| Literature DB >> 34061124 |
Cristina Valencia-Sanchez1, Sean J Pittock1,2, Carolyn Mead-Harvey3, Divyanshu Dubey1,2, Eoin P Flanagan1,2, Sebastian Lopez-Chiriboga4, Max R Trenerry5, Nicholas L Zalewski6, Anastasia Zekeridou1,2, Andrew McKeon1,2.
Abstract
Hashimoto encephalopathy, also known as steroid-responsive encephalopathy associated with autoimmune thyroiditis, has been defined by sub-acute onset encephalopathy, with elevated thyroid antibodies, and immunotherapy responsiveness, in the absence of specific neural autoantibodies. We aimed to retrospectively review 144 cases referred with suspected Hashimoto encephalopathy over a 13-year period, and to determine the clinical utility of thyroid antibodies in the course of evaluation of those patients. One hundred and forty-four patients (all thyroid antibody positive) were included; 72% were women. Median age of symptom onset was 44.5 years (range, 10-87). After evaluation of Mayo Clinic, 39 patients (27%) were diagnosed with an autoimmune CNS disorder [autoimmune encephalopathy (36), dementia (2) or epilepsy (1)]. Three of those 39 patients had neural-IgGs detected (high glutamic acid decarboxylase-65, α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptor-receptor and neural-restricted unclassified antibody), and 36 were seronegative. Diagnoses among the remaining 105 patients (73%) were functional neurological disorder (n = 20), neurodegenerative disorder (n = 18), subjective cognitive complaints (n = 14), chronic pain syndrome (n = 12), primary psychiatric (n = 11), sleep disorder (n = 10), genetic/developmental (n = 8), non-autoimmune seizure disorders (n = 2) and other (n = 10). More patients with autoimmune CNS disorders presented with sub-acute symptom onset (P < 0.001), seizures (P = 0.008), stroke-like episodes (P = 0.007), aphasia (P = 0.04) and ataxia (P = 0.02), and had a prior autoimmune history (P = 0.04). Abnormal brain MRI (P = 0.003), abnormal EEG (P = 0.007) and CSF inflammatory findings (P = 0.002) were also more frequent in the autoimmune CNS patients. Patients with an alternative diagnosis had more depressive symptoms (P = 0.008), anxiety (P = 0.003) and chronic pain (P = 0.002). Thyoperoxidase antibody titre was not different between the groups (median, 312.7 versus 259.4 IU/ml; P = 0.44; normal range, <9 IU/ml). None of the non-autoimmune group and all but three of the CNS autoimmune group (two with insidious dementia presentation, one with seizures only) fulfilled the autoimmune encephalopathy criteria proposed by Graus et al. (A clinical approach to diagnosis of autoimmune encephalitis. Lancet Neurol 2016; 15: 391-404.) (sensitivity, 92%; specificity, 100%). Among patients who received an immunotherapy trial at our institution and had objective post-treatment evaluations, the 16 responders with autoimmune CNS disorders more frequently had inflammatory CSF, compared to 12 non-responders, all eventually given an alternative diagnosis (P = 0.02). In total, 73% of the patients referred with suspected Hashimoto encephalopathy had an alternative non-immune-mediated diagnosis, and more than half had no evidence of a primary neurological disorder. Thyroid antibody prevalence is high in the general population, and does not support a diagnosis of autoimmune encephalopathy in the absence of objective neurological and CNS-specific immunological abnormalities. Thyroid antibody testing is of little value in the contemporary evaluation and diagnosis of autoimmune encephalopathies.Entities:
Keywords: Hashimoto encephalopathy; autoimmune encephalopathy; steroid-responsive encephalopathy associated with autoimmune thyroiditis
