| Literature DB >> 34054814 |
Xiaoxiao Qin1,2, Huajun Yang3, Fei Zhu1,2,4,5, Qun Wang1,2,4,5, Wei Shan1,2,4,5.
Abstract
Objective: To examine the clinical characteristics of autoimmune encephalitis associated with the contactin-associated protein-2 (CASPR2) antibody. Materials andEntities:
Keywords: Caspr2; autoimmune encephalitis; clinical character; retrospective study; treatment
Year: 2021 PMID: 34054814 PMCID: PMC8159154 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.652864
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Characteristics and clinical features.
| Characteristics | Values |
|---|---|
| Sex, n (%) | |
| Male | 17 (68%) |
| Female | 8 (32%) |
| Age, y, median (range) | 43 (3–79) |
| Course of disease, d, median (range) | 17 (2–181) |
| Clinical syndrome, n (%) | |
| Morvan syndrome | 4/25 (16) |
| Cerebellar syndrome | 3/25 (12) |
| Presenting symptom, n (%) | |
| Cognitive disturbance | 5/25 (20) |
| Fever | 6/25 (24) |
| Myokymia and neuromyotonia | 4/25 (16) |
| Seizure | 2/25 (8) |
| Numbness | 2/25 (8) |
| Sleep disorder | 2/25 (8) |
| Others | 4/25 (16) |
| Symptoms during course of disease, n(%) | |
| Cognitive disturbances, n (%) | 17/25 (68) |
| Amnesia | 5/25 (20) |
| Behavioural disorder | 5/25 (20) |
| Hallucination | 5/25 (20) |
| Psychosis | 7/25 (28) |
| Epilepsy, n (%) | 5/25 (20) |
| Peripheral nerve hyperexcitability, n (%) | 4/25(16) |
| Sleep disorder, n (%) | 6/25 (24) |
| Insomnia | 4/6 (67) |
| Difficulty falling asleep | 2/6 (33) |
| Autonomic dysfunctiona, n (%) | 6/25 (24) |
| Constipation | 3/6 (50) |
| Tachycardia | 1/6 (17) |
| Urinary retention or hesitation | 4/6 (67) |
| Hyperhydrosis | 3/6 (50) |
| Pain, n (%) | 4/25(16) |
| Weight loss, n (%) | 2/25 (8) |
aTWO or more symptoms could present simultaneously in one patient. Double symptoms occurred in five patients.
Laboratory results and imaging.
| Test profile | n (%) |
|---|---|
| CSF | |
| Normal | 8 (32) |
| WBC counts | 8 (32) |
| Protein | 10 (40) |
| Protein | 7 (28) |
| Immunological evaluation | |
| FT3 increasing | 1/15 (6) |
| Positive TPOAb and TGAb | 3/15 (20) |
| RO-52 antibody | 1/15 (6) |
| ASO antibody | 1/15 (6) |
| Tumor marker | |
| Normal | 14/19 (74) |
| Abnormal | 5/19 (26) |
| EEG | |
| Normal | 6/17 (35) |
| Slow background | 6/17 (35) |
| Epileptic discharge | 5/17 (29) |
| MRI | |
| Normal | 17 (74) |
| Bilateral mesial temporal lobe hyperintensity | 3 (13) |
| Unilateral mesial temporal lobe hyperintensity | 3 (13) |
Figure 1Abnormal EEG findings in patients with CASPR2 antibody-associated encephalitis. (A) normal EEG pattern observed in patients; (B) slow wave activities observed in F8 and T4; (C) interictal spikes and waves in F7 and T3.
Figure 2Abnormal neuroimaging findings in patients with CASPR2 antibody-associated encephalitis. (A, B) Comparison between normal and abnormal MRI showed abnormal signals in bilateral hippocampus in patients; (C, D) Comparison between normal and abnormal PET-CT revealed increased metabolism of bilateral basal ganglia and mesial temporal lobe in patients.
Treatment and outcomes.
| Test profile | n (%) |
|---|---|
| Treatment | |
| Corticosteroids | 5/22 (23) |
| IVIG | 2/22 (9) |
| Corticosteroids + IVIG | 15/22 (68) |
| Other treatment | 3/25 (15) |
| Outcomes | |
| mRS ≤ 2 | 6/17 (35) |
| At least −1 mRS point | 11/17 (65) |
| No change on mRS | 4/17 (24) |
| Relapse | 4/25 (16) |
Other treatment including anti-viral, anti-tuberculotic treatments and vessel circulation improvement. These patients were not diagnosed as AE during hospitalization and thus given empiric therapy as above.
The mRS scales of these patients were graded higher than 2 before treatment.
Eight patients were lost to follow-up.