| Literature DB >> 33649021 |
Hesham Abboud1,2, John Probasco3, Sarosh R Irani4, Beau Ances5, David R Benavides6, Michael Bradshaw7,8, Paulo Pereira Christo9, Russell C Dale10, Mireya Fernandez-Fournier11, Eoin P Flanagan12, Avi Gadoth13, Pravin George14, Elena Grebenciucova15, Adham Jammoul14, Soon-Tae Lee16, Yuebing Li14, Marcelo Matiello17,18, Anne Marie Morse19, Alexander Rae-Grant14, Galeno Rojas20,21, Ian Rossman22, Sarah Schmitt23, Arun Venkatesan3, Steven Vernino24, Sean J Pittock12, Maarten Titulaer25.
Abstract
The objective of this paper is to evaluate available evidence for each step in autoimmune encephalitis management and provide expert opinion when evidence is lacking. The paper approaches autoimmune encephalitis as a broad category rather than focusing on individual antibody syndromes. Core authors from the Autoimmune Encephalitis Alliance Clinicians Network reviewed literature and developed the first draft. Where evidence was lacking or controversial, an electronic survey was distributed to all members to solicit individual responses. Sixty-eight members from 17 countries answered the survey. The most popular bridging therapy was oral prednisone taper chosen by 38% of responders while rituximab was the most popular maintenance therapy chosen by 46%. Most responders considered maintenance immunosuppression after a second relapse in patients with neuronal surface antibodies (70%) or seronegative autoimmune encephalitis (61%) as opposed to those with onconeuronal antibodies (29%). Most responders opted to cancer screening for 4 years in patients with neuronal surface antibodies (49%) or limbic encephalitis (46%) as opposed to non-limbic seronegative autoimmune encephalitis (36%). Detailed survey results are presented in the manuscript and a summary of the diagnostic and therapeutic recommendations is presented at the conclusion. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: autoimmune encephalitis; neuroimmunology; paraneoplastic syndrome
Year: 2021 PMID: 33649021 PMCID: PMC8292591 DOI: 10.1136/jnnp-2020-325302
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry ISSN: 0022-3050 Impact factor: 13.654
Symptomatic management for autoimmune encephalitis
| Symptom category | Therapeutic options | Precautions |
| Psychosis/agitation/mania |
Acute immunotherapy with IVMP, IVIg and/or PLEX. Benzodiazepines (eg, clonazepam, diazepam). Antipsychotics (eg, quetiapine). Mood stabilisers (eg, valproic acid). Establish safety measures as necessary (eg, bed padding, soft restraints, room sitter). |
Avoid over-sedation and unnecessary polypharmacy. Avoid medications that lower seizure threshold in patients with high seizure risk (eg, clozapine, olanzapine). Avoid medications that prolong QT interval in dysautonomic patients (eg, ziprasidone, haloperidol). Watch out for worsening of involuntary movements or development of neuroleptic malignant syndrome. |
| Seizures |
Acute immunotherapy with IVMP, IVIg and/or PLEX. Antiseizure medications (sodium channel blockers like carbamazepine or lacosamide may be preferred in LGI1-antibody encephalitis). Medically induced coma with midazolam, pentobarbital or propofol is required for NORSE. |
Instate early immunotherapy for patients with seizures in the setting of suspected AE. Avoid use of anti-seizure medications alone. May cautiously attempt weaning antiseizure medications in patients with early seizure freedom and normal brain MRI and EEG. |
| Movement disorders |
Acute immunotherapy with IVMP, IVIg and/or PLEX. Benzodiazepines (eg, clonazepam, diazepam) for myoclonus, SPS, PERM, catatonia, dystonia, stereotypies and hyperkinesia. Anticholinergics (eg, trihexyphenidyl, benzatropine) for dystonia. Muscle relaxants (eg, baclofen, tizanidine) for dystonia and spasticity. Dopamine blockers (eg, risperidone) or depleters (tetrabenazine) for chorea, athetosis, balism, tics and hyperkinesia. Dopamine agonists (eg, pramipexole, ropinirole) or carbidopa/levodopa for acquired parkinsonism, rigidity and akinetic mutism. |
Avoid over-sedation and unnecessary polypharmacy. Watch for paradoxical worsening of involuntary movements or development of neuroleptic malignant syndrome. Practice caution with anticholinergics in patients with dysautonomia. Practice caution with anticholinergics and dopaminergic medications in patients with psychosis. |
| Dysautonomia |
Acute immunotherapy with IVMP, IVIg and/or PLEX. ICU monitoring for severe dysautonomia. Beta-blockers (eg, propranolol), alpha-2 blockers (eg, clonidine), and/or acetylcholine esterase inhibitors (pyridostigmine) for increased sympathetic drive. Midodrine, fludrocortisone or droxidopa for symptomatic postural hypotension. Temporary pacing for heart block or severe arrhythmia. Total parental nutrition for patients with severe gastrointestinal dysmotility. Anti-muscarinics (eg, oxybutynin) for bladder incontinence. |
Watch for exaggerated response to sympatholytic therapies. Watch for supine hypertension when treating postural hypotension. Watch for cognitive and cardiac side effects when using antimuscarinics. |
| Sleep disorders |
Acute immunotherapy with IVMP, IVIg and/or PLEX. Promote sleep hygiene and uninterrupted night-time sleep. Melatonin to promote the sleep-wake cycle. Sedating benzodiazepines (eg, temazepam), benzodiazepine receptor agonists (eg, zolpidem) and/or non-benzodiazepine hypnotics (eg, zopiclone) for insomnia. Wake-promoting agents (eg, modafinil) and/or traditional stimulants (eg, methylphenidate) for excessive daytime sleepiness. Evaluate residual sleep disorders with polysomnography and treat sleep disordered breathing if present. |
Avoid over-sedation and unnecessary polypharmacy. Practice caution when using stimulants in patients with seizures or hyperkinetic involuntary movements. |
AE, autoimmune encephalitis; EEG, electroencephalogram; ICU, intensive care unit; IVIg, intravenous immunoglobulins; IVMP, intravenous methyl-prednisolone; LGI1, leucine-rich glioma inactivated-1; NORSE, new onset refractory status-epilepticus; PERM, progressive encephalomyelitis with rigidity and myoclonus; PLEX, plasma exchange; SPS, stiff person syndrome.
