiske3, Svetozar Zarnovicky4, Aija Zuleron Myro5, Egil Røsjø5,6, Emilia Kerty6,7. 1. Department of Neurology, Akershus University Hospital, Lørenskog, Norway. trygve.holmoy@medisin.uio.no. 2. Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway. trygve.holmoy@medisin.uio.no. 3. Multiple Sclerosis Centre Hakadal, Hakadal, Norway. 4. Department of Radiology, Akershus University Hospital, Lørenskog, Norway. 5. Department of Neurology, Akershus University Hospital, Lørenskog, Norway. 6. Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway. 7. Department of Neurology, Oslo University Hospital Rikshospitalet, Oslo, Norway.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) co-occuring with multiple sclerosis-like disease (LHON-MS) is suggested to be a separate disease entity denoted Harding's disease. Little is known about the response to initiation and discontinuation of potent immunomodulatory treatment in LHON-MS. CASE PRESENTATION: We describe a LHON-MS patient with 27 years disease duration who developed severe disease activity peaking 14 months after discontinuation of natalizumab, with extensive new inflammatory lesions throughout the brain and in the spinal cord resembling immune inflammatory reconstitution syndrome. She had previously been clinically and radiologically stable on natalizumab treatment for 6 years, and before that only experienced subtle clinical activity during 9 years on interferon beta1a. CONCLUSION: This is the first report on severe exacerbation of inflammatory disease activity after discontinuation of natalizumab in LHON-MS, and suggests that late rebound activity can occur in these patients.
BACKGROUND:Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) co-occuring with multiple sclerosis-like disease (LHON-MS) is suggested to be a separate disease entity denoted Harding's disease. Little is known about the response to initiation and discontinuation of potent immunomodulatory treatment in LHON-MS. CASE PRESENTATION: We describe a LHON-MS patient with 27 years disease duration who developed severe disease activity peaking 14 months after discontinuation of natalizumab, with extensive new inflammatory lesions throughout the brain and in the spinal cord resembling immune inflammatory reconstitution syndrome. She had previously been clinically and radiologically stable on natalizumab treatment for 6 years, and before that only experienced subtle clinical activity during 9 years on interferon beta1a. CONCLUSION: This is the first report on severe exacerbation of inflammatory disease activity after discontinuation of natalizumab in LHON-MS, and suggests that late rebound activity can occur in these patients.
Leber’s hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) is caused by point mutations in mitochondrial DNA that encodes complex 1 in the respiratory chain, and usually manifests as subacute severe and painless deterioration of central visual acuity, caused by loss retinal ganglion cells in the papillomacular bundle [1]. The co-occurrence of LHON and a multiple sclerosis-like disease (LHON-MS) is suggested to be 50 times more frequent than expected by chance [2], and has been considered a distinct entity named Harding’s disease [3]. With the exception of more frequent and severe involvement of the optic nerves LHON-MS seems to resemble relapsing remitting (RR) MS both clinically and radiologically [4], and most patients also have intrathecal synthesis of immunoglobulin G [2]. Immunomodulatory treatment such as natalizumab can therefore be considered. In MS, it is well established that disease activity returns within 4–7 months after discontinuation of natalizumab [5-7]. Some studies also reports possible rebound activity with disease activity exceeding pre-treatment levels or with particularly severe MS relapses [8-10]. Very little is known about the possible effects of starting and discontinuing potent immunomodulatory treatment in LHON-MS.
MRI during the early phase and at the peak of post-natalizumab exacerbation. The upper panel shows Fluid inversion recovery (FLAIR; a, b and c) and T2 (d) from June 2015. The middle panel shows examples of new and enlarging lesions on corresponding FLAIR (e, f and g) and T2 (h) sections at March 2016. The lower panel (i, j and k) shows examples of gadolinium enhancement on T1 images at March 2016
MRI during the early phase and at the peak of post-natalizumab exacerbation. The upper panel shows Fluid inversion recovery (FLAIR; a, b and c) and T2 (d) from June 2015. The middle panel shows examples of new and enlarging lesions on corresponding FLAIR (e, f and g) and T2 (h) sections at March 2016. The lower panel (i, j and k) shows examples of gadolinium enhancement on T1 images at March 2016
Conclusions
This case story shows that severe disease activity resembling IRIS can occur after 27 years disease duration in a patient with LHON-MS, and raises the question whether this unusual exacerbation was triggered by the withdrawal of natalizumab 14 month previously.The concept of rebound disease activity upon discontinuation of natalizumab in RRMS is not entirely clear. A systematic study of relapses in RRMS patients during the suspension of natalizumab in 2005 showed that disease activity returned to pre-natalizumab levels and peaked between 4 and 7 months, without evidence of rebound [6]. On the other hand, others have reported increased disease activity compared to pre-treatment levels in a substantial proportion of patients, including IRIS-like and lethal exacerbations [5]. In most cases the patients with possible rebound had aggressive RRMS prior to treatment with natalizumab. High risk of significant worsening after natalizumab withdrawal has, however, been reported also in patients with possible secondary progressive MS with EDSS exceeding four [10], which was one of the reasons for withdrawal in our patient.Our patient had no MRI activity when the first clinical signs of disease activity appeared 6 months after discontinuation of natalizumab, and the full-blown IRIS-like exacerbation first appeared after 14 months. This is longer than reported in MS [5, 9, 12]. Saturation of alpha4 integrin is permissive for the immunological effect of natalizuamb. Desaturation to 50 % is likely to occur when serum levels of natalizumab fall below 1 μg/ml [13], which has been predicted to take almost 100 days in 50 % of MS patients on long-term treatment. Natalizumab can however be measured in the serum up to 260 days after the last infusion, with pronounced variation between individuals [14]. Interestingly, it has been demonstrated that natalizumab can exchange Fab-arms with wild-type IgG4 in natalizumab-treated patients, possibly contributing to observed variation in the elimination time [15]. It is thus possible that the time needed to desaturation of α4-integrin varies considerably between individuals, and that an observation period of up to 1 year after natalizumab withdrawal, as reported in several studies [6, 8, 10], is too short to capture all cases of possible rebound.It must, however, also be considered whether the IRIS-like exacerbation in our patient was not causally related to the withdrawal of natalizumab. Because of the rarity, there are no systematic studies of the natural history of LHON-MS. With the exception of early and severe bilateral optic neuropathy, it does however not seem to differ very much from other patients with MS [2, 16]. Interestingly, the IRIS-like MRI findings in our patient share some features with another LHON-MS patient previously reported [17], who had not been treated with natalizumab or other immunomudulatory drugs, and who died after 19 years disease duration [18]. There are however differences, as the most prominent feature of the previously published patient was a cystic and space-occupying lesion in the frontal lobe and contrast enhancement seemed to be less prominent than in our patient.It is not known if or how Leber mutations contribute to the MS-like pathology in LHON-MS, or how the condition should be treated. In contrast to previous reports [2], a recent study did not find more Leber mutations among MS patients than expected by chance [16], thus challenging that LHON-MS is a distinct entity. On the other side, mitochondrial dysfunction is indeed part of the pathogenesis in MS also in patients without LHON [19], and mitochondrial manganese superoxide has been reported to be upregulated in lesions outside the optic nerves in autopsy material from a patient with LHON-MS [18].Given the radiological, immunological and clinical resemblance with MS, we find it reasonable to treat patients with LHON-MS with immunomodulatory drugs as other patients with MS. The current case report underscores the need to be cautious when considering withdrawal of natalizumab also in these patients, and suggests that severe rebound activity can occur more than a year after natalizumab withdrawal.
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