25 results on '"Caballero-Ávila M"'
Search Results
2. 20424. AUSENCIA DE MUTACIONES PATOGÉNICAS Y FUERTE ASOCIACIÓN CON HLA-DRB1*11:01 EN PACIENTES JÓVENES NO EXPUESTOS A ESTATINAS CON MIOPATÍA NECROTIZANTE ANTI-HMGCR
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Llansó Caldentey, L., Segarra Casas, A., Domínguez González, C., Malfatti, E., Kapetanovic, S., Rodríguez Santiago, B., de la Calle, O., Blanco, R., Dobrescu, A., Nascimento, A., Paipa, A., Hernández Laín, A., Jou, C., Mariscal, A., González Mera, L., Arteche, A., Lleixà, C., Caballero Ávila, M., Carbayo, Á., Vesperinas, A., Querol, L., Gallardo, E., and Olivé, M.
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- 2024
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3. 20857. ANÁLISIS DEL PROCESO DIAGNÓSTICO EN UNA CONSULTA ESPECIALIZADA DE MIASTENIA GRAVIS A LO LARGO DE NUEVE AÑOS
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Vesperinas Castro, A., Caballero Ávila, M., Carbayo Viejo, Á., Llansó Caldentey, L., Collet Vidiella, R., Turon Sans, J., Querol Gutiérrez, L., Rojas García, R., and Cortés Vicente, E.
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- 2024
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4. 20413. ANÁLISIS LONGITUDINAL DE LA MARCHA MEDIANTE SENSORES BIOMECÁNICOS PORTÁTILES PARA DETECTAR CAMBIOS CLÍNICAMENTE SIGNIFICATIVOS EN PACIENTES CON NEUROPATÍAS PERIFÉRICAS
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Tejada Illa, C., Pegueroles, J., Claramunt Molet, M., Pi Cervera, A., Heras Delgado, A., Gascón Fontal, J., Idelsohn Zielonka, S., Vidal, N., Martín Aguilar, L., Caballero Ávila, M., Lleixà, C., Collet Vidiella, R., Llansó, L., Rojas García, R., Querol, L., and Pascual Goñi, E.
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- 2024
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5. 20965. PROTEOMA SÉRICO EN EL SÍNDROME DE GUILLAINBARRÉ UTILIZANDO UNA PLATAFORMA BASADA EN APTÁMEROS
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Collet Vidiella, R., Martín Aguilar, L., Lleixà Rodríguez, C., Caballero Ávila, M., Tejada Illa, C., Pascual Goñi, E., Llarch Cegarra, P., Llucià Carol, L., Vesperinas Castro, A., Carbayo Viejo, A., Gallardo Vigo, E., Llansó Caldentey, L., Sedano Tous, M., Casasnovas, C., Gutiérrez Gutiérrez, G., Pardo Fernández, J., Fernández Cadenas, I., and Querol Gutiérrez, L.
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- 2024
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6. 20274. NODOPATÍA AUTOINMUNE ANTI-CONTACTIN-1: CARACTERÍSTICAS CLÍNICAS, BIOMARCADORES Y SEGUIMIENTO A LARGO PLAZO
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Caballero Ávila, M., Martín Aguilar, L., Pascual Goñi, E., Michael, M., Koel-Simmelink, M., Höftberger, R., Wanschitz, J., Alonso Jiménez, A., Armangué, T., Baars, A., Carbayo, Á., Castek, B., Collet Vidiella, R., de Winter, J., del Real, M., Delmont, E., Diamanti, L., Doneddu, P., Hiew, F., Gallardo, E., González, A., Grinzinger, S., Horga, A., Iglseder, S., Jacobs, B., Jauregui, A., Killestein, J., Lindeck Pozza, E., Martínez Martínez, L., Nobile-Orazio, E., Ortiz, N., Pérez Pérez, H., Poppert, K., Ripellino, P., Roche, J., Rodríguez de Rivera, F., Rostasy, K., Sparasci, D., Tejada Illa, C., Teunissen, C., Vegezzi, E., Xuclà Ferrarons, T., Zach, F., Wieske, L., Eftimov, F., Lleixà, C., and Querol, L.
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- 2024
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7. Genotype-phenotype correlations in valosin-containing protein disease: a retrospective muticentre study
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Schiava, M. Ikenaga, C. Villar-Quiles, R.N. Caballero-Ávila, M. Topf, A. Nishino, I. Kimonis, V. Udd, B. Schoser, B. Zanoteli, E. Sgobbi Souza, P.V. Tasca, G. Lloyd, T. Lopez-De Munain, A. Paradas, C. Pegoraro, E. Nadaj-Pakleza, A. De Bleecker, J. Badrising, U. Alonso-Jiménez, A. Kostera-Pruszczyk, A. Miralles, F. Shin, J.-H. Bevilacqua, J.A. Olivé, M. Vorgerd, M. Kley, R. Brady, S. Williams, T. Domínguez-González, C. Papadimas, G.K. Warman-Chardon, J. Claeys, K.G. de Visser, M. Muelas, N. LaForet, P. Malfatti, E. Alfano, L.N. Nair, S.S. Manousakis, G. Kushlaf, H.A. Harms, M.B. Nance, C. Ramos-Fransi, A. Rodolico, C. Hewamadduma, C. Cetin, H. García-García, J. Pál, E. Farrugia, M.E. Lamont, P.J. Quinn, C. Nedkova-Hristova, V. Peric, S. Luo, S. Oldfors, A. Taylor, K. Ralston, S. Stojkovic, T. Weihl, C. Diaz-Manera, J. Martinez-Piñeiro, A. Töpf, A. Kaminska, A. Mayhew, A. Rydelius, A. Behin, A. Toscano, A. Laín, A.H. Lannes, B. Velez, B. Kierdaszuk, B. De Paepe, B. Eymard, B. Cazcarra, C.M. Paradasa, C. Hedberg-Oldfors, C. Longman, C. Bettollo, C.M. Papadopoulos, C. Metay, C. Hilton-Jones, D. Zanotelli, E. Harrington, E.A. Eline, E. Gelpi, E. Rivas, E. Miralles, F. Sorarù, G. Bisogni, G. Lucente, G. Bassez, G. François, J. Chanson, J.