Year: 2021 PMID: 34061124 PMCID: PMC8152924 DOI: 10.1093/braincomms/fcaa233
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Commun ISSN: 2632-1297
Demographic characteristics and clinical presentation of 144 patients referred for possible HE/SREAT diagnosis
| Autoimmune CNS disorder ( | Alternative diagnosis ( | Total ( |
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female | 24 (61.5) | 79 (75.2) | 103 (71.5) | 0.15 |
| Median age (years) at onset (range) | 46.0 (13–87) | 44.0 (10–81) | 44.5 (10–87) | 0.08 |
| Median duration (months) of symptoms (range) | 16 (2–187) | 30 (1–414) | 25 (1–414) |
|
| Sub-acute onset (<3 months) | 32 (82.1) | 29 (27.6) | 61 (42.4) |
|
| Fluctuating course | 23 (59) | 46 (43.8) | 69 (47.9) | 0.13 |
| History of autoimmune thyroid disease | 24 (61.5) | 78 (74.3) | 102 (70.8) | 0.15 |
| Co-existing autoimmune disorder | 13 (33.3) | 17 (16.2) | 30 (20.8) |
|
| Past history of neoplasm | 4 (10.3) | 5 (4.8) | 9 (6.3) | 0.25 |
| Family history of autoimmune disorder | 22 (56.4) | 39 (37.1) | 61 (42.4) | 0.06 |
| Prior immunotherapy | 35 (89.7) | 79 (75.2) | 114 (79.2) | 0.07 |
| Reported immunotherapy response | 33 (94.3) | 29 (36.3) | 62 (53.9) |
|
|
| ||||
| Cognitive complaint | 37 (94.9) | 94 (89.5) | 131 (91) | 0.51 |
| Seizures | 10 (25.6) | 8 (7.6) | 18 (12.5) |
|
| Stroke-like episodes | 8 (20.5) | 5 (4.8) | 13 (9) |
|
| Language deficit | 11 (28.2) | 13 (12.4) | 24 (16.7) |
|
| Ataxia | 6 (15.4) | 4 (3.8) | 10 (6.9) |
|
| Apraxia | 3 (7.7) | 7 (6.7) | 10 (6.9) | >0.99 |
| Motor or sensory deficits | 15 (38.5) | 22 (21) | 37 (25.7) | 0.05 |
| Tremor | 8 (20.5) | 11 (10.5) | 19 (13.2) | 0.16 |
| Myoclonus | 2 (5.1) | 5 (4.8) | 7 (4.9) | >0.99 |
| Hypersomnolence | 5 (12.8) | 17 (16.2) | 22 (15.3) | 0.8 |
| Psychosis | 13 (33.3) | 21 (20) | 34 (23.6) | 0.12 |
| Headache | 9 (23.1) | 27 (25.7) | 36 (25) | 0.83 |
| Depression | 5 (12.8) | 37 (35.2) | 42 (29.2) |
|
| Anxiety | 1 (2.6) | 25 (23.8) | 26 (18.1) |
|
| Chronic pain | 2 (5.1) | 31 (29.5) | 33 (22.9) |
|
Categorical data provided as number (percentage). Bold values denote statistically significant results (P < 0.05).
Characteristics of patients diagnosed with autoimmune CNS disorder
| No. Age/ sex | Onset and neurological presentation | MRI | CSF | EEG | PET metabolism | AE criteria |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. 30 M | <3 m Memory loss, behaviour change and hemiparesis (S-L) | - | – | – | SPECT: Global hypoperfusion | Prob HE |
| 2. 53 F | <3 m Memory loss, aphasia, hemiparesis (S-L), loss of motivation and psychosis | T2-H frontal (B) Gad+ | – | DS | NA | Poss AE |
| 3. 48 F | <3 m Memory loss, disorientation and hypersomnia | – | OCB+ | – | NA | Prob HE |
| 4. 16 F | Unclear onset memory loss, hypersomnia, hallucinations and seizures | - | WBC 12 | SW(T) | - | Prob HE |
| 5. 45 F | <3 m Confusion, hemiparesis and aphasia (S-L) | - | WBC 25 | NA | NA | Prob HE |
| 6. 41 M | <3 m Memory loss, confusion and behaviour change | - | – | NA | NA | Prob HE |
| 7. 53 M | <3 m Memory, executive and visuospatial difficulties, behaviour change | - | – | - | Global hypo | Prob HE |
| 8. 32 M | <3 m Confusion, hemiparesis and aphasia (S-L), combative | - | – | - | NA | Def AE |
| 9. 50 M | <3 m Amnesia, aphasia (S-L), seizures, agitation, psychosis and hyper-religiosity | - | – | - | NA | Prob HE |
| 10. 33 F | <3 m Memory, confusion, emotional lability, hallucinations and myoclonus | - | – | - | – | Prob HE |
| 11. 44 M | <3 m Confusion, speech difficulty and facial weakness | - | WBC 15 | - | – | Prob HE |
