| Literature DB >> 34108243 |
Christopher E Uy1,2, Sophie Binks1,2, Sarosh R Irani3,2.
Abstract
Autoimmune encephalitis defines brain inflammation caused by a misdirected immune response against self-antigens expressed in the central nervous system. It comprises a heterogeneous group of disorders that are at least as common as infectious causes of encephalitis. The rapid and ongoing expansion of this field has been driven by the identification of several pathogenic autoantibodies that cause polysymptomatic neurological and neuropsychiatric diseases. These conditions often show highly distinctive cognitive, seizure and movement disorder phenotypes, making them clinically recognisable. Their early identification and treatment improve patient outcomes, and may aid rapid diagnosis of an underlying associated tumour. Here we summarise the well-known autoantibody-mediated encephalitis syndromes with neuronal cell-surface antigens. We focus on practical aspects of their diagnosis and treatment, offer our clinical experiences of managing such cases and highlight more basic neuroimmunological advances that will inform their future diagnosis and treatments. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: clinical neurology; epilepsy; immunology; limbic system; neuroimmunology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34108243 PMCID: PMC8461404 DOI: 10.1136/practneurol-2020-002567
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pract Neurol ISSN: 1474-7758
Demographic, clinical and paraclinical features of neuronal autoantibody syndromes
| Neuronal auto-antibody (Ref.) and predominant IgG subclass | Median age, years (range) | Sex ratio (M:F) | Clinical features | MR brain scan findings | CSF findings | EEG findings | Other investigations | Immunotherapy response and outcomes |
| NMDAR | 21 | 1:4 | Encephalitis with prominent polysymptomatic neuropsychiatric presentation, polymorphic movement disorder, language disorder, autonomic dysfunction, coma and central apnoea. | 70%–80% normal or non-specific, with a typical limbic encephalitis in a minority. | 80% abnormal (lymphocytic pleocytosis, unpaired oligoclonal bands common). | 90% abnormal (slowing most common, 20% epileptiform abnormalities, rarely extreme delta brush pattern). | Ovarian teratoma in 60% of adult, female patients. | ~50% improve in 4 weeks with first line immunotherapy (IT). |
| LGI1* | 64 | 2:1 | Limbic encephalitis with frequent focal seizures, including characteristic facio-brachial dystonic seizures. | ~75% abnormal. | ~25% abnormal (mild pleocytosis with elevated protein). | ~50% abnormal (~30% epileptiform abnormal, ~20% focal slowing). | >90% with HLA-DRB1*07:01. | At 2 years, 1/3 fully recovered, 1/3 functionally independent but unable to work, 1/3 severely disabled or dead. |
| CASPR2* | 66 | 9:1 | ~30% increased signal in medial temporal lobes. | ~30% abnormal (pleocytosis, elevated protein±oligoclonal bands). | ~70% abnormal (40% epileptiform abnormal). | HLA-DRB1*11:01. | ~50% with good or full response to tumour therapy/IT. | |
| GABAAR | 40 | 1:1 | Encephalitis with frequent status epilepticus. | >80% cortical and subcortical FLAIR signal abnormalities involving 2+ brain regions. | 25–50% lymphocytic pleocytosis±oligoclonal bands and elevated protein. | >80% abnormal (encephalopathy with ictal abnormalities). | Thymoma ~30%. | IT-responsive, however, mortality due to status epilepticus or related complications ~10–20%. |
| GABABR | 61 | 1.5:1 | Limbic encephalitis with prominent seizures. | ~70% abnormal (45% increased signal in medial temporal lobes. | ~80% lymphocytic pleocytosis. | ~75% with ictal abnormalities. | Tumours in ~50% | ~90% show response to IT, those with tumour have poorer prognosis with recurrent neurological symptoms and higher mortality. |
| AMPAR | Mean 53.1 | 2:1 | Limbic encephalitis with prominent confusion, amnesia, seizures and psychiatric/behavioural symptoms. | ~85% abnormal (67% with bilateral mesial temporal involvement). | ~70% abnormal. | 45% abnormal. | Tumour identified in ~70% (thymus, SCLC, breast, ovary). | Most patients showed improvement from peak of disease, median mRS=1 in survivors. |