-B. Lin, J. Skeoch, J. Palmio, J. Baets, J. Pérez, J.A. Díaz, J. Vilchez, J.J. Hudson, J. Hadzsiev, K. Bello, L. Campero, M. Sabatelli, M. Masingue, M. Monforte, M. James, M. Guglieri, M. Inoue, M. Povedano, M. Hofer, M. Olivé, M. Garcia-Angarita, N. Earle, N. Sarró, N.V. Lafôret, P. Rihard, P. de Jonghe, P. Riguzzi, P. Camaño, P. Rubio, R.D. Carlier, R. Muni-Lofra, R. Fernández-Torrón, R. Alvarez, R. Krause, S. Leonard-Louis, S. Souvannanorath, S. Klotz, S. Thiele, S. Xirou, S. Evangelista, T. Grider, T. Rakocevic-Stojanovic, V. Straub, V. Zhu, W. de Ridder, W. Kelly, W. Saito, Y. Park, Y.-E. Nishimori, Y. Sahenk, Z. VCP International Study Group and Schiava, M. Ikenaga, C. Villar-Quiles, R.N. Caballero-Ávila, M. Topf, A. Nishino, I. Kimonis, V. Udd, B. Schoser, B. Zanoteli, E. Sgobbi Souza, P.V. Tasca, G. Lloyd, T. Lopez-De Munain, A. Paradas, C. Pegoraro, E. Nadaj-Pakleza, A. De Bleecker, J. Badrising, U. Alonso-Jiménez, A. Kostera-Pruszczyk, A. Miralles, F. Shin, J.-H. Bevilacqua, J.A. Olivé, M. Vorgerd, M. Kley, R. Brady, S. Williams, T. Domínguez-González, C. Papadimas, G.K. Warman-Chardon, J. Claeys, K.G. de Visser, M. Muelas, N. LaForet, P. Malfatti, E. Alfano, L.N. Nair, S.S. Manousakis, G. Kushlaf, H.A. Harms, M.B. Nance, C. Ramos-Fransi, A. Rodolico, C. Hewamadduma, C. Cetin, H. García-García, J. Pál, E. Farrugia, M.E. Lamont, P.J. Quinn, C. Nedkova-Hristova, V. Peric, S. Luo, S. Oldfors, A. Taylor, K. Ralston, S. Stojkovic, T. Weihl, C. Diaz-Manera, J. Martinez-Piñeiro, A. Töpf, A. Kaminska, A. Mayhew, A. Rydelius, A. Behin, A. Toscano, A. Laín, A.H. Lannes, B. Velez, B. Kierdaszuk, B. De Paepe, B. Eymard, B. Cazcarra, C.M. Paradasa, C. Hedberg-Oldfors, C. Longman, C. Bettollo, C.M. Papadopoulos, C. Metay, C. Hilton-Jones, D. Zanotelli, E. Harrington, E.A. Eline, E. Gelpi, E. Rivas, E. Miralles, F. Sorarù, G. Bisogni, G. Lucente, G. Bassez, G. François, J. Chanson, J.-B. Lin, J. Skeoch, J. Palmio, J. Baets, J. Pérez, J.A. Díaz, J. Vilchez, J.J. Hudson, J. Hadzsiev, K. Bello, L. Campero, M. Sabatelli, M. Masingue, M. Monforte, M. James, M. Guglieri, M. Inoue, M. Povedano, M. Hofer, M. Olivé, M. Garcia-Angarita, N. Earle, N. Sarró, N.V. Lafôret, P. Rihard, P. de Jonghe, P. Riguzzi, P. Camaño, P. Rubio, R.D. Carlier, R. Muni-Lofra, R. Fernández-Torrón, R. Alvarez, R. Krause, S. Leonard-Louis, S. Souvannanorath, S. Klotz, S. Thiele, S. Xirou, S. Evangelista, T. Grider, T. Rakocevic-Stojanovic, V. Straub, V. Zhu, W. de Ridder, W. Kelly, W. Saito, Y. Park, Y.-E. Nishimori, Y. Sahenk, Z. VCP International Study Group
- Abstract
Background Valosin-containing protein (VCP) disease, caused by mutations in the VCP gene, results in myopathy, Paget's disease of bone (PBD) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Natural history and genotype-phenotype correlation data are limited. This study characterises patients with mutations in VCP gene and investigates genotype-phenotype correlations. Methods Descriptive retrospective international study collecting clinical and genetic data of patients with mutations in the VCP gene. Results Two hundred and fifty-five patients (70.0% males) were included in the study. Mean age was 56.8±9.6 years and mean age of onset 45.6±9.3 years. Mean diagnostic delay was 7.7±6 years. Symmetric lower limb weakness was reported in 50% at onset progressing to generalised muscle weakness. Other common symptoms were ventilatory insufficiency 40.3%, PDB 28.2%, dysautonomia 21.4% and FTD 14.3%. Fifty-seven genetic variants were identified, 18 of these no previously reported. c.464G>A (p.Arg155His) was the most frequent variant, identified in the 28%. Full time wheelchair users accounted for 19.1% with a median time from disease onset to been wheelchair user of 8.5 years. Variant c.463C>T (p.Arg155Cys) showed an earlier onset (37.8±7.6 year) and a higher frequency of axial and upper limb weakness, scapular winging and cognitive impairment. Forced vital capacity (FVC) below 50% was as risk factor for being full-time wheelchair user, while FVC <70% and being a full-time wheelchair user were associated with death. Conclusion This study expands the knowledge on the phenotypic presentation, natural history, genotype-phenotype correlations and risk factors for disease progression of VCP disease and is useful to improve the care provided to patient with this complex disease. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.
- Published
- 2022
8. HIGH PREVALENCE OF PARASPINAL MUSCLE INVOLVEMENT IN ADULTS WITH McARDLE DISEASE
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Álvarez‐Velasco, R., primary, Nuñez‐Peralta, C. A., additional, Alonso‐Pérez, J., additional, Gallardo, E., additional, Collet‐Vidiella, R., additional, Reyes‐Leiva, D., additional, Pascual‐Goñi, E., additional, Martín‐Aguilar, L., additional, Caballero‐Ávila, M., additional, Carbayo‐Viejo, A., additional, Llauger‐Roselló, J., additional, Díaz‐Manera, J., additional, and Olivé, M., additional
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- 2022
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9. Long-Term Follow Up in Anti-Contactin-1 Autoimmune Nodopathy.