| 12. 83 M | <3 m Confusion and hemiparesis (S-L) | - | – | - | NA | Prob HE |
| 13. 26 F | <3 m Disorientation, psychosis and seizure | - | – | NA | NA | Prob HE |
| 14. 63 M | <3 m Confusion, hemiparesis and aphasia (S-L) | - | – | DS | NA | Prob HE |
| 15. 42 F | <3 m Confusion and hallucinations | - | – | – | NA | Prob HE |
| 16. 13 M | <3 m Seizures and memory loss | - | – | SW(F) | NA | Prob HE |
| 17. 67 F | <3 m Disorientation, confabulation, personality change, agitation and hallucinations | - | – | - | Focal (FT)hypo | Prob HE |
| 18. 70 F | <3 m Disorientation and memory loss | - | – | – | NA | Def AE |
| 19. 87 F | <3 m Disorientation, myoclonus and hypersomnia | - | – | SW(T) | Focal (FTP) hypo and hyper (T) | Prob HE |
| 20. 42 F | <3 m Memory loss and hypersomnia | - | – | - | NA | Prob HE |
| 21. 69 F | 1–2 y memory loss 6 m more rapid decline | - | IgGs | – | Focal (PT) hypo | None |
| 22. 73 F | <3 m Confusion, behaviour change and seizures | Hippo atrophy & T2-H (R) | WBC 7 | SZ | Focal (P) hypo and hyper (T) | Prob AE |
| 23. 41 F | <3 m Confusion and emotional lability | - | – | – | NA | Prob HE |
| 24. 30 F | 6 m Seizures and memory loss | - | WBC 7 | SW(P) | NA | Prob HE |
| 25. 43 M | <3 m Aphasia, memory loss, seizures and hemiparesis (S-L) | - | WBC 25 OCB+ IgGi | SW(FT), TIRDA | NA | Prob HE |
| 26. 70 M | <3 m Memory loss, disorientation and seizures | T2-H temporal (B) | – | SZ (T) | – | Def LE |
| 27. 56 M | <3 m Confusion, combative, hallucinations and cranial neuropathies (VII, IX, X) | - | – | NA | NA | Prob HE |
| 28. 67 F | <3 m Confusion, behaviour change, mania and psychosis | - | – | DS | Focal (F)hypo | Prob HE |
| 29. 51 F | <3 m Memory loss, psychosis and mania | - | – | – | – | Prob HE |
| 30. 66 M | <3 m Confusion, agitation, hallucinations and ataxia | Frontal T2-H (R), Gad+ (dural) | WBC 8 | GPEDs, DS | NA | Prob AE |
| 31. 42 F | <3 m Confusion, delusions and seizures | Hippo atrophy and T2-H (L) | WBC 8 | – | NA | Prob AE |
| 32. 41 F | Months memory loss, hemiparesis and ataxia | - | OCB+ | NA | Global hypo | Prob HE |
| 33. 44 F | <3 m Confusion, ataxia and dysarthria | Brainstem atrophy | IgGi | – | NA | Prob AE |
| 34. 42 M | 5-y Memory loss, aphasia, apraxia and tremor | Frontotemporal T2-H (L) | WBC 12 OCB+ IgGi | – | NA | None |
| 35. 68 F | <3 m Memory loss, aphasia, hallucinations and ataxia | - | – | SW(T), TIRDA | NA | Prob HE |
| 36. 56 F | <3 m Memory loss, abnormal movements and right upper extremity | Hippo atrophy & T2-H(B), Gad+ | – | SW (T) | NA | Def LE |
| 37. 62 M | 4 m Memory loss, concentration and neuropathy | – | – | – | NA | Prob HE |
| 38. 39 F | <3 m Multiple cranial neuropathies | - | – | NA | - | Prob HE |
| 39. 61 F | 8 m New musicogenic seizures | - | – | SW(T), SZ (FT) | NA | None |
+ yes, - normal or non-specific, S-L, stroke-like; m, months; y, years; T2-H, T2-hyperintensity; AE, autoimmune encephalitis; HE, Hashimoto encephalopathy; LE, limbic encephalitis; DS, diffuse slowing; SW, sharp waves; SZ, seizure; TIRDA, temporal intermittent rhythmic delta activity; GPEDs, generalized periodic epileptiform discharges; M, male; F, female; NA, not available; Hippo, hippocampus; F, frontal; T, temporal; P, parietal; FT, fronto-temporal; FTP, fronto-temporo-parietal; PT, parieto-temporal; L, left; R, right; B, bilateral; Gad+, contrast enhancement; IgGi, elevated IgG index; IgGs, elevated IgG synthesis rate; Prob, probable; Poss, possible; Def, definite.
Autoimmune dementia.
Autoimmune epilepsy.
Symptom onset excluded.
