| Literature DB >> 35046526 |
Frank Leypoldt1,2, Ludger Tebartz van Elst3,4, Dominique Endres5,6, Eva Lüngen5,6, Alkomiet Hasan7,8, Michael Kluge9, Sabrina Fröhlich10,11, Jan Lewerenz12, Tom Bschor13, Ida Sibylle Haußleiter14, Georg Juckel14, Florian Then Bergh15, Barbara Ettrich15, Lisa Kertzscher9, Tatiana Oviedo-Salcedo8, Robert Handreka16, Martin Lauer17, Klaas Winter18, Norbert Zumdick19, Anna Drews20, Jost Obrocki21, Yavor Yalachkov22, Anna Bubl23, Felix von Podewils24, Udo Schneider25, Kristina Szabo26, Margarete Mattern27, Alexandra Philipsen28, Katharina Domschke6,29, Klaus-Peter Wandinger1, Alexandra Neyazi30, Oliver Stich31,32, Harald Prüss33,34.
Abstract
Autoimmune encephalitis (AE) can rarely manifest as a predominantly psychiatric syndrome without overt neurological symptoms. This study's aim was to characterize psychiatric patients with AE; therefore, anonymized data on patients with suspected AE with predominantly or isolated psychiatric syndromes were retrospectively collected. Patients with readily detectable neurological symptoms suggestive of AE (e.g., epileptic seizures) were excluded. Patients were classified as "probable psychiatric AE (pAE)," if well-characterized neuronal IgG autoantibodies were detected or "possible pAE" (e.g., with detection of nonclassical neuronal autoantibodies or compatible cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) changes). Of the 91 patients included, 21 (23%) fulfilled our criteria for probable (autoantibody-defined) pAE and 70 (77%) those for possible pAE. Among patients with probable pAE, 90% had anti-NMDA receptor (NMDA-R) autoantibodies. Overall, most patients suffered from paranoid-hallucinatory syndromes (53%). Patients with probable pAE suffered more often from disorientation (p < 0.001) and impaired memory (p = 0.001) than patients with possible pAE. Immunotherapies were performed in 69% of all cases, mostly with high-dose corticosteroids. Altogether, 93% of the patients with probable pAE and 80% of patients with possible pAE reportedly benefited from immunotherapies (p = 0.251). In summary, this explorative, cross-sectional evaluation confirms that autoantibody-associated AE syndromes can predominantly manifest as psychiatric syndromes, especially in anti-NMDA-R encephalitis. However, in three out of four patients, diagnosis of possible pAE was based on nonspecific findings (e.g., slight CSF pleocytosis), and well-characterized neuronal autoantibodies were absent. As such, the spectrum of psychiatric syndromes potentially responding to immunotherapies seems not to be limited to currently known autoantibody-associated AE. Further trials are needed.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35046526 PMCID: PMC9095476 DOI: 10.1038/s41380-021-01396-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Psychiatry ISSN: 1359-4184 Impact factor: 13.437
Subgroup definitions.
| Probable psychiatric autoimmune encephalitis (“probable pAE”) | Possible psychiatric autoimmune encephalitis (“possible pAE”) |
|---|---|
| Patients with psychiatric syndromes and detection of well-characterized neuronal IgG Abs against cell surface or glial antigens (NMDA-R, LGI1, MOG) in serum and/or CSF. | Patients with psychiatric syndromes and the detection of well-characterized onconeuronal Abs by immunoblot (Yo, Zic4), non-well-characterized neuronal Abs (glycine-R, VGKC-C without LGI1/CASPR2 antibodies, GAD65, uncharacterized neuropil-specific immunostaining on rat/mouse brain immunohistochemistry) or clinical response to immunomodulatory therapies with or without detection of antithyroid Abs or detection of inflammatory CSF pathologies. |
| Subgroups (based on antibody findings) | |
• Patients with pAE associated with antibodies against cell surface antigens. • Patients with pAE associated with antibodies against intracellular antigens. • Patients with probable Hashimoto encephalopathy based on detection of any thyroid antibodies and response to immunotherapy. • Seronegative patients with “potential psychiatric autoimmune syndromes” based on inflammatory CSF alterations and/or a response to a trial of immunotherapy as rated by the treating physician. | |
Demographics and clinical findings.