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Caballero-Ávila M, Martín-Aguilar L, Pascual-Goñi E, Michael MR, Koel-Simmelink MJA, Höftberger R, Wanschitz J, Alonso-Jiménez A, Armangué T, Baars AE, Carbayo Á, Castek B, Collet-Vidiella R, De Winter J, Del Real MÁ, Delmont E, Diamanti L, Doneddu PE, Hiew FL, Gallardo E, Gonzalez A, Grinzinger S, Horga A, Iglseder S, Jacobs BC, Jauregui A, Killestein J, Pozza EL, Martínez-Martínez L, Nobile-Orazio E, Ortiz N, Pérez-Pérez H, Poppert KN, Ripellino P, Roche JC, Rodriguez de Rivera FJ, Rostasy K, Sparasci D, Tejada-Illa C, Teunissen CCE, Vegezzi E, Xuclà-Ferrarons T, Zach F, Wieske L, Eftimov F, Lleixà C, and Querol L
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- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Follow-Up Studies, Middle Aged, Adolescent, Young Adult, Retrospective Studies, Child, Rituximab therapeutic use, Neurofilament Proteins blood, Autoimmune Diseases of the Nervous System immunology, Autoimmune Diseases of the Nervous System blood, Autoimmune Diseases of the Nervous System drug therapy, Immunoglobulins, Intravenous therapeutic use, Biomarkers blood, Autoantibodies blood, Contactin 1 immunology
- Abstract
Objective: To analyze long-term clinical and biomarker features of anti-contactin-1 (CNTN1) autoimmune nodopathy (AN)., Methods: Patients with anti-CNTN1
+ autoimmune nodopathy detected in our laboratory from which clinical information was available were included. Clinical features and treatment response were retrospectively collected. Autoantibody, serum neurofilament light chain (sNfL), and serum CNTN1 levels (sCNTN1) were analyzed at baseline and follow up., Results: A total of 31 patients were included. Patients presented with progressive sensory motor neuropathy (76.7%) with proximal (74.2%) and distal involvement (87.1%), ataxia (71.4%), and severe disability (median INCAT at nadir of 8). A total of 11 patients (35%) showed kidney involvement. Most patients (97%) received intravenous immunoglobulin, but only 1 achieved remission with intravenous immunoglobulin. A total of 22 patients (71%) received corticosteroids, and 3 of them (14%) did not need further treatments. Rituximab was effective in 21 of 22 patients (95.5%), with most of them (72%) receiving a single course. Four patients (12.9%) relapsed after a median follow up of 25 months after effective treatment (12-48 months). Anti-CNTN1 titers correlated with clinical scales at sampling and were negative after treatment in all patients, but 1 (20/21). sNfL levels were significantly higher and sCNTN1 significantly lower in anti-CNTN1+ patients than in healthy controls (sNfL: 135.9 pg/ml vs 7.48 pg/ml, sCNTN1: 25.03 pg/ml vs 22,186 pg/ml, p < 0.0001). Both sNfL and sCNTN1 returned to normal levels after successful treatment., Interpretation: Patients with anti-CNTN1+ autoimmune nodopathy have a characteristic clinical profile. Clinical and immunological relapses are infrequent after successful treatment, suggesting that continuous treatment is unnecessary. Anti-CNTN1 antibodies, sNfL, and sCNTN1 levels are useful to monitor disease status in these patients. ANN NEUROL 2025;97:529-541., (© 2024 American Neurological Association.)- Published
- 2025
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10. A Homozygous ATP2A2 Variant Alters Sarcoendoplasmic Reticulum Ca 2+ -ATPase 2 Function in Skeletal Muscle and Causes a Novel Vacuolar Myopathy.
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Llansó L, Ravenscroft G, Aceituno C, Gutiérrez A, Parmar J, Gallano P, Caballero-Ávila M, Carbayo Á, Vesperinas A, Collet R, Blanco R, Laing N, Hove-Madsen L, Gallardo E, and Olivé M
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- Humans, Female, Adult, Homozygote, Middle Aged, Lysosomal Storage Diseases genetics, Lysosomal Storage Diseases pathology, Pedigree, Male, Mutation, Missense, Sarcoplasmic Reticulum Calcium-Transporting ATPases genetics, Sarcoplasmic Reticulum Calcium-Transporting ATPases metabolism, Muscle, Skeletal pathology, Muscle, Skeletal metabolism, Muscular Diseases genetics, Muscular Diseases pathology, Muscular Diseases metabolism
- Abstract
Aims: Sarcoendoplasmic reticulum Ca
2+ -ATPase 2 (SERCA2), encoded by ATP2A2, is a key protein involved in intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis. The SERCA2a isoform is predominantly expressed in cardiomyocytes and type I myofibres. Variants in this gene are related to Darier disease, an autosomal dominant dermatologic disorder, but have never been linked to myopathy. We describe four patients suffering from a novel myopathy caused by a homozygous missense variant in ATP2A2., Methods: We studied a family with four individuals suffering from an adult-onset skeletal myopathy. We evaluated the clinicopathological phenotype, muscle imaging, and genetic workup including whole genome sequencing and segregation analysis. SERCA2 expression in skeletal muscle was assessed. Functional studies to evaluate Ca2+ handling in patient myotubes in response to electrical stimulation or caffeine exposure were performed., Results: Four sisters developed slowly progressive proximal weakness in adulthood. Biopsy findings showed small vacuoles restricted to type I myofibres. Ultrastructural analysis showed sarcotubular dilation and autophagic vacuoles. Genome sequencing revealed a homozygous variant in ATP2A2 (c.1117G > A, p.(Glu373Lys)) which segregated with the disease. Immunohistochemistry suggested that there was SERCA2 mislocalisation in patient myofibres. Western blotting did not show changes in the amount of protein. In vitro functional studies revealed delayed sarcoendoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ reuptake in patient myotubes, consistent with an altered pumping capacity of SERCA2 after cell stimulation., Conclusions: We report a novel adult-onset vacuolar myopathy caused by a homozygous variant in ATP2A2. Biopsy findings and functional studies demonstrating an impaired function of SERCA2 and consequent Ca2+ dysregulation in slow-twitch skeletal myofibres highly support the pathogenicity of the variant., (© 2025 British Neuropathological Society.)- Published
- 2025
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11. Identification of a pathogenic mutation in ARPP21 in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
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Dols-Icardo O, Carbayo Á, Jericó I, Blasco-Martínez O, Álvarez-Sánchez E, López Pérez MA, Bernal S, Rodríguez-Santiago B, Cusco I, Turon-Sans J, Cabezas-Torres M, Caballero-Ávila M, Vesperinas A, Llansó L, Pagola-Lorz I, Torné L, Valle-Tamayo N, Muñoz L, Rubio-Guerra S, Illán-Gala I, Cortés-Vicente E, Gelpi E, and Rojas-García R
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Spain, Aged, Adult, RNA-Binding Proteins genetics, Phosphoproteins genetics, Pedigree, Whole Genome Sequencing, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis genetics, Mutation, Missense
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Background and Objective: Between 5% and 10% of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) cases have a family history of the disease, 30% of which do not have an identifiable underlying genetic cause after a comprehensive study of the known ALS-related genes. Based on a significantly increased incidence of ALS in a small geographical region from Spain, the aim of this work was to identify novel ALS-related genes in ALS cases with negative genetic testing., Methods: We detected an increased incidence of both sporadic and, especially, familial ALS cases in a small region from Spain compared with available demographic and epidemiological data. We performed whole genome sequencing in a group of 12 patients with ALS (5 of them familial) from this unique area. We expanded the study to include affected family members and additional cases from a wider surrounding region., Results: We identified a shared missense mutation (c.1586C>T; p.Pro529Leu) in the cyclic AMP regulated phosphoprotein 21 ( ARPP21) gene that encodes an RNA-binding protein, in a total of 10 patients with ALS from 7 unrelated families. No mutations were found in other ALS-causing genes., Conclusions: While previous studies have dismissed a causal role of ARPP21 in ALS, our results strongly support ARPP21 as a novel ALS-causing gene., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2025. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ Group.)
