Abstract

ObjectivesImmunotherapy in addition to antiepileptic drugs can improve seizure freedom rates in autoimmune epilepsy, highlighting the importance of early diagnosis. A diagnosis of autoimmune epilepsy can be supported by presence of serum antibodies to neuronal antigens. We asked how often neuronal antibodies are found in the serum of unselected adult patients with new‐onset seizures and whether such testing could improve detection of autoimmune epilepsy.Material and MethodsWe included 44 patients over the age of 25 presenting after at least one unprovoked seizure to the Neurology Clinic at Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Gothenburg, Sweden. The median time between the first‐ever seizure in life and the serum sampling was 50 days (range 22–11,000). Antibody testing in serum was performed according to the manufacturer's instructions. The patients were followed for at least 1 year.ResultsEpilepsy could be diagnosed already at the first visit in 21/44 patients (47.7%). Two patients (4.5%) were positive for neuronal antibodies: one against contactin‐associated protein 2 (CASPR‐2) and one against glutamate acid decarboxylase (GAD). Three patients (6.7%) displayed very weak immunoreactivity that was deemed clinically insignificant. One of the antibody‐positive patients had only a single seizure. The other had a focal cortical dysplasia and was seizure‐free on levetiracetam. None of the five patients with antibodies or immunoreactivity displayed any feature of autoimmune epilepsy.ConclusionsWe conclude that indiscriminate testing in patients presenting to a first seizure clinic with new‐onset seizures or epilepsy is unlikely to improve detection of autoimmune epilepsy.

Highlights

  • Autoimmune epilepsy refers to epilepsy resulting from immune‐ driven processes in the brain and is a recognized etiological category in the International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) classifications of epilepsies (Scheffer et al, 2017)

  • A diagnosis of autoimmune epilepsy can be supported by presence of neuronal antibodies in serum, which are most commonly directed against particular neuronal antigens (Irani et al, 2011)

  • We investigated the presence of neuronal an‐ tibodies in unselected patients with onset of seizures after the age of 25

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Summary

Introduction

Autoimmune epilepsy refers to epilepsy resulting from immune‐ driven processes in the brain and is a recognized etiological category in the International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) classifications of epilepsies (Scheffer et al, 2017). Nonparaneoplastic cases are more common than paraneoplastic ones, and autoimmune epilepsy has been suggested to account for up to 20% of epilepsy of unknown etiology (Bien & Holtkamp, 2017; Dubey, Alqallaf, et al, 2017; Irani, Bien, & Lang, 2011). A diagnosis of autoimmune epilepsy can be supported by presence of neuronal antibodies in serum, which are most commonly directed against particular neuronal antigens (Irani et al, 2011). In cases of immune‐ mediated epilepsy, immunotherapy in addition to antiepileptic drugs can improve seizure freedom rates, highlighting the importance of early diagnosis (Feyissa, Lopez Chiriboga, & Britton, 2017)

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