Treatment-responsive limbic encephalitis identified by neuropil antibodies: MRI and PET correlates

被引:342
作者
Ances, BM
Vitaliani, R
Taylor, RA
Liebeskind, DS
Voloschin, A
Houghton, DJ
Galetta, SL
Dichter, M
Alavi, A
Rosenfeld, MR
Dalmau, J
机构
[1] Hosp Univ Penn, Dept Neurol, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
[2] Hosp Univ Penn, Dept Radiol, Div Nucl Med, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
[3] Med Coll Georgia, Dept Neurosurg, Augusta, GA 30912 USA
关键词
limbic encephalitis; neuronal autoantibodies; paraneoplastic syndrome; PET; MRI;
D O I
10.1093/brain/awh526
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
We report seven patients, six from a single institution, who developed subacute limbic encephalitis initially considered of uncertain aetiology. Four patients presented with symptoms of hippocampal dysfunction (i.e. severe short-term memory loss) and three with extensive limbic dysfunction (i.e. confusion, seizures and suspected psychosis). Brain MRI and [F-18]fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG)-PET complemented each other but did not overlap in 50% of the patients. Combining both tests, all patients had temporal lobe abnormalities, five with additional areas involved. In one patient, FDG hyperactivity in the brainstem that was normal on MRI correlated with central hypoventilation; in another case, hyperactivity in the cerebellum anticipated ataxia. All patients had abnormal CSF: six pleocytosis, six had increased protein concentration, and three of five examined had oligoclonal bands. A tumour was identified and removed in four patients (mediastinal teratoma, thymoma, thymic carcinoma and thyroid cancer) and not treated in one (ovarian teratoma). An immunohistochemical technique that facilitates the detection of antibodies to cell surface or synaptic proteins demonstrated that six patients had antibodies to the neuropil of hippocampus or cerebellum, and one to intraneuronal antigens. Only one of the neuropil antibodies corresponded to voltage-gated potassium channel (VGKC) antibodies; the other five (two with identical specificity) reacted with antigens concentrated in areas of high dendritic density or synaptic-enriched regions of the hippocampus or cerebellum. Preliminary characterization of these antigens indicates that they are diverse and expressed on the neuronal cell membrane and dendrites; they do not co-localize with VGKCs, but partially co-localize with spinophilin. A target autoantigen in one of the patients co-localizes with a cell surface protein involved in hippocampal dendritic development. All patients except the one with antibodies to intracellular antigens had dramatic clinical and neuroimaging responses to immunotherapy or tumour resection; two patients had neurological relapse and improved with immunotherapy. Overall, the phenotype associated with the novel neuropil antibodies includes dominant behavioural and psychiatric symptoms and seizures that often interfere with the evaluation of cognition and memory, and brain MRI or FDG-PET abnormalities less frequently restricted to the medial temporal lobes than in patients with classical paraneoplastic or VGKC antibodies. When compared with patients with VGKC antibodies, patients with these novel antibodies are more likely to have CSF inflammatory abnormalities and systemic tumours (teratoma and thymoma), and they do not develop SIADH-like hyponatraemia. Although most autoantigens await characterization, all share intense expression by the neuropil of hippocampus, with patterns of immunolabelling characteristic enough to suggest the diagnosis of these disorders and predict response to treatment.
引用
收藏
页码:1764 / 1777
页数:14
相关论文
共 28 条
  • [1] Limbic encephalitis and small cell lung cancer - Clinical and immunological features
    Alamowitch, S
    Graus, F
    Uchuya, M
    Rene, R
    Bescansa, E
    Delattre, JY
    [J]. BRAIN, 1997, 120 : 923 - 928
  • [2] Paraneoplastic disorders of the central nervous system: Update on diagnostic criteria and treatment
    Bataller, L
    Dalmau, JO
    [J]. SEMINARS IN NEUROLOGY, 2004, 24 (04) : 461 - 471
  • [3] Autoantigen diversity in the opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome
    Bataller, L
    Rosenfeld, MR
    Graus, F
    Vilchez, JJ
    Cheung, NKV
    Dalmau, J
    [J]. ANNALS OF NEUROLOGY, 2003, 53 (03) : 347 - 353
  • [4] Benyahia B, 1999, ANN NEUROL, V45, P162, DOI 10.1002/1531-8249(199902)45:2<162::AID-ANA5>3.0.CO
  • [5] 2-R
  • [6] Immunohistochemical analysis of anti-Hu-associated paraneoplastic encephalomyelitis
    Bernal, F
    Graus, F
    Pifarré, A
    Saiz, A
    Benyahia, B
    Ribalta, T
    [J]. ACTA NEUROPATHOLOGICA, 2002, 103 (05) : 509 - 515
  • [7] Limbic encephalitis not associated with neoplasm as a cause of temporal lobe epilepsy
    Bien, CG
    Schulze-Bonhage, A
    Deckert, M
    Urbach, H
    Helmstaedter, C
    Grunwald, T
    Schaller, C
    Elger, CE
    [J]. NEUROLOGY, 2000, 55 (12) : 1823 - 1828
  • [8] ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL COMPARISON OF PYRAMIDAL AND STELLATE NONPYRAMIDAL NEURONS IN DISSOCIATED CELL-CULTURE OF RAT HIPPOCAMPUS
    BUCHHALTER, JR
    DICHTER, MA
    [J]. BRAIN RESEARCH BULLETIN, 1991, 26 (03) : 333 - 338
  • [9] Potassium channel antibodies in two patients with reversible limbic encephalitis
    Buckley, C
    Oger, J
    Clover, L
    Tüzün, E
    Carpenter, K
    Jackson, M
    Vincent, A
    [J]. ANNALS OF NEUROLOGY, 2001, 50 (01) : 73 - 78
  • [10] Paraneoplastic encephalitis associated with cystic teratoma is detected by fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography with negative magnetic resonance image findings
    Dadparvar, S
    Anderson, GS
    Bhargava, P
    Guan, L
    Reich, P
    Alavi, A
    Zhuang, HM
    [J]. CLINICAL NUCLEAR MEDICINE, 2003, 28 (11) : 893 - 896