Antibody prevalence in epilepsy and encephalopathy (APE2 score)
| Antibody prevalence in epilepsy and encephalopathy (APE2 score) | Value |
| New onset, rapidly progressive mental status changes that developed over 1–6 weeks or new onset seizure activity (within 1 year of evaluation) | (+1) |
| Neuropsychiatric changes; agitation, aggressiveness, emotional lability | (+1) |
| Autonomic dysfunction (sustained atrial tachycardia or bradycardia, orthostatic hypotension (≥20 mm Hg fall in systolic pressure or ≥ 10 mm Hg fall in diastolic pressure within 3 min of quiet standing), hyperhidrosis, persistently labile blood pressure, ventricular tachycardia, cardiac asystole or gastrointestinal dysmotility) | (+1) |
| Viral prodrome (rhinorrhoea, sore throat, low-grade fever) to be scored in the absence of underlying systemic malignancy within 5 years of neurological symptom onset | (+2) |
| Faciobrachial dystonic seizures | (+3) |
| Facial dyskinesias, to be scored in the absence of faciobrachial dystonic seizures | (+2) |
| Seizure refractory to at least to two antiseizure medications | (+2) |
| CSF findings consistent with inflammation (elevated CSF protein >50 mg/dL and/or lymphocytic pleocytosis >5 cells/µL, if the total number of CSF RBC is <1000 cells/µL) | (+2) |
| Brain MRI suggesting encephalitis (T2/FLAIR hyperintensity restricted to one or both medial temporal lobes, or multifocal in grey matter, white matter or both compatible with demyelination or inflammation) | (+2) |
| Systemic cancer diagnosed within 5 years of neurological symptom onset (excluding cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma, basal cell carcinoma, brain tumour, cancer with brain metastasis) | (+2) |
| Total (max: 18) |
Adapted with permission from Dubey et al.28
CSF, cerebrospinal fluid.
Neuronal Autoantibody Confidence Scale*
| Clinical/laboratory factor | Score |
| Ab against intracellular antigen (or high clinical relevance surface antibody) | 1 |
| Movement disorder and/or stiff person syndrome | 1 |
| Cancer and/or smoking history | 1 |
| Inflammatory CSF (either high cell count, IgG index and/or positive OCBs) | 1 |
| Serum hyponatraemia | 1 |
| Chronic course (>3 months)† | −1 |
| Total | Maximum=5 |
Modified from Abboud et al. 33
*Based on a study in patients tested for the original Mayo Clinic Paraneoplastic panel not the Autoimmune Encephalitis Panel.
†Although chronic course is rare in autoimmune encephalitis, patients with leucine-rich glioma inactivated-1, CASPR2 and IgLON5-antibodies can have a chronic course.
Ab, antibody; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; OCBs, oligoclonal bands.
Figure 1Interpretation of the neuronal autoantibody panel. *Anti-Hu (ANNA-1), anti-Ri (ANNA-2), ANNA-3, anti-SOX1 (AGNA), anti-amphiphysin, anti-CRMP-5 (anti-CV2), anti-Yo (PCA-1), PCA-2, high-titre anti-GAD65. **Anti-NMDA-R, anti-LGI1, anti-CASPR2, anti-AMPA-R, anti-GABA-A/B, PCA-Tr, anti-DPPX, anti-mGluR1, anti-mGluR2, anti-mGluR5, anti-IgLON5, anti-AQP4, anti-MOG. ***Non-LGI1 non-CASPR2 anti-VGKC, anti-P/Q VGCC, anti-N VGCC, Ach-b, Ach-M, Ach-G, Striational. Low-titre anti-GAD65 is an antibody against cytoplasmic antigen but is of questionable clinical significance. Adapted with permission from George et al.40
Figure 2Autoimmune Encephalitis Alliance Clinicians Network survey results for periodic cancer screening. AE, autoimmune encephalitis. *Excluding immune checkpoint inhibitors.