| Literature DB >> 28155064 |
AnnaCarin Horne1, Ronny Wickström2, Michael B Jordan3, E Ann Yeh4, Ahmed Naqvi5, Jan-Inge Henter2, Gritta Janka6.
Abstract
OPINION STATEMENT: Central nervous system (CNS)-hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) is not a disease in itself, but it is part of a systemic immune response. The vast majority of patients with CNS-HLH also have systemic HLH and a large number of patients with primary and secondary HLH have CNS involvement. Reactivations within the CNS are frequent during the course of HLH treatment and may occur concomitant with or independent of systemic relapses. It is also important to consider primary HLH as an underlying cause of "unknown CNS inflammation" as these patients may present with only CNS disease. To initiate proper treatment, a correct diagnosis must be made. A careful review of the patient's history and a thorough neurological examination are essential. In addition to the blood tests required to make a diagnosis of HLH, a lumbar puncture with cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) should always be done in all cases regardless of the presence or absence of neurological signs or symptom. Treatment options for CNS-HLH include, but are not limited to, those commonly used in systemic HLH, including corticosteroids, etoposide, cyclosporine A, alemtuzumab, and ATG. In addition, intrathecal treatment with methotrexate and corticosteroids has become a standard care and is likely to be beneficial. Therapy must be initiated without inappropriate delay to prevent late effects in HLH. An interesting novel approach is an anti-IFN-gamma antibody (NI-0501), which is currently being tested. Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) also represents an important CNS-HLH treatment; patients with primary HLH may benefit from immediate HSCT even if there is active disease at time of transplantation, though care should be taken to monitor CNS inflammation through HSCT and treat if needed. Since CNS-HLH is a condition leading to the most severe late effects of HLH, early expert consultation is recommended.Entities:
Keywords: Central nervous system (CNS); Cerebrospinal fluid; Hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH); Intrathecal treatment; Long-term effects; Neuroradiology; Overall survival; Treatment
Year: 2017 PMID: 28155064 PMCID: PMC5290057 DOI: 10.1007/s11940-017-0439-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Treat Options Neurol ISSN: 1092-8480 Impact factor: 3.598
Summary of articles (of over 20 children) with data on neurological findings and symptoms, neuroradiology findings, and CSF analyses
| Reference | Study type | Cohort n (ages) | Neurological symptoms/findings | Pathological neuroradiology | Pathological CSF * |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arico et al. [ | Retrospective multicenter | 122 (0 month–6 years) |
|
| 55/94 (58%) |
| Haddad et al. [ | Retrospective single center | 34 (1 month–4 years) | 25/34 (73%) | 10/17 (59%) | 29/34 (85%) |
| Trottestam et al. [ | Prospective treatment study: HLH-94 | 249 | 80/245 (33%) | 107/203 (53%) | 43/135 (32%) |
| Hirst et al. [ | Retrospective single center | 23 (3 days–9 years) | 7/23 (30%) |
|
|
| Yang et al. [ | Prospective single center | 92 (2 months–16 years) | 12/92 (13%) | 36/92 (39%) | 15/92 (16%) |
| Kim et al. [ | Retrospective single center | 50 (10 day–17 years) | 19/50 (38%) | 12/21 (57%) | 13/23 (57%) |
| Jovanovic et al. [ | Retrospective single center | 30 (1 month–16 years) | 14/30 (46%) | 4/9 (44%) | 17/30 (56%) |
| Horne et al. [ | Prospective treatment study: HLH-94 | 193 (12 days–14 years) | 72/193 (37%) | 35/115 (30%) | 101/193 (52%) |
| Henter et al. [ | Retrospective multicenter | 23 (1month–6years) | 15/23 (65%) |
| 19/21 (90%) |
| Deiva et al. [ | Retrospective single center | 46 (0 month–15 years) | 29/46 (63%) | 31/46 (67%) | 23/46 (50%) |
| Rachmandran et al. [ | Retrospective single center | 43 (50 day–14 years) | 12/43 (36%) |
| 4/12 (33%) |
| Koh et al. [ | Retrospective multicenter | 251 (0 year–18 years) | 41/233 (18%) | 38/106 (36%) | 26/77 (34) |
| Dao et al. [ | Prospective, single center | 89 (2 months–14 years) | Not specified | 9/15 (60%) | 74/81 (91%) |
Fig. 1Suggested workup for CNS disease in a patient with HLH.
Fig. 2Neuroradiological MRI findings in HLH. a T2w image showing bilateral hyperintense lesions in the cerebellum. b T2w image with hyperintense signal and edema in the left posterior hemisphere and abnormalities in the brainstem. c Diffusion weighted imaging of the same region as in b with lesions imitating cerebral infarction.