Alternative diagnoses among 105 patients referred with suspected HE/SREAT
| Alternative clinical diagnoses |
|
|---|---|
| Neurodegenerative disorder | 18 (17.1%) |
| Alzheimer disease (5) | |
| Fronto-temporal dementia (1) | |
| Primary progressive aphasia (2) | |
| Lewy body dementia (2) | |
| Posterior cortical atrophy (1) | |
| Vascular dementia (1) | |
| Probable Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (1) | |
| Other neurodegenerative disorder (5) | |
| Functional neurological disorder | 20 (19%) |
| Subjective cognitive complaints | 14 (13.3%) |
| Fibromyalgia/chronic fatigue/chronic pain syndromes | 12 (11.4%) |
| Psychiatric disorder | 11 (10.5%) |
| Depression (3) | |
| Generalized anxiety disorder (2) | |
| Bipolar disorder (2) | |
| Obsessive compulsive disorder (1) | |
| Schizoaffective disorder (1) | |
| Schizophreniform disorder (2) | |
| Sleep disorder, in combination with other diagnosis | 10 (9.5%) |
| Obstructive sleep apnoea + functional (3) | |
| Obstructive sleep apnoea + fibromyalgia + depression (2) | |
| Obstructive sleep apnoea + anxiety (1) | |
| Obstructive sleep apnoea + narcolepsy (1) | |
| Primary hipersomnia + functional tremor + fibromyalgia (1) | |
| Insomnia + functional tremor + depression (1) | |
| Insomnia +subjective cognitive (1) | |
| Other medical condition | 10 (9.5%) |
| Severe hypothyroidism (2) | |
| Radiation leucoencephalopathy (1) | |
| Post-surgical movement disorder (1) | |
| Side effects antiepileptic drugs (1) | |
| Mast cell activation disorder (1) | |
| Static encephalopathy after intracranial haemorrhage + status epilepticus (1) | |
| Intracranial hypotension (1) | |
| Leucoencephalopathy (toxic/vascular) (1) | |
| Central pontine myelinolysis + functional tremor and spells (1) | |
| Genetic/developmental disorder with behavioural/cognitive symptoms | 8 (7.6%) |
| Trisomy 21 (1) | |
| Trisomy 2 (1) | |
| Mitochondrial cytopathy (1) | |
| Adult onset neuronal intra-nuclear inclusion disease (1) | |
| Autism spectrum disorder (1) | |
| Other developmental disorder (3) | |
| Epilepsy | 2 (1.9%) |
| Idiopathic focal epilepsy (1) | |
| Focal epilepsy secondary to meningioma (1) |
Summary of the diagnostic testing results in patients with autoimmune CNS disorders and alternative diagnosis
| Diagnostic test | Autoimmune CNS disorder ( | Alternative diagnosis ( | Total ( |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median TPO titre IU/ml (range) | 312.7 | 259.4 | 271.5 | 0.44 |
| (14.4–950) | (9.9–950) | (9.9–950) | ||
| ( | ( | ( | ||
| Low vitamin B12 | 6/26 (23.1) | 1/70 (1.4) | 7 (7.3) |
|
| Non-neural antibodies | 6/34 (17.6) | 17/90 (18.9) | 23/124 (18.5) | >0.99 |
| Neural antibodies in serum | 14/39 (35.9) | 21/101 (20.8) | 35/140 (25) | 0.08 |
| MRI abnormalities suggesting AE | 8 (20.5) | 4/104 (3.8) | 12/143 (8.4) |
|
| Abnormal EEG | 14/33 (42.4) | 14/85 (16.5) | 28/118 (23.7) |
|
| Abnormal PET | 8/14 (57.1) | 18/42 (42.9) | 26/56 (46.4) | 0.37 |
| CSF inflammatory | 20/39 (51.3) | 20/88 (22.7) | 40/127 (31.5) |
|
| WBCs, >5 cells/μl | 9/39 (23.1) | 1/88 (1.1) | 10/127 (7.9) |
|
| Protein level, >50 mg/dl | 16/39 (41) | 20/88(22.7) | 36/127 (28.3) | 0.05 |
| Positive OCB | 4/30 (13.3) | 0/81 (0) | 4/111 (3.6) |
|
| Elevated IgG index and synthesis rate | 3/29 (10.3) | 0/81(0) | 3/110 (2.8) |
|
Categorical data is provided as number (percentage). Bold values denote statistically significant results (P < 0.05).
TPO, thyoperoxidase antibody; WBC, white blood cells; OCB, oligoclonal bands.
Patients with abnormal (>9) value at Mayo Clinic.
