Clinical, serological and genetic predictors of response to immunotherapy in anti-IgLON5 disease.
HLA-DRB1*10:01
IgG subclass
anti-IgLON5 disease
immunotherapy
neurofilament light chain
Journal
Brain : a journal of neurology
ISSN: 1460-2156
Titre abrégé: Brain
Pays: England
ID NLM: 0372537
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
13 02 2023
13 02 2023
Historique:
received:
13
09
2021
revised:
14
12
2021
accepted:
06
02
2022
pubmed:
9
3
2022
medline:
16
2
2023
entrez:
8
3
2022
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
Anti-IgLON5 disease is a newly defined clinical entity characterized by a progressive course with high disability and mortality rate. While precise pathogenetic mechanisms remain unclear, features characteristic of both autoimmune and neurodegenerative diseases were reported. Data on immunotherapy are limited, and its efficacy remains controversial. In this study, we retrospectively investigated an anti-IgLON5 disease cohort with special focus on clinical, serological and genetic predictors of the immunotherapy response and long-term outcome. Patients were recruited from the GENERATE (German Network for Research on Autoimmune Encephalitis) registry. Along with clinical parameters, anti-IgLON5 immunoglobulin (Ig)G in serum and CSF, anti-IgLON5 IgG1-4, IgA and IgM in serum, neurofilament light chain and glial fibrillary acidic protein in serum as well as human leukocyte antigen-genotypes were determined. We identified 53 patients (symptom onset 63.8 ± 10.3 years, female:male 1:1.5). The most frequent initial clinical presentations were bulbar syndrome, hyperkinetic syndrome or isolated sleep disorder [at least one symptom present in 38% (20/53)]. At the time of diagnosis, the majority of patients had a generalized multi-systemic phenotype; nevertheless, 21% (11/53) still had an isolated brainstem syndrome and/or a characteristic sleep disorder only. About one third of patients [28% (15/53)] reported subacute disease onset and 51% (27/53) relapse-like exacerbations during the disease course. Inflammatory CSF changes were evident in 37% (19/51) and increased blood-CSF-barrier permeability in 46% (21/46). CSF cell count significantly decreased, while serum anti-IgLON5 IgG titre increased with disease duration. The presence of human leukocyte antigen-DRB1*10:01 [55% (24/44)] was associated with higher serum anti-IgLON5 IgG titres. Neurofilament light chain and glial fibrillary acidic protein in serum were substantially increased (71.1 ± 103.9 pg/ml and 126.7 ± 73.3 pg/ml, respectively). First-line immunotherapy of relapse-like acute-to-subacute exacerbation episodes resulted in improvement in 41% (11/27) of patients and early initiation within the first 6 weeks was a predictor for therapy response. Sixty-eight per cent (36/53) of patients were treated with long-term immunotherapy and 75% (27/36) of these experienced no further disease progression (observation period of 20.2 ± 15.4 months). Long-term immunotherapy initiation during the first year after onset and low pre-treatment neurofilament light chain were significant predictors for a better outcome. In conclusion, subacute disease onset and early inflammatory CSF changes support the primary role of autoimmune mechanisms at least at initial stages of anti-IgLON5 disease. Early immunotherapy, prior to advanced neurodegeneration, is associated with a better long-term clinical outcome. Low serum neurofilament light chain at treatment initiation may serve as a potential biomarker of the immunotherapy response.