Studies describing treatment of CNS involvement in HLH
| Reference | Study type | Study group | Treatment | Key results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Haddad et al. [ | Case series | 29 (children) | Between 1981 and 1990, Etoposide and MTX IT; since 1991, CSA and ATG). During the maintenance therapy of both regimens, MTX IT was given usually every month. | • The outcome of the 19 patients treated by systemic and intrathecal chemotherapy and/or immunosuppression exclusively was poor: all died following occurrence of multiple relapses or CNS disease progression in most cases. |
| Ouachee-Chardin M et al. [ | Case series | 48 (children) | HSCT | • HSCT, whatever the donor compatibility, is the treatment of choice for FHLH. It prevents relapses and CNS disease progression. |
| Mahlaoui et al. [ | Case series | 38 (children) | Combination of ATG with corticosteroids, CSA, and MTX IT | Treatment worked better for those without neurological disease: The probability of achieving CR for children with neurological disease was 58% (11 of 19) compared with 89% (17 of 19) in those without overt neurologic disease. In patients who did not receive a transplant shortly after ATG therapy, median duration of CR was 1.3 months with considerable variability (range 0.5–18 months). |
| Horne et al. [ | Treatment study: HLH-94 | 193 (children) | HLH-94 | Treatment worked best for those without neurologic symptoms and normal cerebrospinal fluid: The probability of being alive without neurological symptoms at two months after start of therapy was 66% (81/122) for those with either neurological symptoms and/or abnormal cerebrospinal fluid compared with 89% (63/71) in patients without any of these features. |
| Tateishi Y et al. [ | Case series | 8 (children) | Continuous hemodiafiltration using a polymethyl methacrylate membrane hemofilter (PMMA-CHDF) for cytokine removal in patients with refractory secondary HLH | Even in patients with severe HLH complicated with organ failure who are refractory to medical therapy, PMMA- CHDF may be effective in controlling HLH and contribute to survival: 2/3 with CNS “failure” went into remission. One died. |
| Sparber-Sauer et al. [ | Case series | 18 (children) | HSCT | Patients with early relapse of primary HLH or with persistent CNS involvement may benefit from immediate HSCT. Both surviving patients with active CNS disease at HSCT are free of neurological sequelae. |
| Hu Y. et al. [ | Case series | 15 (adults) | Cyclophosphamide, vincristine and prednisone combined chemotherapy (COP). Patients diagnosed with sHLH were enrolled and treated with the COP regimen as either initial or second-line therapy. | • COP chemotherapy had a relatively favourable effect for adult patients with sHLH, and the toxicities were tolerable |
| Rajajee et al. 2014 [ | Case series | 40 (children) | Secondary HLH treated in three different groups: | • Both IVIG therapy and HLH protocol 2004 were found to be equally efficient in the management of secondary HLH |
| Marsh et al. [ | Case series | 22 (children) | Alemtuzumab | • This case series suggests that alemtuzumab therapy of refractory HLH results in improvement and survival to allogeneic HCT in most patients |
| Deiva et al. [ | Case series | 46 (children) | Combination of ATG or alemtuzumab with corticosteroids, CSA, and MTX IT | 21/29 children with neurological symptoms (72%) achieved complete or partial remission and received HSCT compared to 16/17 (94%) without neurological symptoms at onset. |
| Rachmandran et al. [ | Case series | 43 (children) | Steroids with or without IVIG were used commonly in the early phase of the disease. | The overall mortality (24%) was lower than in other Asian case series. Better survival rate in this paper might be due to a high incidence of secondary HLH, early diagnosis and early institution of immunomodulatory treatment. |
| Koh et al. [ | Case series | 251 | HLH-94- or HLA-2004-based immunochemotherapy | Treatment worked better for those without CNS disease: 5-year overall survival for those with CNS involvement was 56% compared to 76% for those without. |
| Dao et al. [ | Case series | 89 (children) | • Suspected secondary HLH treated with either DX + CsA + etoposide or DX + CsA | The combination chemotherapy including etoposide was related to a favorable prognosis of survival in secondary HH patients: 40/50 (80%) vs 23/37 (62%) |
| Kim et al. [ | Case series | 50 (children) 23 with CNS disease | During the study period, three different chemotherapy protocols were used: | Overall, patients with CNS disease achieve poorer outcomes than patients without CNS involvement. |
GLOSSARY: ATG antithymocyte globulin, CSA cyclosporin A, MTX IT methotrexate intrathecal, HSCT hematopoietic stem cell transplantation