Objective: To report the clinical features and long-term outcome of 22 newly diagnosed paraneoplastic patients with GABA B receptor antibodies (GABA B R-Abs). Methods: Retrospective clinical study of CSF-confirmed cases of GABA B R-Abs encephalitis. Results: We identified 22 patients (4 female) with GABA B R-Abs, with a median age of 64 years (range 55–85). All were paraneoplastic: 20 small-cell lung cancer, one malignant thymoma, and one uncharacterized lung mass. The most frequent first symptom was the isolated recurrent seizures without cognitive inter-ictal impairment in 17 patients (77%). In the other, three presented the first behavioral disorders and two presented de novo status epilepticus (SE). After a median delay of 10 days (range 1–30), the recurrent seizures’ phase was followed by an encephalitic phase characterized by confusion in 100% of cases and SE in 81% (n = 17), with 53% (n = 9) non-convulsive SE. Dysautonomic episodes were frequent (36%, n = 8, bradycardia and central apnea) and killed three patients. CSF study was abnormal in 95% of the cases (n = 21). At the encephalitic phase, MRI showed a temporal FLAIR hypersignal in 73% (n = 16) of the cases. First-line immunotherapy was initiated after a median delay of 26 days (range 6–65) from disease onset, and a partial response was observed in 10 out of 20 patients (50%). There was no complete response. Two years after onset, a massive anterograde amnesia affected all still alive patients. Nine patients died from cancer progression (median survival: 1.2 years). Conclusion: Paraneoplastic GABA B R-Abs encephalitis is characterized by a stereotype presentation with an epilepsy phase before an encephalitic phase with dysautonomia. The functional prognosis is poor.

Isolated seizures are a common early feature of paraneoplastic anti-GABA B receptor encephalitis / Maureille, A.; Fenouil, T.; Joubert, B.; Picard, G.; Rogemond, V.; Pinto, A. -L.; Thomas, L.; Ducray, F.; Quadrio, I.; Psimaras, D.; Berzero, G.; Antoine, J. -C.; Desestret, V.; Honnorat, J.. - In: JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY. - ISSN 0340-5354. - 266:1(2019), pp. 195-206. [10.1007/s00415-018-9132-0]

Isolated seizures are a common early feature of paraneoplastic anti-GABA B receptor encephalitis

Berzero G.;
2019-01-01

Abstract

Objective: To report the clinical features and long-term outcome of 22 newly diagnosed paraneoplastic patients with GABA B receptor antibodies (GABA B R-Abs). Methods: Retrospective clinical study of CSF-confirmed cases of GABA B R-Abs encephalitis. Results: We identified 22 patients (4 female) with GABA B R-Abs, with a median age of 64 years (range 55–85). All were paraneoplastic: 20 small-cell lung cancer, one malignant thymoma, and one uncharacterized lung mass. The most frequent first symptom was the isolated recurrent seizures without cognitive inter-ictal impairment in 17 patients (77%). In the other, three presented the first behavioral disorders and two presented de novo status epilepticus (SE). After a median delay of 10 days (range 1–30), the recurrent seizures’ phase was followed by an encephalitic phase characterized by confusion in 100% of cases and SE in 81% (n = 17), with 53% (n = 9) non-convulsive SE. Dysautonomic episodes were frequent (36%, n = 8, bradycardia and central apnea) and killed three patients. CSF study was abnormal in 95% of the cases (n = 21). At the encephalitic phase, MRI showed a temporal FLAIR hypersignal in 73% (n = 16) of the cases. First-line immunotherapy was initiated after a median delay of 26 days (range 6–65) from disease onset, and a partial response was observed in 10 out of 20 patients (50%). There was no complete response. Two years after onset, a massive anterograde amnesia affected all still alive patients. Nine patients died from cancer progression (median survival: 1.2 years). Conclusion: Paraneoplastic GABA B R-Abs encephalitis is characterized by a stereotype presentation with an epilepsy phase before an encephalitic phase with dysautonomia. The functional prognosis is poor.
2019
Epilepsy
GABAB receptor autoantibodies
Paraneoplatic neurological syndromes
Small cell lung cancer
Status epilepticus
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11768/123438
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