| Literature DB >> 34975890 |
Abstract
Autoimmune encephalitis (AE) is an immune-mediated disease involving the central nervous system, usually caused by antigen-antibody reactions. With the advent of autoantibody-associated diseases, AE has become a hot research frontier in neuroimmunology. The first-line conventional treatments of autoimmune encephalitis consist of steroids, intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG), plasma exchange (PLEX), and second-line therapy includes rituximab. Despite considerable research and expanding clinical experience, current treatments are still ineffective for a significant number of patients. Although there is no clear consensus, clinical trial evidence limited, and the level of evidence for some of the drugs based on single reports, third-line therapy is a viable alternative for refractory encephalitis patients. With the current rapid research progress, a breakthrough in the treatment of AE is critical. This article aims to review the third-line therapy for refractory AE.Entities:
Keywords: autoimmune encephalitis; neuroimmunology; refractory; rituximab; third-line therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34975890 PMCID: PMC8716621 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.790962
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Overview of third-line therapy drugs.
| Name | Mechanism | Function | Side effects | Contraindications | Regimen |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Inducing cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis on long-live plasma cells by accumulating the misfolded proteins. | Depleting antibody-producing plasma cells, lowering the titers of autoantibodies | Infusion reactions, cytopenia, heart failure exacerbation, infection, herpes reactivation, acute lung injury and neuropathy | Allergy, heart failure and hypotension thrombocytopenia should be used with caution | Subcutaneous injection of 1.3 mg/m2, twice weekly for 2 weeks (days 1, 4, 8, and 11), followed by a 10-day rest |
|
| Blocking IL-6-mediated signal transduction | Inducing the differentiation and proliferation of B cells, keeping plasma cells alive, inducing helper T cell differentiation, and producing other cytokines, such as IL-17; stimulating cytotoxic T cells。 | Infusion reactions, infection, neutropenia, hypertension | Allergy; severe infection; gastrointestinal perforation tuberculosis should be treated first if there is active or latent tuberculosis infection | 8mg/kg, intravenous injection |
| Meningoencephalitis; Cognitive impairment and leukoencephalopathy; autoimmune encephalitis | |||||
|
| Inducing CD38-expressing plasma cell apoptosis | Depleting antibody-producing plasma cells, lowering the titers of autoantibodies | Fatigue, nausea, anemia; neutropenia, diarrhea and cough; Serious infection | Allergy; severe infection or severe impairment of immune responses | 16 mg/kg, intravenous injection |
|
| A selective inhibitor of the JAK family of tyrosine kinases | Passing through the blood-brain barrier (BBB), modulating the immune response to a wide range of cytokine receptors | Neutropenia, headaches, diarrhea, fatigue, hypertension and symptoms of upper respiratory tract infection; severe infections, reactivation of latent tuberculosis, gastrointestinal perforation and | Allergy; severe infection; gastrointestinal perforation tuberculosis should be treated first if there is active or latent tuberculosis infection | 5 mg twice daily, oral |
|
| Specifically activating regulatory T cells without stimulating effector T cells | Inhibiting the activation and proliferation of multiple immune cells and suppressing cytokine production | Injection site reactions, influenza-like symptoms, nausea, neutropenia, subclinical hyperthyroidism | Allergy; seizures, severe hypotension, severe cardiac and renal dysfunction, severe infections | Subcutaneous injection of 1.5 million IU/day for 5 days, followed by three 5-day courses of 3 million IU/day at weeks 3, 6, and 9 |
|
| Inhibiting T-cell-mediated immune response | Exhibiting both protective and therapeutic effects in injured central nervous system by reducing overzealous inflammatory responses | Headache, nausea, dizziness, epistaxis, joint pain, thrombocytopenia, leucopenia, hypertriglyceridemia, hypercholesterolemia, hyperglycemia, elevated liver enzymes | Allergy, severe infections | loading dose: 6mg/d oral |
| maintenance dose: 3mg/d oral | |||||
| maintain trough concentrations of 8–12 ng/mL |
Studies on third-line therapy for refractory autoimmune encephalitis.
| Name | Study Population | Result | Type | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| A 22-year-old woman with refractory anti-NMDAR encephalitis | Clinical symptoms improved; autoantibody titers decreased from 1:1000 to 1:320 in serum | Case report | Schroeder Christoph et al. in ( |
| An 8-year-old girl with refractory anti-NMDAR encephalitis | Clinical symptoms improved; autoantibody titers decreased from 1:20 to 1:2 in CSF | Case report | Cordani R et al. in ( | |
| 5 cases of severe refractory anti-NMDA encephalitis | Three patients improved to a minimally conscious state; Two patients’ autoantibody titers decreased in CSF | Case series | Yong-Won Shin et al. in ( | |
| A 26-year-old woman with refractory anti-NMDAR encephalitis | Clinical symptoms improved | Case report | Olafur Sveinsson et al. in ( | |
| Two cases of severe refractory anti-NMDA encephalitis | Significant clinical improvement | Case series | S. Keddie et al. in ( | |
|
| A 64-year-old man with refractory Anti-CASPR2 Antibodies | Clinical and neuroradiological improved; autoantibody titers decreased from 1:1000 to 1:100 in serum | Case report | Maurizio benucci et al. in ( |
| Three children with refractory autoimmune encephalitis | Clinical symptoms improved | Case series | Randell R. et al. in ( | |
| An 8-year-old girl with refractory anti-GAD encephalitis | Clinical symptoms improved; autoantibody levels declined from 303.1 U/ml to 30 U/ml in serum | Case report | Jaafar F. et al. in ( | |
| 30 patients with refractory autoimmune encephalitis | Higher frequencies of mRS improvement and favorable clinical responses compared with the control groups | Cohort study | Lee et al. in ( | |
| 52 patients with anti-NMDA encephalitis | Better efficacy than the control groups | Cohort study | Lee et al. in ( | |
|
| A 60-year-old man with refractory anti-CASPR2 encephalitis | Clinical symptoms improved; autoantibody titers decreased from > 1:1.000 to 1:32 in CSF and > 1:10.000 to 1:10.000 in serum | Case report | Scheibe F et al. in ( |
| A 26-year-old woman with refractory anti-NMDAR encephalitis | Clinical symptoms improved | Case report | Ratuszny D et al. in ( | |
|
| 8 patients with refractory autoimmune encephalitis | Two had good responses; three had partial responses; three showed no significant improvements | Cohort study | Lee et al. in ( |
|
| 10 patients with refractory autoimmune encephalitis | Functional outcome improved in six patients | Cohort study | Lim JA et al. in ( |
|
| 17 patients with anti-Hu encephalitis | Over half of the patients improved or stabilized functional disabilities | Cohort study | de Jongste AH et al. in ( |
| An 8-year-old girl with refractory anti-NMDAR encephalitis | Clinical symptoms improved | Case report | Cordani R et al. in ( |
Figure 1Bortezomib, tocilizumab, and daratumumab overcome the weakness that rituximab cannot target plasma cells; tofacitinib overcomes the weakness that rituximab cannot cross the blood-brain barrier; low-dose IL2, rapamycin can alleviate the clinical symptom.