| Literature DB >> 31212763 |
Marco A Lana-Peixoto1, Natália Talim2.
Abstract
Neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMOSD) and anti-myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (anti-MOG) syndromes are immune-mediated inflammatory conditions of the central nervous system that frequently involve the optic nerves and the spinal cord. Because of their similar clinical manifestations and habitual relapsing course they are frequently confounded with multiple sclerosis (MS). Early and accurate diagnosis of these distinct conditions is relevant as they have different treatments. Some agents used for MS treatment may be deleterious to NMOSD. NMOSD is frequently associated with antibodies which target aquaporin-4 (AQP4), the most abundant water channel in the CNS, located in the astrocytic processes at the blood-brain barrier (BBB). On the other hand, anti-MOG syndromes result from damage to myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG), expressed on surfaces of oligodendrocytes and myelin sheaths. Acute transverse myelitis with longitudinally extensive lesion on spinal MRI is the most frequent inaugural manifestation of NMOSD, usually followed by optic neuritis. Other core clinical characteristics include area postrema syndrome, brainstem, diencephalic and cerebral symptoms that may be associated with typical MRI abnormalities. Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis and bilateral or recurrent optic neuritis are the most frequent anti-MOG syndromes in children and adults, respectively. Attacks are usually treated with steroids, and relapses prevention with immunosuppressive drugs. Promising emerging therapies for NMOSD include monoclonal antibodies and tolerization.Entities:
Keywords: anti-MOG syndrome; aquaporin 4-IgG; multiple sclerosis; myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein; neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders
Year: 2019 PMID: 31212763 PMCID: PMC6631227 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines7020042
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
Incidence and prevalence of NMOSD across the world.
| Authors, Year | Country | Number of Cases | Incidence (95% CI) (per Million per Year) | Prevalence (95% CI) (per 100,000) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rivera et al., 2008 [ | Mexico | 34 | 0.20 (0.05–0.35) | 1 |
| Cabrera-Gómez et al., 2009 [ | Cuba | 58 | 0.44 (0.3–0.62) | 0.43 (0.29–0.61) |
| Asgari et al., 2011 [ | Denmark | 42 | 4 (3.0–5.4) | 4.41 (3.1–5.7) |
| Aboul Enein et al., 2011 [ | Austria | 71 | 0.54 (0.01–0.03) | 0.71 (0.17–0.96) |
| Cossburn et al., 2012 [ | UK | 14 | NA | 1.96 (1.22–2.97) |
| Houzen et al., 2012 [ | Japan | 3 | 0.8 (0.3–1.6) | 0.72 (0.31–1.42) |
| Jacob et al., 2013 [ | UK | 13 | 0.8 (0.3–1.6) | 0.72 (0.31–1.42) |
| Etemadifar et al., 2014 [ | Iran | 95 | NA | 1.95 (1.62–2.23) |
| Pandit et al., 2014 [ | India | 11 | NA | 2.6 |
| Kashipazha et al., 2015 [ | Iran | 51 | NA | 0.8 (0.54–1.06) |
| Flanagan et al., 2016 [ | USA | 6 | 0.7 (0.0–2.1) | 3.9 (0.8–7.1) |
| Martinique | 39 | 7.3 (4.1–10.1) | 10.0 (6.8–13.2) | |
| van Pelt et al., 2016 [ | Netherlands | 1.2 | NA | |
| Houzen et al., 2017 [ | Japan | 14 | NA | 4.1 (2.2–6.9) |
| Hor et al., 2017 [ | Malaysia | 14 | NA | 1.99 (1.09–3.35) |
| Bukhari et al., 2017 [ | ANZ | 81 | 0.37 (0.36–0.38) | 0.7 (0.66–0.74) |
| Sepulveda et al., 2017 [ | Spain | 74 | 0.63 (0.45–0.8) | 0.89 (0.87–0.91) |
| Holroyd et al., 2018 [ | United Arab Emirates | 10 | 0.59 | 0.34 |
NMOSD: neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders; NA: not available; ANZ: Australia and New Zealand.
