| Literature DB >> 36158962 |
Yongheng Zhao1,2, Jun Li1, Liang Gao1,2, Xiaofan Yang1, Haiqing Zhao1,2, Yumei Li1,2, Li Su1,2, Xiaoyu Zhao1,2, Hao Ding1,2, Baomin Li1.
Abstract
This study aimed to discuss clinical characteristics, therapy, and antibody prevalence in epilepsy (APE) score for short-term, frequent epileptic seizures in children who are autoimmune-antibody negative and respond well to immunotherapy. The clinical characteristics, imaging manifestations, electrophysiology, and effective treatment plan of 9 children who met the above criteria were retrospectively analyzed in the Pediatric Neurology Department of Qilu Hospital at Shandong University from June 2019 to December 2021. All 9 patients (6 boys, 3 girls; aged 13 months-11 years and 5 months, median 3.5 years) had acute-onset seizures within 3 months. All had previous normal growth/development with no family history of disease. Seizure types were focal motor seizures (6), generalized tonic-clonic seizures (2), and generalized secondary-to-focal (1); occurred >10 times/day; and lasted <1 min/episode. Formal treatment with ≥2 types of antiseizure medicine (ASM) achieved an unsatisfactory effect. Cranial magnetic resonance imaging showed an abnormal result in 1 case. The APE score was ≥4 in 3 cases and <4 in 6 cases. All patients experienced symptomatic relief with immunotherapy; subsequently, 8 patients were free of recurrence and 1 had significantly reduced seizure frequency. Autoimmune antibody screening is recommended for children who were previously well and have acute-onset epilepsy; high frequency, short-duration seizures; no good response to 2 types of ASM; and other etiologic factors excluded, even with APE score <4. Even with negative autoimmune antibody results, the possibility of autoimmune epilepsy should be considered for urgent initiation of immunotherapy, which can achieve good results.Entities:
Keywords: antibody prevalence in epilepsy (APE) score; autoimmune antibody negativity; autoimmune encephalitis; autoimmune epilepsy; immunotherapy for epilepsy
Year: 2022 PMID: 36158962 PMCID: PMC9490574 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2022.948727
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.086
Antibody prevalence in epilepsy (APE) score.
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| New-onset, rapid progressive mental symptoms more than 1–6 weeks or new-onset epileptic seizure (evaluated within 1 year) | 1 |
| Neuropsychiatric changes; Restlessness, aggression, emotional instability | 1 |
| Autonomic dysfunction [persistent atrial tachycardia or bradycardia, erect hypotension (systolic blood pressure drop ≥20 mm Hg or diastolic blood pressure drop ≥10 mm Hg within 3 min of standing), hyperhidrosis, persistent unstable blood pressure, ventricular tachycardia, or cardiac arrest] | 1 |
| Viral prodrome (runny nose, sore throat, low fever), no potential systemic malignancy | 2 |
| Facial dystonia or faciobrachial dystonia | 2 |
| No response to at least 2 types of AEDs | 2 |
| CSF results showing inflammatory changes (CSF protein > 50 mg/dL and/or lymphocytes > 5/dL when CSF RBC count <1,000/mm3) | 2 |
| Brain MRI showing signal changes consistent with limbic encephalitis (Altered T2/FLAIR signal in the Medial temporal lobe) | 2 |
| Presence of potential malignancies (excluding cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma and basal cell carcinoma) | 2 |
CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; RBC, red blood cell.
Figure 1(A–C) Are craniocerebral magnetic resonance imaging of some children, and the results are negative.
Figure 2Electroencephalograms for 3 pediatric patients. (A) The right hemisphere is dominated by multifocal spike waves and slow spike waves. (B,C) Generalized decreased voltage. In the bilateral frontal pole and frontal and anterior temporal regions, a fast wave is actively released with a low amplitude, lasting for 20 s, and in the late stage of onset, 1–3 Hz δ is actively released in the temporal region and accompanied by a large amount of electromyography pseudo error.
Clinical background data for all study patients.
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| 1 | Female | 3 years 2 months | Focal seizure | No abnormality | Right central, temporalis media-onset focal seizure | -/- | - | 5 | OXC, VPA, CZP | IVIG | Good |
| 2 | Male | 4 years 4 months | Focal seizure | No abnormality | Dominant in the right hemisphere and have extensive spike wave, spike slow wave, multi spikes slow wave, and fast wave rhythm | -/- | - | 3 | OXC, VPA | IVIG | Completely no attack |
| 3 | Male | 1 year 1 month | Generalized seizure | No abnormality | During the sleeping period, the frontal, central, and midline areas of the bilateral atypical sharp wave, slow wave compound small sharp wave | -/- | - | 5 | OXC, VPA | IVIG | Completely no attack |
| 4 | Male | 2 years 5 months | Generalized seizure | No abnormality | In sleeping period, bilateral frontal, central, parietal, Fz, Cz spike wave, and slow spike wave | -/- | - | 3 | OXC, VPA | IVIG+ IVMP | Completely no attack |
| 5 | Male | 3 years 6 months | Focal seizure | The temporal horn of the right ventricle is slightly enlarged | Focal onset in the right middle temporal region | -/- | - | 2 | OXC, VPA, CZP | IVIG+ IVMP | Completely no attack |
| 6 | Male | 11 years 5 months | Focal seizure | No abnormality | During sleeping period, regular rhythm of spike wave, slow spike wave, multiple-spike wave, low amplitude fast wave was found in frontal lobe | -/- | - | 3 | VPA, LEV, CZP, LCM | IVIG | Completely no attack |
| 7 | Male | 11 years | Focal seizure | No abnormality | The left central region began with focal episodes of seizures with consciousness | -/- | - | 3 | OXC, LCM, CBZ | IVIG | Completely no attack |
| 8 | Female | 1 year 7 months | Focal seizure | No abnormality | The anterior head is mainly spike wave, slow spike wave, multi spike slow wave, sharp slow wave, sharp slow wave, irregular slow wave, and fast wave. Obvious in left side | -/- | - | 5 | OXC, LCM | IVIG | Completely no attack |
| 9 | Female | 4 years | Focal seizure secondary to generalized seizure secondary | No abnormality | In the right central, occipital, and middle temporal regions, spike, and slow spike were released. During sleeping period, the right hemisphere was dominant, and the extensive slow spike waves, multi spike slow wave, slow spike slow wave, and 15–21 Hz fast waves were regularly released | -/- | - | 3 | VPA, LEV, CZP, OXC | IVIG | Effective |
The number of seizure episodes after immunotherapy decreased ≥50 and <75% was considered effective; decrease ≥ 50 and <100% was considered good; decrease 100% was considered completely no seizure episodes. When the steady-state concentration is reached after 7–10 days of drug treatment, the number of seizure episodes decreased by <50% was considered invalid. AEDS, Anti-epileptic Drugs; APE, Antibody Prevalence in Epilepsy; CZP, Clonazepam; EEG, Electroencephalogram; IVIG, intravenous immunoglobulin; IVMP, Intravenous methylprednisolone; LCM, Lacosamide; CBZ, Carbamazepine; LEV, Levetiracetam; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; OXC, oxcarbazepine; VPA, Valproic acid. Dose: IVIG 2 g/kg divided over 2–5 days, IVMP 20 mg/kg per day for 3 days followed by Sequential treatment with oral methylprednisolone.
Figure 3Flow diagram of diagnosis and therapy (15). APE, antibody prevalence in epilepsy.