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- 2025
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12. A nationwide Guillain-Barré syndrome epidemiological study in Spain during the COVID-19 years.
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Blanco-Ruiz M, Martín-Aguilar L, Caballero-Ávila M, Lleixà C, Pascual-Goñi E, Collet-Vidiella R, Tejada-Illa C, Turon-Sans J, Carbayo Á, Llansó L, Cortés E, Amaya Pascasio L, and Querol L
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- Humans, Spain epidemiology, Male, Female, Aged, Incidence, Middle Aged, Adult, Seasons, Aged, 80 and over, Adolescent, Young Adult, Child, Guillain-Barre Syndrome epidemiology, COVID-19 epidemiology
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: The purpose was to perform a nationwide epidemiological study of Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) in Spain, analysing background incidences and seasonal variation and trying to identify incidence changes during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) years., Methods: This was an observational study collecting all GBS diagnoses from the National Epidemiological Surveillance Network collected by the Ministry of Health. Patients discharged with GBS as the main diagnosis and admitted during 2018-2021 were included. Data on the incidence of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infections were obtained from the National Epidemiology Centre., Results: In total, 3147 cases were included, 832 in 2018, 861 in 2019, 670 in 2020 and 784 in 2021. Nationwide hospital incidence was 1.78 in 2018, 1.71 in 2019, 1.41 in 2020 and 1.66 in 2021, with an increased frequency in males, the elderly population and in the winter season. Eleven per cent of GBS patients needed ventilatory support. GBS and SARS-CoV-2 incidences did not correlate with one another (r = -0.29, p = 0.36). GBS incidence decreased during 2020 and during the COVID-19 lockdown period in comparison to the same months of 2018-2019., Conclusions: The incidence of GBS in Spain is similar to that of other countries. Despite prior reports describing a significant increase in COVID-19-associated GBS in Spain, a significant drop of GBS incidence during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic was detected, probably due to prevention measures., (© 2024 The Author(s). European Journal of Neurology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Academy of Neurology.)
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- 2024
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13. Absence of Pathogenic Mutations and Strong Association With HLA-DRB1*11:01 in Statin-Naïve Early-Onset Anti-HMGCR Necrotizing Myopathy.
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Llansó L, Segarra-Casas A, Domínguez-González C, Malfatti E, Kapetanovic S, Rodríguez-Santiago B, de la Calle O, Blanco R, Dobrescu A, Nascimento-Osorio A, Paipa A, Hernandez-Lain A, Jou C, Mariscal A, González-Mera L, Arteche A, Lleixà C, Caballero-Ávila M, Carbayo Á, Vesperinas A, Querol L, Gallardo E, and Olivé M
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- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Young Adult, Child, Adolescent, Child, Preschool, Mutation, Autoantibodies blood, Autoantibodies immunology, Necrosis, Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors adverse effects, Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors pharmacology, Myositis immunology, Myositis genetics, Hydroxymethylglutaryl CoA Reductases genetics, Hydroxymethylglutaryl CoA Reductases immunology, HLA-DRB1 Chains genetics
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Immune-mediated necrotizing myopathy (IMNM) caused by antibodies against 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase (HMGCR) is an inflammatory myopathy that has been epidemiologically correlated with previous statin exposure. We characterized in detail a series of 11 young statin-naïve patients experiencing a chronic disease course mimicking a limb-girdle muscular dystrophy. With the hypothesis that HMGCR upregulation may increase immunogenicity and trigger the production of autoantibodies, our aim was to expand pathophysiologic knowledge of this distinct phenotype., Methods: Clinical and epidemiologic data, autoantibody titers, creatine kinase (CK) levels, response to treatment, muscle imaging, and muscle biopsies were assessed. HMGCR expression in patients' muscle was assessed by incubating sections of affected patients with purified anti-HMGCR+ serum. Whole-exome sequencing (WES) with a special focus on cholesterol biosynthesis-related genes and high-resolution human leukocyte antigen (HLA) typing were performed., Results: Patients, aged 3-25 years and mostly female (90.9%), presented with subacute proximal weakness progressing over many years and high CK levels (>1,000 U/L). Diagnostic delay ranged from 3 to 27 years. WES did not reveal any pathogenic variants. HLA-DRB1*11:01 carrier frequency was 60%, a significantly higher proportion than in the control population. No upregulation or mislocalization of the enzyme in statin-exposed or statin-naïve anti-HMGCR+ patients was observed, compared with controls., Discussion: WES of a cohort of patients with dystrophy-like anti-HMGCR IMNM did not reveal any common rare variants of any gene, including cholesterol biosynthesis-related genes. HLA analysis showed a strong association with HLA-DRB1*11:01, previously mostly described in statin-exposed adult patients; consequently, a common immunogenic predisposition should be suspected, irrespective of statin exposure. Moreover, we were unable to conclusively demonstrate muscle upregulation/mislocalization of HMGCR in IMNM, whether or not driven by statins.
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- 2024
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14. Antibodies in Autoimmune Neuropathies: What to Test, How to Test, Why to Test.
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Pascual-Goñi E, Caballero-Ávila M, and Querol L
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- Humans, Autoimmune Diseases of the Nervous System immunology, Autoimmune Diseases of the Nervous System diagnosis, Autoantibodies blood, Autoantibodies immunology, Polyradiculoneuropathy, Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating immunology, Polyradiculoneuropathy, Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating diagnosis, Guillain-Barre Syndrome immunology, Guillain-Barre Syndrome diagnosis, Guillain-Barre Syndrome blood
- Abstract
Autoimmune neuropathies are a heterogeneous group of immune-mediated disorders of the peripheral nerves. Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) and chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (CIDP) are the archetypal acute and chronic forms. Over the past few decades, pathogenic antibodies targeting antigens of the peripheral nervous system and driving peripheral nerve damage in selected patients have been described. Moreover, the detection of these antibodies has diagnostic and therapeutic implications that have prompted a modification of the GBS and CIDP diagnostic algorithms. GBS diagnosis is based in clinical criteria, and systematic testing of anti-ganglioside antibodies is not required. Nonetheless, a positive anti-ganglioside antibody test may support the clinical suspicion when diagnosis of GBS (GM1 IgG), Miller Fisher (GQ1b IgG), or acute sensory-ataxic (GD1b IgG) syndromes is uncertain. Anti-myelin-associated glycoprotein (MAG) IgM and anti-disialosyl IgM antibodies are key in the diagnosis of anti-MAG neuropathy and chronic ataxic neuropathy, ophthalmoplegia, M-protein, cold agglutinins, and disialosyl antibodies spectrum neuropathies, respectively, and help differentiating these conditions from CIDP. Recently, the field has been boosted by the discovery of pathogenic antibodies targeting proteins of the node of Ranvier contactin-1, contactin-associated protein 1, and nodal and paranodal isoforms of neurofascin (NF140, NF186, or NF155). These antibodies define subgroups of patients with specific clinical (most importantly poor or partial response to conventional therapies and excellent response to anti-CD20 therapy) and pathologic (node of Ranvier disruption in the absence of inflammation) features that led to the definition of the "autoimmune nodopathy" diagnostic category and to the incorporation of nodal/paranodal antibodies to clinical routine testing. The purpose of this review was to provide a practical vision for the general neurologist of the use of antibodies in the clinical assessment of autoimmune neuropathies.
