Querol Luis, Dalakas Marinos C
Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau, Barcelona, Spain.
Centro para la Investigación Biomédica en Red en Enfermedades Raras (CIBERER), Madrid, Spain.
Neurol Neuroimmunol Neuroinflamm. 2025 Jan;12(1):e200365. doi: 10.1212/NXI.0000000000200365. Epub 2024 Dec 13.
In the past decade, significant progress has been made on the understanding of IgG4-mediated autoimmune diseases, of both the central and the peripheral CNS. In addition to the description of diverse antigenic targets, the description of IgG subclasses associated with specific pathogenic autoantibodies has provided useful insights into the pathophysiology and, more importantly, into the therapeutic implications of the autoantibody subclasses. This understanding has affected how myasthenia gravis, autoimmune encephalitis, and autoimmune neuropathies are treated. In the case of autoimmune neuropathies, the discovery of antigenic targets located at the node of Ranvier has led to the definition of a new diagnostic category, the autoimmune nodopathies, which differentiate them from the classical forms of Guillain-Barré syndrome and chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy. These neuropathies including those caused by autoantibodies targeting contactin-1, contactin-associated protein 1, and neurofascin are mainly, though not always exclusively, mediated by IgG4 antibodies, and respond to therapies similarly to other IgG4-mediated neurologic and non-neurologic diseases, providing evidence that not only the antigenic target but also the autoantibody subclass play a role in understanding both the disease pathophysiology and response to therapies. In this article, we describe the history and main findings on autoimmune nodopathies; highlight the particularities and similarities of IgG4-mediated neurologic diseases, including autoimmune nodopathies and neuromuscular junction and certain CNS disorders; elaborate on the unique functional properties of IgG4 in influencing their specific response to immunotherapies stressing the rationale of the most suitable present and future targeted therapies; and discuss how best to apply and monitor maintenance therapies for inducing disease stability in all IgG4 neurologic autoimmunities including the need for potential future biomarkers.
在过去十年中,人们对IgG4介导的中枢神经系统和外周神经系统自身免疫性疾病的认识取得了重大进展。除了对多种抗原靶点的描述外,与特定致病性自身抗体相关的IgG亚类的描述为病理生理学,更重要的是为自身抗体亚类的治疗意义提供了有用的见解。这种认识影响了重症肌无力、自身免疫性脑炎和自身免疫性神经病的治疗方式。在自身免疫性神经病方面,对位于郎飞结处的抗原靶点的发现导致了一种新的诊断类别——自身免疫性结节病的定义,这使其与吉兰-巴雷综合征和慢性炎症性脱髓鞘性多发性神经根神经病的经典形式区分开来。这些神经病,包括由靶向接触蛋白-1、接触蛋白相关蛋白1和神经束蛋白的自身抗体引起的神经病,主要(但并非总是唯一)由IgG4抗体介导,并且对治疗的反应与其他IgG4介导的神经和非神经疾病相似,这表明不仅抗原靶点,而且自身抗体亚类在理解疾病病理生理学和治疗反应中都发挥着作用。在本文中,我们描述了自身免疫性结节病的历史和主要发现;强调了IgG4介导的神经疾病的特殊性和相似性,包括自身免疫性结节病、神经肌肉接头疾病和某些中枢神经系统疾病;详细阐述了IgG4在影响其对免疫治疗的特异性反应方面的独特功能特性,强调了最合适的当前和未来靶向治疗的原理;并讨论了如何最好地应用和监测维持治疗以在所有IgG4神经自身免疫性疾病中诱导疾病稳定,包括对潜在未来生物标志物的需求。