| All patients ( | Probable psychiatric autoimmune encephalitis ( | Possible psychiatric autoimmune encephalitis ( | Statisticsc | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Demographic information | ||||
| Females (%): males (%) | 52 (57%): 39 (43%) | 14 (67%): 7 (33%) | 38 (54%): 32 (46%) | |
| Mean age ± SD | 40.53 ± 16.05 ( | 35.20 ± 17.53 ( | 42.10 ± 15.37 ( | |
| Psychometric information | ||||
| Disturbance of consciousness | 1% (1/90) | 0% (0/21) | 1% (1/69) | |
| Disorientation | 21% (17/82) | 53% (9/17) | 12% (8/65) | |
| Attention and concentration deficits | 74% (54/73) | 71% (10/14) | 75% (44/59) | |
| Impaired memory | 45% (34/75) | 81% (13/16) | 36% (21/59) | |
| Formal thought dysfunction | 70% (54/77) | 53% (8/15) | 74% (46/62) | |
| Anxiety and obsessive-compulsive symptoms | 44% (31/71) | 33% (4/12) | 46% (27/59) | |
| Delusions | 53% (40/76) | 60% (9/15) | 51% (31/61) | |
| Acoustical hallucinations | 29% (21/72) | 27% (4/15) | 30% (17/57) | |
| Optical hallucinations | 20% (15/74) | 38% (6/16) | 16% (9/58) | |
| Loss of ego-boundaries | 23% (15/66) | 36% (4/11) | 20% (11/55) | |
| Affective disorder | 93% (77/83) | 94% (16/17) | 92% (61/66) | |
| Altered energy and psychomotor activity | 87% (66/76) | 93% (14/15) | 85% (52/61) | |
| Suicidality | 26% (19/72) | 8% (1/12) | 30% (18/60) | |
| Behavior harmful to others | 6% (4/72) | 15% (2/13) | 3% (2/59) | |
| Sleep disturbance | 64% (43/67) | 50% (6/12) | 67% (37/55) | |
| Additional symptoms | ||||
| Nonspecific accompanying neurological signs overall | 26% (23/89) | 24% (5/21) | 26% (18/68) | |
| Motor symptomsb | 19% (17/89) | 10% (2/21) | 22% (15/68) | |
| Dissociative states | 2% (2/89) | 10% (2/21) | 0% (0/68) | |
| Hyposmia | 1% (1/89) | 0% (0/21) | 1% (1/68) | |
| Visual symptoms | 2% (2/89) | 5% (1/21) | 1% (1/68) | |
| Headache | 1% (1/89) | 0% (0/21) | 1% (1/68) | |
| Autonomic dysregulation overall | 6% (5/86) | 15% (3/20) | 3% (2/66) | |
| Urinary incontinence | 1% (1/86) | 0% (0/20) | 2% (1/66) | |
| Heavy sweating | 1% (1/86) | 0% (0/20) | 2% (1/66) | |
| Tachycardia | 1% (1/86) | 5% (1/20) | 0% (0/66) | |
| Hypertensive crisis | 1% (1/86) | 5% (1/20) | 0% (0/66) | |
| Syncope | 1% (1/86) | 5% (1/20) | 0% (0/66) | |
Abs autoantibodies.
aNot available from three patients.
bConsidered to be caused by medication or catatonia by treating physicians.
cStatistics refer to the comparison between patients with probable and possible psychiatric autoimmune encephalitis.
Significant changes are marked in bold.
Fig. 1Syndromal findings (presented here is the predominant psychiatric syndrome for each patient).
AE autoimmune encephalitis. The group of patients with paranoid-hallucinatory syndromes includes all patients with catatonic syndromes.
Fig. 2Autoantibody findings.
Inflammatory CSF pathologies are coded here only if patients had no additional neuronal antibodies. For a small subgroup of patients only response to immunomodulatory treatment was documented. *Anti-Yo antibodies were tested in one patient using an immunoblot and in indirect immunofluorescence, in the second anti-Yo positive patient, these antibodies were positive in two immunoblots. **Unfortunately, the antibody measurement method in the anti-Zic4 positive patient was not documented. AE autoimmune encephalitis, CSF cerebrospinal fluid.
Diagnostic findings and cancer association.