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- 2024
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15. Clinicopathological correlates in the frontotemporal lobar degeneration-motor neuron disease spectrum.
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Carbayo Á, Borrego-Écija S, Turon-Sans J, Cortés-Vicente E, Molina-Porcel L, Gascón-Bayarri J, Rubio MÁ, Povedano M, Gámez J, Sotoca J, Juntas-Morales R, Almendrote M, Marquié M, Sánchez-Valle R, Illán-Gala I, Dols-Icardo O, Rubio-Guerra S, Bernal S, Caballero-Ávila M, Vesperinas A, Gelpi E, and Rojas-García R
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- Humans, Male, Female, Aged, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis pathology, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis genetics, Frontotemporal Dementia pathology, Frontotemporal Dementia genetics, Brain pathology, DNA-Binding Proteins genetics, DNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration pathology, Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration genetics, Motor Neuron Disease pathology, Motor Neuron Disease genetics
- Abstract
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a devastating motor neuron disease (MND) that shares a common clinical, genetic and pathologic spectrum with frontotemporal dementia (FTD). It is highly heterogeneous in its presentation and features. Up to 50% of patients with MND develop cognitive-behavioural symptoms during the course of the disease, meeting criteria for FTD in 10%-15% of cases. In the absence of a precise biomarker, neuropathology is still a valuable tool to understand disease nosology, reach a definite diagnostic confirmation and help define specific subgroups of patients with common phenotypic, genetic and biomarker profiles. However, few neuropathological series have been published, and the frequency of frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) in MND is difficult to estimate. In this work we describe a large clinicopathological series of MND patients, analysing the frequency of concurrent FTLD changes and trying to define specific subgroups of patients based on their clinical, genetic and pathological characteristics. We performed an observational, retrospective, multicentre case study. We included all cases meeting neuropathological criteria for MND from the Neurological Tissue Bank of the FRCB-IDIBAPS-Hospital Clínic Barcelona Biobank between 1994 and 2022, regardless of their last clinical diagnosis. While brain donation is encouraged in all patients, it is performed in very few, and representativeness of the cohort might not be precise for all patients with MND. We retrospectively reviewed clinical and neuropathological data and describe the main clinical, genetic and pathogenic features, comparing neuropathologic groups between MND with and without FTLD changes and aiming to define specific subgroups. We included brain samples from 124 patients, 44 of whom (35.5%) had FTLD neuropathologic features (i.e. FTLD-MND). Pathologic TDP-43 aggregates were present in 93.6% of the cohort and were more extensive (higher Brettschneider stage) in those with concurrent FTLD (P < 0.001). Motor symptom onset was more frequent in the bulbar region in FTLD-MND cases than in those with isolated MND (P = 0.023), with no differences in survival. We observed a better clinicopathological correlation in the MND group than in the FTLD-MND group (93.8% versus 61.4%; P < 0.001). Pathogenic genetic variants were more common in the FTLD-MND group, especially C9orf72. We describe a frequency of FTLD of 35.5% in our series of neuropathologically confirmed cases of MND. The FTLD-MND spectrum is highly heterogeneous in all aspects, especially in patients with FTLD, in whom it is particularly difficult to define specific subgroups. In the absence of definite biomarkers, neuropathology remains a valuable tool for a definite diagnosis, increasing our knowledge in disease nosology., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain.)
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- 2024
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16. Excellent response to anti-CD38 therapy with daratumumab in a patient with severe refractory CANOMAD.
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Pascual-Goñi E, Collet R, Tejada-Illa C, Martín-Aguilar L, Caballero-Ávila M, Lleixà C, Novelli S, López-Pardo J, Sanfeliu AE, Mariscal A, Álvaro Gargallo Y, Martínez-Hernández E, Cocho D, and Querol L
- Subjects
- Humans, Aged, Male, Treatment Outcome, Plasma Exchange, Ophthalmoplegia drug therapy, Antibodies, Monoclonal therapeutic use, ADP-ribosyl Cyclase 1 antagonists & inhibitors
- Abstract
Background: Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) and rituximab are considered the first-line and second-line treatments for Chronic Ataxic Neuropathy and Ophthalmoplegia with IgM-paraprotein, cold Agglutinins, and anti-Disialosyl antibodies (CANOMAD), with an overall clinical response around 50%. New anti-CD38 daratumumab, targeting long-lived plasma cells, has been reported as a promising therapy for treatment-refractory antibody-mediated disorders. We report the first case of a severe refractory CANOMAD, successfully treated with daratumumab., Methods: A patient in their 70s with severe relapsing CANOMAD, refractory to IVIG, steroids, rituximab and ibrutinib developed severe tetraparesis and respiratory failure. Plasma exchange (PE) improved motor and ventilatory function; however, after 6 weeks, patient remained PE dependent. Intravenous daratumumab was initiated at 16 mg/kg weekly for 3 weeks, every 2 weeks for the second and third month, and monthly afterwards., Results: After 3 weeks of starting daratumumab, PE was discontinued and, since then, the patient evolved to complete recovery. Antidisialosyl antibody titres decreased after PE and remained stable during daratumumab. Serum neurofilament light-chain levels were elevated in the exacerbation phase and normalised after daratumumab. The patient remains in clinical remission under monthly daratumumab, 12 months after initiation., Conclusions: The first patient with aggressive treatment-refractory CANOMAD treated with daratumumab provides proof-of-principle evidence that daratumumab may be an effective treatment in IgM-related neuropathies., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2024
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17. Membrane Proteome-Wide Screening of Autoantibodies in CIDP Using Human Cell Microarray Technology.