| DPPX | 53 | 1.5:1 | Multifocal encephalitis with myoclonus, tremors and hyperekplexia, prominent diarrhoea/weight loss. | 100% normal or non-specific. | ~30% abnormal (mild pleocytosis and elevated protein). | ~70% abnormal (focal or diffuse slowing). | ~10% with B-cell neoplasm (gastrointestinal follicular lymphoma,; leukaemia). | 60%–70% improve with IT. |
| GlyR | 50 | 1:1 | ~40% pleocytosis, 20% oligoclonal bands. | ~70% abnormal | EMG abnormal 60% (continuous motor unit activity, spontaneous or stimulus-induced activity, neuromyotonia) | ~10% mortality in initial case series. | ||
| MOG | 37 | 1:1 | Optic neuritis, transverse myelitis, brainstem encephalitis, encephalitis. | ~60% lymphocytic pleocytosis oligoclonal bands uncommon. | Not reported. | Visual evoked potentials may show evidence of previous optic neuritis. | ~75% have good response to corticosteroids. | |
| IgLON5 | 64 | 1:1 | ~80% normal/ non-specific. | 30% CSF pleocytosis. | Not reported. | HLA-DRB1*10:01/HLA-DQB*05:01 alleles in 87%. | Up to 50% respond to initial IT but far fewer have a sustained response. | |
| Neurexin-3α | 44 | 1:2 | Encephalitis. | 20% mesial temporal T2/FLAIR signal abnormal. | 100% abnormal (pleocytosis, elevated Ig index). | Not reported | 40% mortality despite IT, remaining 60% partial recovery in initial series. |
*LGI1-antibodies and CASPR2-antibodies were historically classified as antibodies against the Voltage-Gated Potassium Channel.
AMPAR, α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptor; CASPR2, contact-associated protein 2; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; DPPX, dipeptidyl peptidase-like protein 6; EEG, electroencephalogram; GABAA/BR, gamma aminobutyric acid; GlyR, glycine receptor; HSV, herpes simplex virus; IgLON5, immunoglobulin-like cell-adhesion molecule 5; IT, immunotherapy; L, long-segment; LGI1, leucine-rich glioma inactivated protein 1; MOG, myelin-oligodendrocyte glycoprotein; mRS, modified Rankin score; NMDAR, N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor; (N)REM, (non)-rapid eye-movement sleep; S, short-segment; SCLC, Small Cell Lung Cancer; TM, transverse myelitis.
Figure 1Classic syndromes and characteristic features of neuronal autoantibodies. Listed in an estimated order of descending frequency. AMPAR, α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptor; CASPR2, contact-associated protein 2; DPPX, dipeptidyl peptidase-like protein 6; GABAA/BR, gamma aminobutyric acid; IgLON5, immunoglobulin-like cell-adhesion molecule 5; LGI1, leucine-rich glioma inactivated protein 1; NMDAR, N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor; MOG, myelin-oligodendrocyte glycoprotein.
Immunotherapeutic options for treatment of autoimmune encephalitis
| Immunotherapy | Mechanism of action | Dose/regimen | Monitoring/prophylactic adjunctive therapies | Side-effects |
| First-line therapy | ||||
| Corticosteroids | Multiple: largely via attenuation of immune response via genomic and non-genomic effects. | Methylprednisolone 1 g intravenous daily×3–5 days. | Clinical monitoring for steroids side effects. | Sleep disruption, irritability, osteoporosis, weight gain, hypertension, hyperglycaemia, increased intraocular pressures, upper gastrointestinal bleeding, skin thinning/bruising/ striae, reactivation of chronic infection, suppression of endogenous steroid production,. Rare complications include: avascular necrosis of jaw or hip, |
| Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) | Very wide to include modulation of T/B-cells, cytokines and innate pathways. | 2 g/kg intravenous divided over 3–5 days. | Clinical monitoring for allergic reactions, transfusion reactions, aseptic meningitis. | Transfusion reactions (most mild), rare complications include aseptic meningitis, anaphylaxis, acute renal failure, haemolytic anaemia and thromboembolism. |
| Plasmapheresis | Bulk removal of circulating immunoglobulins. Rebound state may increase susceptibility of circulating antibody-secreting cells and precursors to cytotoxic therapies (ie, cyclophosphamide). | 3–5 sessions over 5–10 days. | Clinical monitoring for hypotension, catheter-related complications (thrombosis, infection, air embolism) and anaphylaxis. | Mortality 3–5 per 10 000, hypocalcaemia, hypokalaemia, metabolic alkalosis, hypotension, catheter-related complications (thrombosis, infection, air embolism), anaphylaxis, TRALI and rare viral transmission |