| All patients ( | Probable psychiatric autoimmune encephalitis ( | Possible psychiatric autoimmune encephalitis ( | Statisticsd | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Laboratory findings | ||||
| CSF results reported | 95% (86/91) | 95% (20/21) | 94% (66/70) | – |
| CSF overall altereda | 77% (66/86) | 85% (17/20) | 74% (49/66) | |
| Inflammatory CSF changes (increased WBC count and/or OCBs in CSF) | 53% (46/86) | 65% (13/20) | 50% (33/66) | |
| WBC count ↑ | 42% (36/86) | 60% (12/20) | 36% (24/66) | |
| Protein levels ↑ | 41% (35/86) | 35% (7/20) | 42% (28/66) | |
| Albumin quotient ↑ | 35% (23/66) | 36% (5/14) | 35% (18/52) | |
| IgG index ↑ | 20% (17/86) | 0% (0/20) | 26% (17/66) | |
| OCBs in CSF/OCBs in CSF and serum | 23% (18/77)/13% (10/77) | 21% (3/14)/36% (5/14) | 24% (15/63)/8% (5/63) | |
| Instrument based diagnostics | ||||
| MRI results reported | 97% (88/91) | 95% (20/21) | 97% (68/70) | – |
| MRI overall alterations | 57% (50/88) | 45% (9/20) | 60% (41/68) | |
| White matter changes | 49% (43/88) | 45% (9/20) | 50% (34/68) | |
| Generalized cortical atrophy | 2% (2/88) | 0% (0/20) | 3% (2/68) | |
| Localized cortical atrophy | 7% (6/88) | 10% (2/20) | 6% (4/68) | |
| Post-ischemic defects | 1% (1/88) | 0% (0/20) | 1% (1/68) | |
| Anatomical variants (e.g., cysts) | 5% (4/88) | 0% (0/20) | 6% (4/68) | |
| Others | 7% (6/88) | 5% (1/20) | 7% (5/68) | |
| EEG results reported | 82% (75/91) | 76% (16/21) | 84% (59/70) | – |
| EEG overall alterationsb | 40% (30/75) | 38% (6/16) | 41% (24/59) | |
| Epileptic activity | 4% (3/75) | 0% (0/16) | 5% (3/59) | |
| Slowing | 39% (29/75) | 38% (6/16) | 39% (23/59) | |
| FDG-PET results reported | 30% (27/91) | 14% (3/21) | 34% (24/70) | – |
| FDG-PET overall alterations | 56% (15/27) | 67% (2/3) | 54% (13/24) | |
| Cancer association | ||||
| Malignanciesc | 3% (3/91) | 10% (2/21) | 1% (1/70) | |
Some patients were documented as having received an examination; however, the corresponding findings were not entered into the database. These findings were assessed here as “not reported findings” and therefore do not appear in the table. If several findings were abnormal (e.g., the MRI showed two alterations), then both pathologies were coded.
MRI magnetic resonance imaging, Abs autoantibodies, BBB blood–brain barrier, EEG electroencephalography, FDG-PET [18F]Fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography, CSF cerebrospinal fluid, WBC white blood cell, IgG immunoglobulin G.
aDefined as increased WBC count, increased protein concentration/albumin quotient, increased lactate, increased IgG index, oligoclonal bands (including identical bands in serum and CSF).
bThirty patients had epileptic activity and slowing, two patients also showed anterior pronounced basic activity.
cType of Malignancy: Anal carcinoma (N = 1), prostate carcinoma (N = 1), cold thyroid node (N = 1).
dStatistics refer to the comparison between patients with probable and possible psychiatric autoimmune encephalitis.
Treatment approaches and responses.
| All patients ( | Probable psychiatric autoimmune encephalitis ( | Possible psychiatric autoimmune encephalitis ( | Statisticsc | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Immunomodulatory treatment | ||||
| Immunotherapies overalla | 69% (63/91) | 71% (15/21) | 69% (48/70) | |
| Overall improvementb | 83% (48/58) | 93% (13/14) | 80% (35/44) | |
| High-dose i.v. steroids | 57% (52/91) | 67% (14/21) | 54% (38/70) | - |
| Improvementb | 72% (34/47) | 67% (8/12) | 74% (26/35) | |
| “Low dose” oral steroids | 38% (35/91) | 29% (6/21) | 41% (29/70) | - |
| Improvementb | 81% (21/26) | 75% (3/4) | 82% (18/22) | |
| Plasmapheresis/immune-adsorption | 13% (12/91) | 14% (3/21) | 13% (9/70) | - |
| Improvement | 67% (6/9) | 50% (1/2) | 71% (5/7) | |
| Intravenous immunoglobulins | 11% (10/91) | 43% (9/21) | 1% (1/70) | - |
| Improvementb | 88% (7/8) | 100% (7/7) | 0% (0/1) | |
| Rituximab | 4% (4/91) | 14% (3/21) | 1% (1/70) | - |
| Improvement | 100% (4/4) | 100% (3/3) | 100% (1/1) | |
| Long-term immunotherapy | 16% (15/91) | 5% (1/21) | 20% (14/70) | |
| Steroids | 33% (5/15) | 0% (0/1) | 36% (5/14) | |
| Azathioprine | 47% (7/15) | 100% (1/1) | 43% (6/14) | |
| Methotrexate | 13% (2/15) | 0% (0/1) | 14% (2/14) | |
| Other | 7% (1/15) | 0% (0/1) | 7% (1/14) | |
| Psychopharmacological medication | ||||
| Psychotropic drugs overall | 93% (85/91) | 95% (20/21) | 93% (65/70) | |
| Antipsychotics | 86% (71/85) | 80% (16/20) | 85% (55/65) | |
| Antidepressants | 48% (41/85) | 40% (8/20) | 51% (33/65) | |
| Anticonvulsants | 42% (36/85) | 65% (13/20) | 35% (23/65) | |
In five patients, outcome after immunotherapy was not documented. Therefore, there is more data on treatments overall than on outcome.
i.v. intravenous.
aSteroids, plasma exchange/immunoadsorption, intravenous immunoglobulins, rituximab, cyclosphosphamide.
bThere were patients in whom the nature of the treatment was known but the response remained unclear.
cStatistics refer to the comparison between patients with probable and possible psychiatric autoimmune encephalitis.