Subgroup comparison according to clinical phenotype and serostatus in autoimmune encephalitis: a multicenter retrospective study
- Creators
- Gastaldi M.
- Mariotto S.
- Giannoccaro M. P.
- Iorio R.
- Zoccarato M.
- Nosadini M.
- Benedetti L.
- Casagrande S.
- Di Filippo M.
- Valeriani M.
- Ricci S.
- Bova S.
- Arbasino C.
- Mauri M.
- Versino M.
- Vigevano F.
- Papetti L.
- Romoli M.
- Lapucci C.
- Massa F.
- Sartori S.
- Zuliani L.
- Barilaro A.
- De Gaspari P.
- Spagni G.
- Evoli A.
- Liguori R.
- Ferrari S.
- Marchioni E.
- Giometto B.
- Massacesi L.
- Franciotta D.
- Others:
- Gastaldi, M.
- Mariotto, S.
- Giannoccaro, M. P.
- Iorio, R.
- Zoccarato, M.
- Nosadini, M.
- Benedetti, L.
- Casagrande, S.
- Di Filippo, M.
- Valeriani, M.
- Ricci, S.
- Bova, S.
- Arbasino, C.
- Mauri, M.
- Versino, M.
- Vigevano, F.
- Papetti, L.
- Romoli, M.
- Lapucci, C.
- Massa, F.
- Sartori, S.
- Zuliani, L.
- Barilaro, A.
- De Gaspari, P.
- Spagni, G.
- Evoli, A.
- Liguori, R.
- Ferrari, S.
- Marchioni, E.
- Giometto, B.
- Massacesi, L.
- Franciotta, D.
Description
Background and purpose Autoimmune encephalitides (AE) include a spectrum of neurological disorders whose diagnosis revolves around the detection of neuronal antibodies (Abs). Consensus-based diagnostic criteria (AE-DC) allow clinic-serological subgrouping of AE, with unclear prognostic implications. The impact of AE-DC on patients' management was studied, focusing on the subgroup of Ab-negative-AE. Methods This was a retrospective multicenter study on patients fulfilling AE-DC. All patients underwent Ab testing with commercial cell-based assays (CBAs) and, when available, in-house assays (immunohistochemistry, live/fixed CBAs, neuronal cultures) that contributed to defining final categories. Patients were classified as Ab-positive-AE [N-methyl-d-aspartate-receptor encephalitis (NMDAR-E), Ab-positive limbic encephalitis (LE), definite-AE] or Ab-negative-AE (Ab-negative-LE, probable-AE, possible-AE). Results Commercial CBAs detected neuronal Abs in 70/118 (59.3%) patients. Testing 37/48 Ab-negative cases, in-house assays identified Abs in 11 patients (29.7%). A hundred and eighteen patients fulfilled the AE-DC, 81 (68.6%) with Ab-positive-AE (Ab-positive-LE, 40; NMDAR-E, 32; definite-AE, nine) and 37 (31.4%) with Ab-negative-AE (Ab-negative-LE, 17; probable/possible-AE, 20). Clinical phenotypes were similar in Ab-positive-LE versus Ab-negative-LE. Twenty-four/118 (20.3%) patients had tumors, and 19/118 (16.1%) relapsed, regardless of being Ab-positive or Ab-negative. Ab-positive-AE patients were treated earlier than Ab-negative-AE patients (P = 0.045), responded more frequently to treatments (92.3% vs. 65.6%, P < 0.001) and received second-line therapies more often (33.3% vs. 10.8%, P = 0.01). Delays in first-line therapy initiation were associated with poor response (P = 0.022; odds ratio 1.02; confidence interval 1.00-1.04). Conclusions In-house diagnostics improved Ab detection allowing better patient management but was available in a patient subgroup only, implying possible Ab-positive-AE underestimation. Notwithstanding this limitation, our findings suggest that Ab-negative-AE and Ab-positive-AE patients share similar oncological profiles, warranting appropriate tumor screening. Ab-negative-AE patients risk worse responses due to delayed and less aggressive treatments.
Additional details
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/1019046
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/1019046
- Origin repository
- UNIGE