| Literature DB >> 32328884 |
Marios Hadjivassiliou1, Francesc Graus2, Jerome Honnorat3, Sven Jarius4, Maarten Titulaer5, Mario Manto6, Nigel Hoggard7, Ptolemaios Sarrigiannis8, Hiroshi Mitoma9.
Abstract
Aside from well-characterized immune-mediated ataxias with a clear trigger and/or association with specific neuronal antibodies, a large number of idiopathic ataxias are suspected to be immune mediated but remain undiagnosed due to lack of diagnostic biomarkers. Primary autoimmune cerebellar ataxia (PACA) is the term used to describe this later group. An International Task Force comprising experts in the field of immune ataxias was commissioned by the Society for Research on the Cerebellum and Ataxias (SRCA) in order to devise diagnostic criteria aiming to improve the diagnosis of PACA. The proposed diagnostic criteria for PACA are based on clinical (mode of onset, pattern of cerebellar involvement, presence of other autoimmune diseases), imaging findings (MRI and if available MR spectroscopy showing preferential, but not exclusive involvement of vermis) and laboratory investigations (CSF pleocytosis and/or CSF-restricted IgG oligoclonal bands) parameters. The aim is to enable clinicians to consider PACA when encountering a patient with progressive ataxia and no other diagnosis given that such consideration might have important therapeutic implications.Entities:
Keywords: Immune ataxias; Primary autoimmune cerebellar ataxia (PACA)
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32328884 PMCID: PMC7351847 DOI: 10.1007/s12311-020-01132-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cerebellum ISSN: 1473-4222 Impact factor: 3.847
Fig. 1MR spectroscopy of the cerebellar vermis of a patient with PACA before and a year after treatment with mycophenolate. Note the improvement of the NAA/Cr area ratio from 0.92 pre-treatment to 1.12 after treatment. This was associated with clinical improvement
Some examples of autoantibodies observed in primary autoimmune cerebellar ataxia
| 1 Examples of autoantibodies associated with non-neurological autoimmune diseases that may raise suspicion of PACA | |
| Thyroid peroxidase, thyroglobulin | PACA, thyroid autoimmune diseases |
| Anti-SSA (Ro), SSB (La) | PACA, Sjogren’s syndrome |
| 2 Examples of autoantibodies reported only in a few patients with ataxia, thus significance in the context of ataxia is less well characterized but their presence may raise suspicion of PACA | |
| Anti-Sj/ITPR-1 | Variable clinical course |
| Anti-Ca/ARHGAP26 | Variable clinical course. Association with neoplasm reported |
| Anti-MAG | Chronic gait ataxia and neuropathy. Ataxia is central in origin |
| Anti-Septin-5 | Chronic cerebellar syndrome, no improvement after immunotherapy |
| Anti-neurochondrin | Chronic cerebellar/brainstem syndrome |
| Anti-Nb/AP3B2 | Subacute cerebellar ataxia |
| Anti-Homer-3 | Subacute cerebellar ataxia |
ITPR1, inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate receptor type 1; ARHGAP26, Rho GTPase-activating protein 26; MAG, myelin-associated glycoprotein