Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, Mayo Clinic, 200 1St ST SW, Rochester, MN, 55905, USA.
Department of Neurology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, USA.
J Neurol. 2024 Dec;271(12):7502-7515. doi: 10.1007/s00415-024-12680-y. Epub 2024 Sep 15.
Despite constituting one-third of suspected autoimmune encephalitis (AE) patients, antibody-negative cases without typical AE features are understudied. We aim to characterize the clinical phenotypes and long-term outcomes of "possible only" and "probable" AE cases.
We conducted a retrospective analysis of adult patients evaluated at Mayo Clinic's Autoimmune Neurology Clinic (01/01/2006-12/31/2020), meeting diagnostic criteria for "possible only" or "probable but antibody-negative" AE, with ≥ 1 year of follow-up. All patients underwent neural antibody testing.
Among fifty-one patients, six had a change in diagnosis (non-autoimmune, 2) and were excluded from further analysis. Forty-five patients were analyzed [median age, 61 years (range 20-88); female, 21 (47%); median follow-up, 36 months (range 12-174)]. A nadir modified Rankin Scale (mRS) ≥ 3 was recorded in 41/45 (91%). CSF was inflammatory in 20/44 (45%) and MRI had encephalitic changes in 21/45 (47%). Unclassified neural-specific IgG staining on tissue-based assay was detected in five (11%). Two patients (4%) had paraneoplastic causation. Relapses (> 3 months from onset) were noted in 14 (31%). Memory dysfunction (69%), attention deficits (38%), and gait instability (29%) were the most frequent at the last follow-up. Most patients (76%) were independent at the last follow-up and only two required an assistive device to ambulate; 11 patients (24%) had poor neurological outcome (mRS ≥ 3). Higher mRS score and gait assistance requirement at 3 months were predictive of poor outcome (P ≤ 0.01).
Despite significant disability at initial disease stages, most antibody-negative AE patients regain independent functioning. Early functional status and gait assistance requirements may predict long-term prognosis.
尽管抗体阴性且不具有典型自身免疫性脑炎(AE)特征的病例占疑似 AE 患者的三分之一,但针对此类病例的研究仍较少。我们旨在描述“极可能”和“很可能”AE 病例的临床表型和长期结局。
我们对 2006 年 1 月 1 日至 2020 年 12 月 31 日在 Mayo 诊所自身免疫神经病学诊所就诊、符合“极可能”或“很可能但抗体阴性”AE 诊断标准且随访时间≥1 年的成年患者进行了回顾性分析。所有患者均接受了神经抗体检测。
51 例患者中,6 例患者(非自身免疫性疾病,2 例)诊断发生改变,被排除在进一步分析之外。对 45 例患者进行了分析[中位年龄 61 岁(范围 20-88 岁);女性 21 例(47%);中位随访时间 36 个月(范围 12-174 个月)]。45 例患者中,41 例(91%)记录到最低改良 Rankin 量表(mRS)评分≥3 分。20 例(45%)脑脊液呈炎症性,21 例(47%)MRI 显示脑炎样改变。组织基检测到未分类的神经特异性 IgG 染色 5 例(11%)。2 例(4%)患者为副肿瘤性病因。14 例(31%)出现复发(起病后>3 个月)。末次随访时,记忆力障碍(69%)、注意力缺陷(38%)和步态不稳(29%)最常见。末次随访时,大多数患者(76%)能够独立生活,仅 2 例需要辅助设备行走;11 例(24%)预后不良(mRS≥3 分)。3 个月时 mRS 评分较高和需要步态辅助与预后不良相关(P≤0.01)。
尽管在疾病初始阶段存在显著残疾,但大多数抗体阴性 AE 患者可恢复独立功能。早期的功能状态和步态辅助需求可能预测长期预后。