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Caballero-Ávila M, Lleixà C, Pascual-Goñi E, Martín-Aguilar L, Vidal-Fernandez N, Tejada-Illa C, Collet-Vidiella R, Rojas-Garcia R, Cortés-Vicente E, Turon-Sans J, Gallardo E, Olivé M, Vesperinas A, Carbayo Á, Llansó L, Martinez-Martinez L, Shock A, Christodoulou L, Dizier B, Freeth J, Soden J, Dawson S, and Querol L
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- Humans, Autoantibodies, Proteome, Neurons chemistry, Polyradiculoneuropathy, Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating, Autoimmune Diseases
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Autoantibody discovery in complex autoimmune diseases is challenging. Diverse successful antigen identification strategies are available, but, so far, have often been unsuccessful, especially in the discovery of protein antigens in which conformational and post-translational modification are critical. Our study assesses the utility of a human membrane and secreted protein microarray technology to detect autoantibodies in chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (CIDP)., Methods: A cell microarray consisting of human embryonic kidney-293 cells expressing >5,000 human proteins was used. First, a validation step was performed with 4 serum samples from patients with autoimmune nodopathy (AN) to assess the ability of this technology to detect circulating known autoantibodies. The ability of the cell microarray technology to discover novel IgG autoantibodies was assessed incubating the array with 8 CIDP serum samples. Identified autoantibodies were subsequently validated using cell-based assays (CBAs), ELISA, and/or tissue immunohistochemistry and analyzed in a cohort of CIDP and AN (n = 96) and control (n = 100) samples., Results: Serum anti-contactin-1 and anti-neurofascin-155 were detected by the human cell microarray technology. Nine potentially relevant antigens were found in patients with CIDP without other detectable antibodies; confirmation was possible in six of them: ephrin type-A receptor 7 (EPHA7); potassium-transporting ATPase alpha chain 1 and subunit beta (ATP4A/4B); leukemia-inhibitory factor (LIF); and interferon lambda 1, 2, and 3 (IFNL1, IFNL2, IFNL3). Anti-ATP4A/4B and anti-EPHA7 antibodies were detected in patients and controls and considered unrelated to CIDP. Both anti-LIF and anti-IFNL antibodies were found in the same 2 patients and were not detected in any control. Both patients showed the same staining pattern against myelinating fibers of peripheral nerve tissue and of myelinating neuron-Schwann cell cocultures. Clinically relevant correlations could not be established for anti-LIF and anti-IFNL3 antibodies., Discussion: Our work demonstrates the utility of human cell microarray technology to detect known and discover unknown autoantibodies in human serum samples. Despite potential CIDP-associated autoantibodies (anti-LIF and anti-IFNL3) being identified, their clinical and pathogenic relevance needs to be elucidated in bigger cohorts.
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- 2024
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18. Clinical Classification of Variants in the Valosin-Containing Protein Gene Associated With Multisystem Proteinopathy.
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Schiava M, Ikenaga C, Topf A, Caballero-Ávila M, Chou TF, Li S, Wang F, Daw J, Stojkovic T, Villar-Quiles R, Nishino I, Inoue M, Nishimori Y, Saito Y, Katsuno M, Noda S, Ito C, Otsuka M, Nahir S, Manousakis G, Walk D, Quinn C, Alfano L, Sahenk Z, Tasca G, Monforte M, Sabatelli M, Bisogni G, Oldfors A, Rydeliu A, Pal E, Paradas C, Velez B, De Bleecker JL, Farugia ME, Longman C, Harms MB, Ralston S, Zanoteli E, Macedo Serafim da Silva A, Sotoca J, Juntas-Morales R, Bevilacqua J, Balart M, Talbot S, Straub V, Guglieri M, Marini-Bettolo C, Diaz-Manera J, and Weihl CC
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Pathogenic variants in the valosin-containing protein ( VCP ) gene cause a phenotypically heterogeneous disorder that includes myopathy, motor neuron disease, Paget disease of the bone, frontotemporal dementia, and parkinsonism termed multisystem proteinopathy. This hallmark pleiotropy makes the classification of novel VCP variants challenging. This retrospective study describes and assesses the effect of 19 novel or nonpreviously clinically characterized VCP variants identified in 28 patients (26 unrelated families) in the retrospective VCP International Multicenter Study., Methods: A 6-item clinical score was developed to evaluate the phenotypic level of evidence to support the pathogenicity of the novel variants. Each item is allocated a value, a score ranging from 0.5 to 5.5 points. A receiver-operating characteristic curve was used to identify a cutoff value of 3 to consider a variant as high likelihood disease associated. The scoring system results were confronted with results of in vitro ATPase activity assays and with in silico analysis., Results: All variants were missense, except for one small deletion-insertion, 18 led to amino acid changes within the N and D1 domains, and 13 increased the enzymatic activity. The clinical score coincided with the functional studies in 17 of 19 variants and with the in silico analysis in 12 of 19. For 12 variants, the 3 predictive tools agreed, and for 7 variants, the predictive tools disagreed. The pooled data supported the pathogenicity of 13 of 19 novel VCP variants identified in the study., Discussion: This study provides data to support pathogenicity of 14 of 19 novel VCP variants and provides guidance for clinicians in the evaluation of novel variants in the VCP gene., Competing Interests: The authors report no relevant disclosures. Go to Neurology.org/NG for full disclosure., (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the American Academy of Neurology.)
- Published
- 2023
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19. Antibodies against the flotillin-1/2 complex in patients with multiple sclerosis.
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Lleixà C, Caballero-Ávila M, Pascual-Goñi E, Martín-Aguilar L, Vidal N, Tejada C, Valdés-Hevia E, Zárate E, Vesperinas A, Collet R, Franco-Leyva T, Martínez-Martínez L, Moga E, Cortés-Vicente E, Rojas-García R, Gómez-Anson B, Gil A, González-Mingot C, Brieva L, Martínez-Yélamos S, and Querol L
- Abstract
Multiple sclerosis is a tissue-specific autoimmune disease of the central nervous system in which the antigen(s) remains elusive. Antibodies targeting the flotillin-1/2 complex have been described in 1-2% of the patients in a recent study. Other candidate antigens as anoctamin-2 or neurofascin-155 have been previously described in multiple sclerosis patients, although their clinical relevance remains uncertain. Our study aims to analyse the frequency and clinical relevance of antibodies against neurofascin-155, anoctamin-2 and flotillin-1/2 complex in multiple sclerosis. Serum ( n = 252) and CSF ( n = 50) samples from 282 multiple sclerosis patients were included in the study. The control group was composed of 260 serum samples (71 healthy donors and 189 with other neuroinflammatory disorders). Anti-flotillin-1/2, anti-anoctamin-2 and anti-neurofascin-155 antibodies were tested by cell-based assays using transfected cells. We identified six multiple sclerosis patients with antibodies against the flotillin-1/2 complex (2.1%) and one multiple sclerosis patient with antibodies against anoctamin-2 (0.35%). All multiple sclerosis patients were negative for anti-neurofascin-155 antibodies. Three of the anti-flotillin-1/2 positive patients showed anti-flotillin-1/2 positivity in other serum samples extracted at different moments of their disease. Immunoglobulin G subclasses of anti-flotillin-1/2 antibodies were predominantly one and three. We confirm that antibodies targeting the flotillin-1/2 complex are present in a subgroup of patients with multiple sclerosis. Further studies are needed to understand the clinical and pathological relevance of anti-flotillin-1/2 autoantibodies in multiple sclerosis., Competing Interests: L.Q. received research grants from Instituto de Salud Carlos III—Ministry of Economy and Innovation (Spain), CIBERER, Fundació La Marató, GBS-CIDP Foundation International, UCB and Grifols, received speaker or expert testimony honoraria from CSL Behring, Novartis, Sanofi-Genzyme, Merck, Annexon, Alnylam, Biogen, Janssen, Lundbeck, ArgenX, UCB, LFB, Octapharma and Roche, serves at Clinical Trial Steering Committee for Sanofi-Genzyme and Roche and is Principal Investigator for UCB’s CIDP01 trial., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain.)