Clinical manifestations of NMOSD according to anatomic involvement *.
| Site | Symtoms |
|---|---|
| Optic nerve/chiasm | Eye pain or headache |
| Blurred vision | |
| Disturbance of color vision | |
| Amaurosis | |
| Optic disc edema | |
| Optic atrophy | |
| Scotomas and other visual field defects | |
| Spinal cord | Limb weakness |
| Lower limb spasticity | |
| Gait abnormalities | |
| Sensory disturbances | |
| Radicular pain | |
| Pruritus | |
| Painful tonic spasms | |
| Trunk and limb ataxia | |
| Sphincter disturbances | |
| Respiratory weakness | |
| Lhermitte phenomenon | |
| Brainstem | Motor and sensory disturbances |
| Incoercible nausea, vomiting and hiccups | |
| Intractable cough | |
| Weight loss | |
| Anorexia | |
| Diplopia/ocular movement disorders | |
| Facial dysesthesia and trigeminal neuralgia | |
| Dysgeusia | |
| Facial paralysis | |
| Hearing loss, tinnitus | |
| Vertigo | |
| Dysarthria/dysphagia | |
| Diencephalon | Narcolepsy |
| Hypophyseal abnormalities | |
| Antidiuretic hormone syndrome | |
| Pre-syncopal symptoms | |
| Disturbances of body temperature | |
| Anhydrosis/excessive sweating | |
| Hyperphagia | |
| Cerebrum | Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES) |
| Mental confusion | |
| Seizures | |
| Aphasia | |
| Apraxia | |
| Cognitive dysfunction | |
| Psychiatric symptoms |
* Modified from Lana-Peixoto and Callegaro, 2012 [34]. NMOSD: neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders.
International consensus diagnostic criteria for NMOSD *.
|
| |||
| 1. At least one core clinical characteristic | |||
| 2. Exclusion of alternative diagnoses | |||
|
| |||
| 1. At least two core clinical characteristics meeting all of the following requirements: | |||
| a. At least one core clinical characteristic must be optic neuritis, acute myelitis with LETM, or area postrema syndrome | |||
| b. Dissemination in space (two or more different core clinical characteristics) | |||
| c. Core clinical syndromes must be associated with respective MRI findings: | |||
| i. Optic neuritis: | |||
| 1. Brain MRI is normal or with nonspecific lesions; OR | |||
| 2. Optic nerve lesion extending over ½ of the optic nerve length; or chiasmal lesion | |||
| ii. Acute myelitis: MRI with lesion or spinal atrophy extending over ≥3 contiguous segments | |||
| iii. Area postrema syndrome: MRI with dorsal medulla/area postrema lesions | |||
| iv. Acute brainstem syndrome: MRI with periependymal brainstem lesions | |||
| v. Narcolepsy or acute diencephalic clinical syndrome: MRI with NMOSD-typical diencephalic lesions | |||
| 2. Exclusion of alternative diagnoses | |||
* Modified from Wingerchuk et al., 2015 [35]. NMOSD: neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders; AQP4: aquaporin-4; IgG: immunoglobulin G; LETM: longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis lesions.
Distinctive characteristics between MS and NMOSD.
|
| |
| Progressive course | |
| Partial transverse myelitis | |
| Brain MRI features | |
| Perpendicular periventricular lesions (Dawson fingers) | |
| Periventricular lesions in the inferior temporal lobe | |
| Juxtacortical lesions involving subcortical U-fibers | |
| Cortical lesions | |
| More severe brain atrophy | |
| Spinal cord MRI features | |
| Lesions <3 complete vertebral segments | |
| Lesions located predominantly in the peripheral cord | |
| Diffuse, indistinct signal change on T2-weighted sequences | |
| Cerebrospinal fluid analysis | |
| Presence of oligoclonal bands | |
| Optic coherence tomography features | |
| Predominant atrophy of temporal RNFL | |
|
| |
| Complete transverse myelitis | |
| Brain MRI features | |
| Multiple patchy enhancement with blurred margin in adjacent regions (cloud-like enhancement) | |
| Large and edematous callosal lesions | |
| Large and confluent white matter lesions (as in PRES) | |
| Predominantly posterior brainstem lesions (around the fourth ventricle lesions and periaqueductal lesions) | |
| Hypothalamic lesions | |
| Extensive optic nerve lesions and chiasmal lesions | |
| Spinal cord MRI features | |
| Longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis lesions (≥3 contiguous segments) | |
| Longitudinally extensive spinal cord atrophy (≥3 contiguous segments) | |
| Centrally-located or holomedullary spinal cord lesions | |
| Cerebrospinal fluid analysis | |
| Moderate or marked pleocytosis | |
| Presence of neutrophils and eosinophils | |
| Optic coherence tomography features | |
| Predominant atrophy of superior and inferior RNFL | |
MS: multiple sclerosis; NMOSD: neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders; PRES: posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome; RNFL: retinal nerve fiber layer.
