From the Institut d'Investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer (IDIBAPS) (M.G., J.D.); Neurology Service (M.G., J.D.), Hospital Clínic de Barcelona, University of Barcelona, Spain; Department of Neurology (J.D.), Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia; and Catalan Institution for Research and Advanced Studies (ICREA) (J.D.), Barcelona, Spain.
Neurology. 2023 Oct 10;101(15):656-660. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000207486. Epub 2023 Jun 23.
In recent years, neurology and psychiatry journals have been inundated with reports on individual symptoms of autoimmune encephalitis (AE) that are described as distinct entities such as autoimmune psychosis, obsessive-compulsive disorders, or depression. It is unquestionable that for AE the demonstration of antibodies against neuronal-surface proteins is intrinsically linked to distinct disorders (some defining new diseases) that are usually treatment-responsive and associate with comorbidities that vary according to the antigen. By contrast, for psychiatric diseases, the apparent detection of antibodies has not defined any disorder or affected the diagnosis and treatment of patients. Although these studies frequently use anti-N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor encephalitis to rationalize the findings, they rarely adopt the same rigorous investigations or address the clinical and pathogenic significance of the antibodies or discuss the limitations related to the biological sample or antibody-testing techniques. It is imperative to consider (1) some antibodies (GAD65, TPO) occur in serum of 8%-13% of healthy people; (2) VGKC antibodies are not useful unless LGI1 or CASPR2 are investigated; (3) commercial-clinical testing for Ma2, Zic4, and SOX1 antibodies causes a high number of false-positive results; (4) GlyR antibodies have unclear disease specificity when examined only in serum; and (5) the significance of antibodies against unknown antigens of endothelium, astrocytes, myelin fibers, or granule cells of hippocampus and cerebellum is questioned by the lack of disease specificity and appropriate controls. These limitations and problems are a frequent cause of neurologic consultations. Here we discuss some of these problems, emphasizing the importance of clinical judgment over antibody findings.
近年来,神经病学和精神病学期刊上充斥着关于自身免疫性脑炎 (AE) 个别症状的报告,这些症状被描述为自身免疫性精神病、强迫症或抑郁症等不同实体。毫无疑问,对于 AE,针对神经元表面蛋白的抗体的检测与通常具有治疗反应性且与根据抗原而变化的合并症相关的不同疾病(一些定义为新疾病)密切相关。相比之下,对于精神疾病,抗体的明显检测并未定义任何疾病,也未影响患者的诊断和治疗。尽管这些研究经常使用抗 N-甲基-D-天冬氨酸受体脑炎来合理化这些发现,但它们很少采用相同的严格调查,也不解决抗体的临床和发病意义,或讨论与生物样本或抗体检测技术相关的局限性。必须考虑到:(1) 一些抗体(GAD65、TPO)在 8%-13%的健康人群血清中出现;(2) VGKC 抗体除非同时检测 LGI1 或 CASPR2,否则没有用处;(3) 针对 Ma2、Zic4 和 SOX1 抗体的商业临床检测会导致大量假阳性结果;(4) 仅在血清中检测 GlyR 抗体时,其疾病特异性不明确;(5) 针对内皮细胞、星形胶质细胞、髓鞘纤维或海马和小脑颗粒细胞未知抗原的抗体缺乏疾病特异性和适当对照,因此其意义受到质疑。这些局限性和问题是神经科咨询的常见原因。在这里,我们讨论了其中的一些问题,强调了临床判断优于抗体检测的重要性。