- Published
- 2023
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20. A new homozygous missense variant in LMOD3 gene causing mild nemaline myopathy with prominent facial weakness.
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Segarra-Casas A, Collet R, Gonzalez-Quereda L, Vesperinas A, Caballero-Ávila M, Carbayo A, Díaz-Manera J, Rodriguez MJ, Gallardo E, Gallano P, and Olivé M
- Subjects
- Humans, Muscle, Skeletal diagnostic imaging, Muscle, Skeletal pathology, Mutation, Missense, Muscle Weakness genetics, Muscle Weakness pathology, Phenotype, Mutation, Myopathies, Nemaline genetics, Myopathies, Nemaline pathology
- Abstract
Nemaline myopathy (NEM) type 10, caused by biallelic mutations in LMOD3, is a severe congenital myopathy clinically characterized by generalized hypotonia and muscle weakness, respiratory insufficiency, joint contractures, and bulbar weakness. Here, we describe a family with two adult patients presenting mild nemaline myopathy due to a novel homozygous missense variant in LMOD3. Both patients presented mild delayed motor milestones, frequent falls during infancy, prominent facial weakness and mild muscle weakness in the four limbs. Muscle biopsy showed mild myopathic changes and small nemaline bodies in a few fibers. A neuromuscular gene panel revealed a homozygous missense variant in LMOD3 that co-segregated with the disease in the family (NM_198271.4: c.1030C>T; p.Arg344Trp). The patients described here provide evidence of the phenotype-genotype correlation, suggesting that non-truncating variants in LMOD3 lead to milder phenotypes of NEM type 10., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest All authors declare no conflict of interests., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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21. Rituximab in myasthenia gravis: efficacy, associated infections and risk of induced hypogammaglobulinemia.
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Caballero-Ávila M, Álvarez-Velasco R, Moga E, Rojas-Garcia R, Turon-Sans J, Querol L, Olivé M, Reyes-Leiva D, Illa I, Gallardo E, and Cortés-Vicente E
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- Humans, Immunoglobulin G therapeutic use, Immunologic Factors adverse effects, Receptors, Cholinergic, Retrospective Studies, Rituximab adverse effects, Agammaglobulinemia chemically induced, Agammaglobulinemia drug therapy, Myasthenia Gravis
- Abstract
The aim of this study is to evaluate the long-term efficacy, safety, and impact on immunoglobulin G (IgG) levels of rituximab in patients with myasthenia gravis (MG). A retrospective, observational study of drug-refractory MG patients treated with rituximab was done. The MG Foundation of America postintervention status (MGFA-PIS) was used to evaluate clinical response. Serum IgG levels were determined at baseline and post-treatment. Hypogammaglobulinemia was defined as IgG<7g/L. Thirty patients were included, 12 with anti-MuSK and 18 with anti-AChR antibodies. Mean (SD) follow-up was 85.5 (48) months. All 12 MuSK+ patients but only six (33%) AChR+ patients achieved minimal manifestations or remission (p<0.01). Nine severe infections were observed in five patients (17%). One patient was diagnosed with progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy. At baseline, two patients (2/24; 8%) had hypogammaglobulinemia. During follow-up, hypogammaglobulinemia was observed in 60% (3/5) of patients who developed an infection and in 33% (7/21) who did not. Two of these patients died of infection-related complications. This study supports the effectiveness of rituximab in patients with MG, especially those with anti-MuSK antibodies. Severe infections may appear after rituximab treatment and hypogammaglobulinemia might play a role on it. A standard protocol would be needed to closely monitor IgG levels in MG patients treated with rituximab., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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22. Genotype-phenotype correlations in valosin-containing protein disease: a retrospective muticentre study.
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Schiava M, Ikenaga C, Villar-Quiles RN, Caballero-Ávila M, Topf A, Nishino I, Kimonis V, Udd B, Schoser B, Zanoteli E, Souza PVS, Tasca G, Lloyd T, Lopez-de Munain A, Paradas C, Pegoraro E, Nadaj-Pakleza A, De Bleecker J, Badrising U, Alonso-Jiménez A, Kostera-Pruszczyk A, Miralles F, Shin JH, Bevilacqua JA, Olivé M, Vorgerd M, Kley R, Brady S, Williams T, Domínguez-González C, Papadimas GK, Warman-Chardon J, Claeys KG, de Visser M, Muelas N, LaForet P, Malfatti E, Alfano LN, Nair SS, Manousakis G, Kushlaf HA, Harms MB, Nance C, Ramos-Fransi A, Rodolico C, Hewamadduma C, Cetin H, García-García J, Pál E, Farrugia ME, Lamont PJ, Quinn C, Nedkova-Hristova V, Peric S, Luo S, Oldfors A, Taylor K, Ralston S, Stojkovic T, Weihl C, and Diaz-Manera J
- Abstract
Background: Valosin-containing protein (VCP) disease, caused by mutations in the VCP gene, results in myopathy, Paget's disease of bone (PBD) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Natural history and genotype-phenotype correlation data are limited. This study characterises patients with mutations in VCP gene and investigates genotype-phenotype correlations., Methods: Descriptive retrospective international study collecting clinical and genetic data of patients with mutations in the VCP gene., Results: Two hundred and fifty-five patients (70.0% males) were included in the study. Mean age was 56.8±9.6 years and mean age of onset 45.6±9.3 years. Mean diagnostic delay was 7.7±6 years. Symmetric lower limb weakness was reported in 50% at onset progressing to generalised muscle weakness. Other common symptoms were ventilatory insufficiency 40.3%, PDB 28.2%, dysautonomia 21.4% and FTD 14.3%. Fifty-seven genetic variants were identified, 18 of these no previously reported. c.464G>A (p.Arg155His) was the most frequent variant, identified in the 28%. Full time wheelchair users accounted for 19.1% with a median time from disease onset to been wheelchair user of 8.5 years. Variant c.463C>T (p.Arg155Cys) showed an earlier onset (37.8±7.6 year) and a higher frequency of axial and upper limb weakness, scapular winging and cognitive impairment. Forced vital capacity (FVC) below 50% was as risk factor for being full-time wheelchair user, while FVC <70% and being a full-time wheelchair user were associated with death., Conclusion: This study expands the knowledge on the phenotypic presentation, natural history, genotype-phenotype correlations and risk factors for disease progression of VCP disease and is useful to improve the care provided to patient with this complex disease., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2022
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23. Immune Response and Safety of SARS-CoV-2 mRNA-1273 Vaccine in Patients With Myasthenia Gravis.