| Second-line therapy | ||||
| Mycophenolate | Active metabolite (mycophenolic acid) inhibits inosine-5′-monophosphate dehydrogenase, depletes guanosine nucleotides preferentially in T and B lymphocytes. | Initially 500 mg two times a day, targeting to 1–1.5 g two times a day maintenance. | Before starting: screening for latent HBV, HCV. | Increased infection risk including reactivation of viral infections (herpes simplex/zoster, polyomavirus (BK virus) associated nephropathy (PVAN), PML and CMV viraemia), increased risk of lymphoma and skin malignancy, cytopenias. |
| Azathioprine | Inhibition of purine synthesis via active metabolites 6-mercaptopurine and 6-thioguanine. | Initial 50 mg daily, increase by 50 mg increments q1-2 weeks until 2 to 3 mg/kg/day maintenance. | CBC-D weekly×1 month, q2 weeks×2 months→monthly. | GI toxicity, dose-related cytopenias, hepatotoxicity, increased infection rates, increased risk of malignancy (including the rare entity hepatosplenic T-cell lymphoma (HSTCL), PML. |
| Rituximab | Monoclonal antibody against CD20: principally B cell depletion. | Induction: 375 mg/m2 intravenous weekly×4 weeks or 500 mg intravenous×2 doses separated by 2 weeks. | Preinitiation: CBC+differential, ALT, AST, LDH, bilirubin, electrolytes, creatinine, screening for latent HBV, HCV, syphilis, HIV, and TB. | Mild transfusion-related reactions (headache, fever, chills, nausea), hypotension, anaphylaxis (rare), reactivation of latent infection (TB, hepatitis B). |
| Cyclophosphamide | Induction of DNA cross-linking and apoptosis by active metabolite (phosphoramide mustard). | 750 mg/m2 intravenous monthly for 3–6 months. | CBC, HIV, HBV, HCV, VZV, liver enzymes, electrolytes, creatinine+urinalysis weekly for the first 4 weeks, then q 2 weekly for next 2 months→monthly. | Cytopenias (neutropenia most common), nausea/vomiting, diarrhoea, hair loss, mucocutaneous ulceration, haemorrhagic cystitis, infertility, teratogenicity. |
| Third-line/experimental | ||||
| Tocilizumab | Monoclonal antibody against IL-6, blocking binding to IL-6 receptor and preventing IL-6 mediated inflammatory cascade. | Initial: 4 mg/kg intravenous infusion. May increase to 8 mg/kg based on response. | Preinitiation screening for TB. | Fever response and CRP elevation may be blunted by impairment in IL-6 receptor signalling. Hepatotoxicity, cytopenias, blood lipid abnormalities, immunosuppression. |
| Bortezimib | Small-molecule proteasome inhibitor. Relatively selective depletion of plasma cells due to high immunoglobulin synthesis rate. | Peripheral neuropathy, myalgia, diarrhoea | ||
Sources: Sun et al, Shin et al,2 62 63 Joint Formulary Committee.
ALP, alkaline phosphatase; ALT, alanine transaminase; AST, aspartate transaminase; CBC-D, complete blood count with differential; CD, cluster of differentiation; Cr, creatinine; CRP, C reactive protein; GFR, glomerular filtration rate; GGT, gamma-glutamyltransferase; HBV/HCV, hepatitis B/C virus; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; HTLV, human T-lymphotrophic virus; IL, interleukin; TB, tuberculosis; TRALI, transfusion associated lung injury.
Figure 2Neuronal surface antibody detection methods. Current research and diagnostic methods expose the test sample to neuronal antigens which differ in the properties of the antigens. Cell-based assays aim largely to expose a single known antigen, by its expression in mammalian cells. Conversely, neurone-based assays and tissue-based assays expose multiple endogenous antigens, both those known to be targets of pathogenic antibodies and as yet unknown antigens. Additionally, the assays vary on whether the antigen was fixed before incubation with the patient sample (serum or cerebrospinal fluid) and whether the cell membrane is intact (‘live’). Live cell-based assays and live neurone-based assays neither fix the surface antigen nor permeabilise the membrane before exposure to the patient’s sample. By contrast, in fixed permeabilised cell-based assays and tissue-based assays, target antigens are potentially altered by fixation and cell membrane integrity is lost. Figure modified from Ramanathan et al.3 CBA, cell-based assay.