CSF inflammatory: WBC, >5 cells/μl, positive OCBs, high IgG index or synthesis rate.
This patient had adult-onset neuronal intra-nuclear inclusion disease.
Figure 1Representative FDG-PET scan findings in two patients diagnosed with autoimmune encephalopathy and one patient with probable neurodegenerative disorder. FDG-PET images, lateral views. (A) Diffuse hypometabolism (patient 32, Table 2). (B) Frontal and temporal hypometabolism (patient 17, Table 2). (C) Profound temporal and parietal hypometabolism and mild frontal hypometabolism (patient 45, Table 6).
Twelve patients ‘non-responders’—who received immunotherapy trial, with no improvement and were eventually diagnosed with non-autoimmune diagnosis
| No/Age/ Sex | Onset <3m | Neurological presentation | Prior IT response | NPS abnormal | MRI abnormal | EEG abnormal | AE criteria | Final diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
40 79 F | – | Memory loss, aphasia, apraxia, psychosis and seizures | – | + | Multiple lacunar strokes | Periodic sharp wave complexes | – | Probable Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease |
|
41 48M | – | Cognitive impairment | – | + | Confluent T2-HI hemispheres and pons | NA | – | Frontotemporal dementia |
|
43 52 F | – | Aphasia | – | NA | Temporal atrophy (L) | NA | – | Primary progressive aphasia |
|
44 52 F | – | Aphasia and memory loss | + | + | – | Sharp waves, TIRDA | – | Primary progressive aphasia |
|
45 53 F | – | Cognitive impairment, hallucinations and aphasia | + | + | – | Atypical spike and wave | – | Probable neurodegenerative disorder |
|
46 71 F | + | Sub-acute confusion superimposed on chronic parkinsonism | + | NA | – | Diffuse slowing | HE | Probable neurodegenerative disorder |
|
47 50M | – | Acute onset tremors and cognitive complaint | + | – | – | – | – | Functional disorder |
|
48 43 F | – | Cognitive complaint, pain and fatigue | – | + (Mild executive deficits) | – | Bitemporal slowing | – | Fibromyalgia |
|
49 12M | – | Agitation, fixations (ASD) | + | + | – | – | – | ASD, behavioural |
|
50 22F | + | Sub-acute change behaviour and cognition (trisomy 21) | + | NA | – | Diffuse slowing | HE | Trisomy 21, behavioural |
|
51 22M | – | Cognitive impairment | + | – | – | – | – | Mast cell activation disorder |
|
52 28F | + | Sub-acute insomnia, shaking spells and disorientation | NA | – | – | – | HE | Insomnia, spells and mood symptoms |
+, yes; −, no; m, months; ASD, autism spectrum disorder; IT, immunotherapy; NPS, neuropsychological testing; NA, not available; T2-HI, T2-hyperintensity; L, left; AE, autoimmune encephalitis; HE, Hashimoto encephalopathy; TIRDA, temporal intermittent rhythmic delta activity.
Clinical and diagnostic tests findings, among autoimmune CNS treatment responders
| No Age/ sex | Clinical presentation | Abnormal testing | Cognitive testing | Prior IT and outcome | IT trial at Mayo | Measurements improved after IT | Additional IT | Relapses off IT | Follow-up and mRS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
1 30 M | Memory loss, behaviour change and hemiparesis (S-L) | PET |
STMS 31 NPS abnormal | None | IVMTP |
Frequency S-L STMS 31→35 SPECT |
MTX (SE) MMF (SE) AZT (SE) >7 y | Yes |
12.8 y mRs 1 |
|
2 53 F | Memory loss, aphasia, hemiparesis (S-L), loss of motivation and psychosis |
MRI EEG | STMS 29 |
IVMTP and pred Improved | IVMTP and PLEX |
STMS 23→31 MRI | Pred and MMF 2 y | Yes |
2.6 y mRs 4 |
|
4 16 F | Memory loss, hypersomnia, hallucinations and seizures |
CSF EEF |
STMS 38 NPS normal |
Pred, PLEX, IVIG Improved | IVMTP |
