Abstract

Antibody-mediated disorders of the central nervous system (CNS) are increasingly recognized as neurologic disorders that can be severe and even life-threatening but with the potential for reversibility with appropriate treatment. The expanding spectrum of newly identified autoantibodies targeting glial or neuronal (neural) antigens and associated clinical syndromes (ranging from autoimmune encephalitis to CNS demyelination) has increased diagnostic precision, and allowed critical reinterpretation of non-specific neurological syndromes historically associated with systemic disorders (e.g., Hashimoto encephalopathy). The intracellular vs. cell-surface or synaptic location of the different neural autoantibody targets often helps to predict the clinical characteristics, potential cancer association, and treatment response of the associated syndromes. In particular, autoantibodies targeting intracellular antigens (traditionally termed onconeural autoantibodies) are often associated with cancers, rarely respond well to immunosuppression and have a poor outcome, although exceptions exist. Detection of neural autoantibodies with accurate laboratory assays in patients with compatible clinical-MRI phenotypes allows a definite diagnosis of antibody-mediated CNS disorders, with important therapeutic and prognostic implications. Antibody-mediated CNS disorders are rare, and reliable autoantibody identification is highly dependent on the technique used for detection and pre-test probability. As a consequence, indiscriminate neural autoantibody testing among patients with more common neurologic disorders (e.g., epilepsy, dementia) will necessarily increase the risk of false positivity, so that recognition of high-risk clinical-MRI phenotypes is crucial. A number of emerging clinical settings have recently been recognized to favor development of CNS autoimmunity. These include antibody-mediated CNS disorders following herpes simplex virus encephalitis or occurring in a post-transplant setting, and neurological autoimmunity triggered by TNFα inhibitors or immune checkpoint inhibitors for cancer treatment. Awareness of the range of clinical and radiological manifestations associated with different neural autoantibodies, and the specific settings where autoimmune CNS disorders may occur is crucial to allow rapid diagnosis and early initiation of treatment.

Highlights

  • The spectrum of immune-mediated neurologic disorders is rapidly expanding with the growing understanding of diverse disease mechanisms that can lead to central and/or peripheral nervous system inflammation [1, 2]

  • A more characteristic pattern of rhythmic delta activity at 1–3 Hz with superimposed beta bursts at 20–30 Hz is found in up to one third of patients with NMDAR autoantibodies [84], it can be seen in patients with non-autoimmune temporal lobe epilepsy, hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy, and brain neoplasms [85]

  • The facio-brachial dystonic seizures seen with LGI1 autoantibodies typically show no EEG correlate during episodes possibly from their short-lasting nature or potentially a deep origin in the basal ganglia [86]

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The spectrum of immune-mediated neurologic disorders is rapidly expanding with the growing understanding of diverse disease mechanisms that can lead to central and/or peripheral nervous system inflammation [1, 2]. Antibody-mediated disorders of the central nervous system (CNS) represent a distinct subgroup of immune-mediated neurologic disorders characterized by the presence of autoantibodies directed against specific neuronal or glial target antigens (generically referred as neural autoantibodies) mostly expressed in the CNS, and which share several distinctive clinical and MRI features. We will review the main clinical syndromes and MRI characteristics associated with neural autoantibodies directed against CNS antigens, and discuss commonly encountered challenges for diagnosis and management. Since not all target antigens are exclusively expressed in the CNS, certain neural autoantibodies are associated with complex clinical syndromes characterized by concomitant CNS and extra-CNS manifestations. Neurological syndromes associated with autoantibodies exclusively targeting neuromuscular structures (e.g., myasthenia gravis) will not be discussed in this article; yet share many similarities in terms of pathophysiology and management

Principles of Autoimmune Neurology
Importance of Neural Autoantibody Detection in Clinical Practice
Clinical syndrome
Neurochondrin NIF
Cerebellar ataxia Lambert eaton myasthenic syndrome
Supportive Paraclinical Findings
Cancer Search
Neural Autoantibody Testing
Investigations to consider
Available Diagnostic Criteria
Neurological Syndromes Associated With Systemic Autoantibodies
Emerging Clinical Settings Associated With Autoimmune CNS Disorders
TREATMENT AND OUTCOMES
Acute Immunotherapy
Maintenance Immunotherapy
Oncologic Treatments
Outcome and Prognosis
CONCLUSIONS
Full Text
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