Differential diagnosis of NMOSD.
| Multiple Sclerosis | |
|---|---|
| Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis | |
| MOG-related disorders | |
| Sarcoidosis | |
| Lymphoma | |
| Paraneoplastic disease | |
| Central nervous system infections | |
| Syphilis | |
| Tuberculosis | |
| Human T-lymphotropic virus-I (HTLV-I) infection | |
| Herpes virus infection | |
| Dengue-virus infection | |
| Lyme disease | |
| Schistosomiasis | |
| Sjogren syndrome | |
| Systemic lupus erythematosus | |
| Neuro-Behçet’s disease | |
| Spinal dural arteriovenous fistula | |
NMOSD: neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders.
Figure 1Examples of longitudinally extensive spinal cord lesions detected by MRI in AQP4- seropositive NMOSD patients. (a). T2-weighted central longitudinally extensive cervical lesion. (b). T1-weighted lesion with gadolinium showing multiple hypointensities (cavitations) throughout the cervical cord. (c). T2-weighted cervical lesion extending to brainstem. Another lesion is seen in the upper thoracic levels. (d). Longitudinally extensive spinal cord atrophy of the cervical cord.
Figure 2Optic nerve abnormalities on MRI in AQP4-seropositive NMOSD patients. (a). Sagittal T1-weighted MRI shows edematous gadolinium-enhancing optic nerve lesion extending from the eye to the intracranial segment. (b). Axial T1-weighted extensive gadolinium-enhancing lesion in both optic nerves. (c). Coronal T1-weighted MRI shows edematous gadolinium enhancing lesion in the optic chiasm.
Drugs used in relapse prevention in neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders.
| Drugs | Route | Regimen | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prednisone | Oral | ≥30 mg/d | Keep until until azathioprine or mycophenolate fully effective, then taper over six months |
| Azathioprine | Oral | 2-3 mg/kg/d in 2 doses | First line treatment; latency four to six months; target dose guided by ALC and MCV; monitor liver function |
| Mycophenolate mofetil | Oral | 1500–3000 mg/d in 2 doses | Target dose guided by ALC and blood concentration (1–2 μg/mL) |
| Rituximab | IV | 1000 mg given twice, 14 d apart.Repeat every 6 mo or based on reemergence of CD19 B cells | First-line therapy; CD19 B cells as a marker |
| Methotrexate | Oral | 15–25.0 mg weekly | Supplement with folic acid 1 mg/d, monitor liver function |
| Ciclosporin A | Oral | 2–5 mg/kg/day in 2 doses | Nephrotoxic, target dose guided by blood concentration (70–100 ng/mL) |
| Tacrolimus | Oral | 1–6 mg/day in 2 doses | Nephrotoxic, target dose guided by blood concentration (5–10 ng/mL) |
| Mitoxantrone | IV | 12 mg/m2 every 1–3 months | Cardiac monitoring (LVEF), target dose guided by leukocyte count; total cumulative dose 100 mg/m2 |
| Tocilizumab | IV | 8 mg/kg every 4 weeks | 8 mg/kg every four weeks; monitoring for infections; CRP no reliable biomarker for infection |
ALC = absolute lymphocyte count; MCV = mean corpuscular volume; IV = intravenously; LVEF = left ventricular ejection fraction; CRP = C-reactive protein.
Figure 3Examples of MRI abnormalities in anti-MOG syndrome. (a). Axial T1-weighted MRI reveals longitudinal extensive gadolinium enhancement of both optic nerves. (b). Coronal T2-weighted MRI shows hyperintense thickening of perioptic nerve sheath. (c). Sagittal T2/FLAIR-weighted image shows large fluffy lesion in the medulla.