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Reyes-Leiva D, López-Contreras J, Moga E, Pla-Juncà F, Lynton-Pons E, Rojas-Garcia R, Turon-Sans J, Querol L, Olive M, Álvarez-Velasco R, Caballero-Ávila M, Carbayo Á, Vesperinas-Castro A, Domingo P, Illa I, Gallardo E, and Cortés-Vicente E
- Subjects
- Antibodies, Viral blood, Humans, Immunity, Cellular, Immunity, Humoral, Longitudinal Studies, Prospective Studies, SARS-CoV-2, T-Lymphocytes immunology, 2019-nCoV Vaccine mRNA-1273 adverse effects, 2019-nCoV Vaccine mRNA-1273 immunology, COVID-19 prevention & control, Myasthenia Gravis complications
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Evidence regarding the safety and efficacy of messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccines in patients with myasthenia gravis (MG) after immunosuppressive therapies is scarce. Our aim is to determine whether the mRNA-1273 vaccine is safe and able to induce humoral and cellular responses in patients with MG., Methods: We performed an observational, longitudinal, prospective study including 100 patients with MG of a referral center for MG in our country, conducted from April 2021 to November 2021 during the vaccination campaign. The mRNA-1273 vaccine was scheduled for all participants. Blood samples were collected before vaccination and 3 months after a second dose. Clinical changes in MG were measured using the MG activities of daily life score at baseline and 1 week after the first and second doses. A surveillance of all symptoms of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) was conducted throughout the study. Humoral and cellular immune responses after vaccination were assessed using a spike-antibody ELISA and interferon gamma release assay in plasma. The primary outcomes were clinically significant changes in MG symptoms after vaccination, adverse events (AEs), and seroconversion and T-cell immune response rates., Results: Ninety-nine patients completed the full vaccination schedule, and 98 had 2 blood samples taken. A statistically significant worsening of symptoms was identified after the first and second doses of the mRNA-1273 vaccine, but this was not clinically relevant. Mild AEs occurred in 14 patients after the first dose and in 21 patients after the second dose. Eighty-seven patients developed a humoral response and 72 patients showed a T-cell response after vaccination. A combined therapy with prednisone and other immunosuppressive drugs correlated with a lower seroconversion ratio (OR = 5.97, 95% CI 1.46-24.09, p = 0.015) and a lower T-cell response ratio (OR = 2.83, 95% CI 1.13-7.13, p = 0.024)., Discussion: Our findings indicate that the mRNA vaccination against COVID-19 is safe in patients with MG and show no negative impact on the disease course. Patients achieved high humoral and cellular immune response levels., Classification of Evidence: This study provides Class IV evidence that patients with MG receiving the mRNA-1273 vaccine did not show clinical worsening after vaccination and that most of the patients achieved high cellular or immune response levels., (Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the American Academy of Neurology.)
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- 2022
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24. Clinical and Laboratory Features in Anti-NF155 Autoimmune Nodopathy.
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Martín-Aguilar L, Lleixà C, Pascual-Goñi E, Caballero-Ávila M, Martínez-Martínez L, Díaz-Manera J, Rojas-García R, Cortés-Vicente E, Turon-Sans J, de Luna N, Suárez-Calvet X, Gallardo E, Rajabally Y, Scotton S, Jacobs BC, Baars A, Cortese A, Vegezzi E, Höftberger R, Zimprich F, Roesler C, Nobile-Orazio E, Liberatore G, Hiew FL, Martínez-Piñeiro A, Carvajal A, Piñar-Morales R, Usón-Martín M, Albertí O, López-Pérez MÁ, Márquez F, Pardo-Fernández J, Muñoz-Delgado L, Cabrera-Serrano M, Ortiz N, Bartolomé M, Duman Ö, Bril V, Segura-Chávez D, Pitarokoili K, Steen C, Illa I, and Querol L
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Young Adult, Autoantibodies blood, Autoimmune Diseases of the Nervous System blood, Autoimmune Diseases of the Nervous System drug therapy, Autoimmune Diseases of the Nervous System immunology, Autoimmune Diseases of the Nervous System physiopathology, Cell Adhesion Molecules immunology, Immunologic Factors pharmacology, Nerve Growth Factors immunology, Ranvier's Nodes immunology, Rituximab pharmacology
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: To study the clinical and laboratory features of antineurofascin-155 (NF155)-positive autoimmune nodopathy (AN)., Methods: Patients with anti-NF155 antibodies detected on routine immunologic testing were included. Clinical characteristics, treatment response, and functional scales (modified Rankin Scale [mRS] and Inflammatory Rasch-built Overall Disability Scale [I-RODS]) were retrospectively collected at baseline and at the follow-up. Autoantibody and neurofilament light (NfL) chain levels were analyzed at baseline and at the follow-up., Results: Forty NF155+ patients with AN were included. Mean age at onset was 42.4 years. Patients presented with a progressive (75%), sensory motor (87.5%), and symmetric distal-predominant weakness in upper (97.2%) and lower extremities (94.5%), with tremor and ataxia (75%). Patients received a median of 3 (2-4) different treatments in 46 months of median follow-up. Response to IV immunoglobulin (86.8%) or steroids (72.2%) was poor in most patients, whereas 77.3% responded to rituximab. HLA-DRB1*15 was detected in 91.3% of patients. IgG4 anti-NF155 antibodies were predominant in all patients; anti-NF155 titers correlated with mRS within the same patient ( r = 0.41, p = 0.004). Serum NfL (sNfL) levels were higher in anti-NF155+ AN than in healthy controls (36.47 vs 7.56 pg/mL, p < 0.001) and correlated with anti-NF155 titers ( r = 0.43, p = 0.001), with I-RODS at baseline ( r = -0.88, p < 0.001) and with maximum I-RODS achieved ( r = -0.58, p = 0.01). Anti-NF155 titers and sNfL levels decreased in all rituximab-treated patients., Discussion: Anti-NF155 AN presents a distinct clinical profile and good response to rituximab. Autoantibody titers and sNfL are useful to monitor disease status in these patients. The use of untagged-NF155 plasmids minimizes the detection of false anti-NF155+ cases., Classification of Evidence: This study provides Class IV evidence that anti-NF155 antibodies associate with a specific phenotype and response to rituximab., (Copyright © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the American Academy of Neurology.)
- Published
- 2021
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25. Corneomandibular reflex in a patient with pontine hemorrhage without impaired consciousness.
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Caballero-Ávila M, Juanola E, Izquierdo A, Martínez-Domeño A, and Martí-Fàbregas J
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- Adult, Brain Stem Hemorrhage, Traumatic diagnostic imaging, Humans, Male, Tomography Scanners, X-Ray Computed, Brain Stem Hemorrhage, Traumatic physiopathology, Consciousness, Mandible physiology, Reflex physiology
- Published
- 2019
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