Identifiants
pubmed: 35259208
pii: 6543527
doi: 10.1093/brain/awac090
doi:
Substances chimiques
Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein
0
Immunoglobulin G
0
Types de publication
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
600-611Subventions
Organisme : Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung
Investigateurs
Frank Leypoldt
(F)
Nico Melzer
(N)
Kristin Stefanie Melzer
(KS)
Christian Geis
(C)
Ilya Ayzenberg
(I)
Andreas van Baalen
(A)
Annette Baumgartner
(A)
Robert Berger
(R)
Franz Blaes
(F)
Astrid Blaschek
(A)
Kathrin Doppler
(K)
Friedrich Ebinger
(F)
Dominique Endres
(D)
Jürgen Hartmut Faiss
(JH)
Alexander Finke
(A)
Carsten Finke
(C)
Andre Dik
(A)
Paul Friedemann
(P)
Manuel Friese
(M)
Anna Gorsler
(A)
Catharina Groß
(C)
Robert Handreka
(R)
Martin Häusler
(M)
Valentin Held
(V)
Frank Hoffmann
(F)
Ulrich Hofstadt-van Oy
(U)
Christoph Kellinghaus
(C)
Andrea Kraft
(A)
Markus Krämer
(M)
Christos Krogias
(C)
Peter Körtvélyessy
(P)
Tanja Kümpfel
(T)
Jan Lewerenz
(J)
Andeas Linsa
(A)
Til Menge
(T)
Wolfgang Heide
(W)
Joachim Havla
(J)
Michael Malter
(M)
Sven Meuth
(S)
Constanze Mönig
(C)
Marie-Luise Mono
(ML)
Michael Nagel
(M)
Jost Obrocki
(J)
Felix von Poderwils
(F)
Josef Priller
(J)
Gernot Reimann
(G)
Marius Ringelstein
(M)
Kevin Rostasy
(K)
Günter Seidel
(G)
Oliver Stammel
(O)
Muriel Stoppe
(M)
Claudia Sommer
(C)
Kurt-Wolfram Sühs
(KW)
Max Kaufmann
(M)
Jens Schaumberg
(J)
Jens Schmidt
(J)
Stephan Schreiber
(S)
Henning Stolze
(H)
Simone Tauber
(S)
Franziska Thaler
(F)
Florian Then Bergh
(FT)
Corinna Trebst
(C)
Christian Urbanek
(C)
Klaus-Peter Wandinger
(KP)
Robert Weissert
(R)
Heinz Wiendl
(H)
Brigitte Wildemann
(B)
Sigrid Mues
(S)
Christian Bien
(C)
Harald Prüß
(H)
Bettina Balint
(B)
George Trendelenburg
(G)
Armin Grau
(A)
Kerstin Hellwig
(K)
Christoph Lehrich
(C)
Marco Gallus
(M)
Sven Ehrlich
(S)
Sebastian Bauer
(S)
Kai Siebenbrodt
(K)
Felix Rosenow
(F)
Jonathan Wickel
(J)
Chung Ha-Yeun
(C)
Michael Adelmann
(M)
Sonka Benesch
(S)
Christine Strippel
(C)
Judith Wagner
(J)
Methab Türedi
(M)
Martina Jansen
(M)
Ina-Isabelle Schmütz
(II)
Sascha Berning
(S)
Andreas Binder
(A)
Marcel Gebhard
(M)
Corinna Bien
(C)
Sarah Bernsen
(S)
Loana Penner
(L)
Justina Dargvainiene
(J)
Fatme Seval Ismail
(FS)
Steffen Syrbe
(S)
Ina Schröder
(I)
Benjamin Wunderlich
(B)
Philip Hillebrand
(P)
Katharina Eisenhut
(K)
Luise Appeltshauser
(L)
Marina Entscheva
(M)
Sebastian Baatz
(S)
Stefan Bittner
(S)
Karsten Witt
(K)
Thomas Pfefferkorn
(T)
Johannes Piepgras
(J)
Lara Zieger
(L)
Raphael Reinecke
(R)
Dirk Fitzner
(D)
Daniel Bittner
(D)
Stephan Rüegg
(S)
Anne-Katrin Pröbstel
(AK)
Saskia Jania Räuber
(SJ)
Matthias von Mering
(M)
Hendrik Rohner
(H)
Alexandra Philipsen
(A)
Niels Hansen
(N)
Marina Flotats-Bastardas
(M)
Lena Edelhoff
(L)
Regina Trollmann
(R)
Susanne Knake
(S)
Johanna Maria Helena Rau
(JMH)
Gerd Meyer Zu Hörste
(GMZ)
Oliver Grauer
(O)
Stjepana Kovac
(S)
Carolin Baade-Büttner
(C)
Halime Gül
(H)
Walid Fazeli
(W)
Jan Lünemann
(J)
Simon Schuster
(S)
Gesa Schreyer
(G)
Makbule Senel
(M)
Karin Storm Van's Gravesande
(KS)
Mona Dreesmann
(M)
Hayrettin Tumani
(H)
Michael Karenfort
(M)
Anna Hoffmann
(A)
Dietrich Sturm
(D)
Aiden Haghikia
(A)
Lena Kristina Pfeffer
(LK)
Julia Maren Decker
(JM)
Mathias Fousse
(M)
Monika Meister
(M)
Mareike Schimmel
(M)
Kim Kristin Falk
(KK)
Aleksandra Juranek
(A)
Peter Huppke
(P)
Theodor Rüber
(T)
Niklas Vogel
(N)
Antonia Harms
(A)
Ina Reichen
(I)
Informations de copyright
© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.