| Literature DB >> 29423617 |
Ania A Crawshaw1, Divya Dhasmana2, Brynmor Jones3, Carolyn M Gabriel4, Steve Sturman5, Nicholas W S Davies2,4,6, Graham P Taylor2.
Abstract
Human T-cell lymphotropic virus (HTLV)-1-associated myelopathy (HAM) is well described. Clinical features are predominantly consistent with cord pathology, though imaging and autopsy studies also demonstrate brain inflammation. In general, this is subclinical; however, six cases have previously been reported of encephalopathy in HTLV-1-infected patients, without alternative identified aetiology. We describe three further cases of encephalitis in the UK HAM cohort (n = 142), whereas the annual incidence of acute encephalitis in the general population is 0.07-12.6 per 100,000. Clinical features included reduced consciousness, fever/hypothermia, headaches, seizures, and focal neurology. Investigation showed: raised CSF protein; pleocytosis; raised CSF:peripheral blood mononuclear cell HTLV-1 proviral load ratio; and MRI either normal or showing white matter changes in brain and cord. Four of the six previous case reports of encephalopathy in HTLV-infected patients also had HAM. Histopathology, reported in three, showed perivascular predominantly CD8+ lymphocytic infiltrates in the brain. One had cerebral demyelination, and all had cord demyelination. We have reviewed the existing six cases in the literature, together with our three new cases. In all seven with HAM, the spastic paraparesis deteriorated sub-acutely preceding encephalitis. Eight of the nine were female, and four of the seven treated with steroids improved. We propose that HTLV-associated encephalopathy may be part of the spectrum of HTLV-1-induced central nervous system disease.Entities:
Keywords: Case series; Corticosteroids; Encephalitis; Encephalopathy; HTLV-1; Review
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29423617 PMCID: PMC5878187 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-018-8777-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 4.849
Fig. 1a, b Patient B MRI brain imaging during first episode of encephalitis. a Coronal FLAIR and b axial T2 FSE. Widespread infratentorial parenchymal signal abnormality particularly involving the dorsal brainstem with extension into the cervical spinal cord. There was minimal mass effect and patchy gadolinium enhancement. In addition, there was scattered involvement of the fronto-parietal white matter (not shown). Appearances are in keeping with an acute inflammatory process, whether infective or para-infective. Follow-up imaging 2 months later showed near resolution of the brainstem changes. c Patient B MRI cord imaging 5 months prior to encephalitis admission showing normal cervical cord appearances. d MRI during first encephalitis episode showing subtle ill-defined long segment signal abnormality throughout the cervical cord which is also slightly swollen. Appearances are those of a long segment myelitis. There was no pathological enhancement
Fig. 4a, b Variation in HTLV proviral load in PBMC and CSF in patients B and C, respectively. Episodes of encephalitis are marked with arrows
Fig. 2a, b Patient B MRI brain imaging during second episode of encephalitis. a Coronal FLAIR and b axial T2 FSE. New patchy signal change in the fronto-parietal white matter, splenium of the corpus callosum, cortico-spinal tracts and recrudescence of the diffuse brain stem signal change seen during the previous encephalitic episode
Fig. 3a Patient C MRI brain during third episode of HTLV encephalitis. Ill-defined T2w signal hyperintensity in the basis pontis. b Patient C brain MRI brain during fourth episode of HTLV encephalitis (while on ciclosporin). Coronal T2w sequence. Ill-defined T2 signal hyperintensity in the midbrain and pontine tegmentum. No swelling or pathological enhancement. Previous area of signal change now normalised
Summary of six existing case reports of HTLV-associated encephalopathy
| References | Araga et al. [ | Iwata et al. [ | Smith et al. [ | Tachi et al. [ | Tateyama et al. [ | Puccioni-Sohler et al. [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age/sex | 52, F | 49, M | 73, F | 13, F | 65, F | 41, F |
| Ethnicity | Japanese | Japanese | African–American | Japanese | Japanese | Brazilian |
| Clinical features | Meningoencephalitis. | Encephalopathy and ataxia | Encephalopathy with seizures | Encephalo-myelopathy with myoclonic seizures | Encephalo-myelo-neuropathy | Rapid-onset myelopathy then encephalopathy with seizures |
| Myelopathy | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Time after HAM onset |
| – | 24 years | Months | ~ 1 month | ~1 month |
| CSF cells | 176–1360 white cells (initially monocytes, then mostly lymphocytes) | 1 lymphocyte | Acellular | 33 white cells (lobulated nuclei) | 1 white cell | 7–116 white cells (first mostly lymphocytes, then mixed with neutrophils) |
| Other abnormal CSF features | IgG index 0.62, OP 36 cmH2O | Protein S3 | Protein 95, oligoclonal bands | Protein 69–83, IgG index 0.7–1.2 | ||
| HTLV-1 blood | Antibody 1:4096 | Antibody 1:80 | Proviral load 37% | Antibody 1:16384 | Antibody present | Proviral load 108% |
| HTLV-1 CSF | Antibody 1:128 | Antibody 1:1 | Proviral load 52% | Antibody 1:8192 | Antibody present | Proviral load 26% |
| Brain imaging | CT- cortical swelling and mild ventricular dilatation | Normal MR | MR-ADEM-like parieto-occipital white matter changes | MR-patchy hyper-intensity in cerebral white matter | Normal CT | |
| EEG | – |
| Generalised slowing. | Polyspike and wave, then slow-wave bursts | Diffuse theta waves; paroxysmal delta and sharp waves |
|
| Treatment | Prednisolone and antibiotics | IV corticosteroids | Phenytoin | IV corticosteroids | IV corticosteroids | IV corticosteroids |
| Outcome | Died of pneumonia | Marked improvement | Died of pneumonia | Died | Ongoing myelopathy and polyneuropathy; resolution of cognitive symptoms | Died of pneumonia |
Normal CSF ranges: white cells 0–5 per mm3, protein 15–45 mg/dL
OP opening pressure, PBMC peripheral blood mononuclear cells, ADEM acute disseminated encephalomyelitis