Seizure frequency EEG |
Pred 6 m MMF 2 y | Yes |
9.2 y mRs 2 |
|
7 53 M | Memory, executive and visuospatial difficulties and behaviour change | PET |
STMS 38 NPS abnormal |
IVMTP Improved | IVIG | NPS |
IVIG 16 m MMF 8 y | Yes |
9.8 y mRs1 |
|
17 67F | Disorientation, confabulation, personality change, agitation and hallucinations | PET |
STMS 31 NPS abnormal |
IVMTP, IVIG, PLEX, pred Improved | IVIG and IVMTP | Exam, confusion, agitation and confabulation | Pred and MMF initiated | Yes |
2.4 y mRs 4 |
|
19 87 F | Disorientation, myoclonus and hypersomnia |
EEG PET | STMS 19 | None | IVMTP | STMS 19→34 | IVMTP 3 m and MMF initiated | No |
0.4y mRs 2 |
|
20 42 F | Memory loss and hypersomnia | – |
STMS 36 NPS abnormal | None | IVMTP |
STMS 36→38 NPS |
IVMTP 4 m IVIG 2 m (SE) AZT 5 m (SE) | Yes |
3.5 y mRs 2 |
|
21 69 F | Memory loss | CSF |
STMS 18 NPS abnormal |
Pred Improved | IVMTP |
STMS 18→14 NPS | AZT initiated | Yes |
1.8 y mRs 3 |
|
22 73 F | Confusion, behaviour change and seizures |
MRI CSF EEG PET |
STMS 29 NPS abnormal |
Pred, IVMTP Improved | IVMTP |
STMS 29→36 NPS EEG | IVMTP 10 m | Yes |
1.8 y mRs 0 |
|
24 30 F | Seizures and memory loss |
CSF EEG |
STMS 34 NPS abnormal | None | IVMTP |
Seizure frequency EEG |
IVMTP 3 m and MMF 10 m Relapse—IVMTP 3 m & resume MMF | Yes |
3.2 y mRs1 |
|
27 56M | Confusion, combative, hallucinations and cranial neuropathies (VII, IX, X) | – | NA |
IVMTP, PLEX, pred Improved | IVMTP | Cranial neuropathies and headache | AZT 1 y (SE) | Yes |
2.5 y mRs 1 |
|
28 67 F | Confusion, behaviour change, mania and psychosis |
EEG PET |
STMS 35 NPS abnormal |
Pred Improved | IVMTP | NPS | MMF initiated | Yes |
4.4 y mRs2 |
|
30 66M | Confusion, agitation, hallucinations and ataxia |
MRI CSF EEG | NA |
IVIG PLEX |
IVMTP Pred | Exam, hallucinations and encephalopathy | None | No |
1.4y mRs 0 |
|
32 41 F | Memory, hemiparesis, ataxia |
CSF PET | STMS 19 |
IVMTP, AZT, MMF, RTX Improved | IVMTP |
STMS 19→24 PET | RTX continued | Yes |
6.1 y mRs 2 |
|
35 68 F | Memory loss, aphasia, hallucinations and ataxia | EEG | STMS 31 | None | IVMTP |
Ataxia and aphasia STMS 31→36 | None | No |
5.9y mRs2 |
|
38 39F | Multiple cranial neuropathies | – | NA |
Pred, IVIG Improved | IVMTP | Cranial neuropathies |
AZT 3 y IVMTP for relapse CYC initiated |
Yes (on AZT) |
12.2y mRs1 |
IT, immunotherapy; STMS, Kokmen short test of mental status; NPS, neuropsychological testing; mRs, modified Rankin score; M, male; F, female; NA, not available; Pred, prednisone; IVMTP, intravenous methylprednisolone; IVIG, intravenous immunoglobulin; PLEX, plasma exchange; MMF, mofetil mycophenolate; AZT, azathioprine; RTX, rituximab; CYC, cyclophosphamide; w, week; m, month; y, year; SE, side effects.
CSF findings in patients with alternative diagnosis without clinical improvement after immunotherapy (non-responders) and patients with autoimmune CNS disorders who experienced improvement (responders)
| Diagnostic test | Non-responders ( | Responders ( | Total ( |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CSF inflammatory | 0 | 6 (37.5) | 6 (37.5) |
|
| WBCs, >5 cells/μl | 0 | 4 (25) | 4 (25) | 0.11 |
| Protein level, >50 mg/dl | 5 (41.7) | 9 (56.3) | 14 (50) | 0.7 |
| Positive OCB | 0/11 | 1/14 (7.1) | 1/25 (4) | >0.99 |
| Elevated IgG synthesis rate | 0/11 | 1/14 (7.1) | 1/25 (4) | >0.99 |
Categorical data is provided as number (percentage).
WBC, white blood cells; OCB, oligoclonal bands.
CSF inflammatory: WBC, >5 cells/μl, positive OCBs, high IgG index or synthesis rate.