Back to Search Start Over

Rituximab Treatment and Long-term Outcome of Patients With Autoimmune Encephalitis

Authors :
Thaler, Franziska S
Zimmermann, Luise
Urbanek, Christian
Pfefferkorn, Thomas
Philipsen, Alexandra
Piepgras, Johannes
von Podewils, Felix
Priller, Josef
Pröbstel, Anne-Katrin
Helena Rau, Johanna Maria
Räuber, Saskia Jania
Reimann, Gernot
Reinecke, Raphael
Sommer, Claudia
Ringelstein, Marius
Rohner, Hendrik
Rosenow, Felix
Rostásy, Kevin
Rüegg, Stephan
Schaumberg, Jens
Schmidt, Jens
Schmütz, Ina-Isabelle
Schreiber, Stephan
Schreyer, Gesa
Doppler, Kathrin
Schröder, Ina
Schuster, Simon
Seidel, Günter
Senel, Makbule
Siebenbrodt, Kai
Stammel, Oliver
Stangel, Martin
Stolze, Henning
Stoppe, Muriel
Storm Van's Gravesande, Karin
Penner, Loana
Sybre, Steffen
Tauber, Simone
Bergh, Florian Then
Trebst, Corinna
Trendelenburg, George
Trollmann, Regina
Tumani, Hayrettin
Türedi, Methab
von Mering, Matthias
Wagner, Judith
Lewerenz, Jan
Weissert, Robert
Wiendl, Heinz
Wildemann, Brigitte
Witt, Karsten
Wöpking, Sigrid
Wunderlich, Benjamin
Zieger, Lara
Roessling, Rosa
Finke, Carsten
Prüß, Harald
Melzer, Nico
Wandinger, Klaus-Peter
Kammermeier, Stefan
Leypoldt, Frank
Kümpfel, Tania
Encephalitis, German Network for Research on Autoimmune
Adelmann, Michael
Appeltshauser, Luise
Ayzenberg, Ilya
Baade-Büttner, Carolin
van Baalen, Andreas
Baatz, Sebastian
Balint, Bettina
Strippel, Christine
Bauer, Sebastian
Baumgartner, Annette
Benesch, Sonka
Berger, Robert
Berning, Sascha
Bernsen, Sarah
Bien, Christian
Bien, Corinna
Binder, Andreas
Bittner, Stefan
Bittner, Daniel
Blaes, Franz
Blaschek, Astrid
Dargvainiene, Justina
Dik, Andre
Dreesmann, Mona
Ebinger, Friedrich
Edelhoff, Lena
Ehrlich, Sven
Eisenhut, Katharina
Kraft, Andrea
Endres, Dominique
Entscheva, Marina
Faiss, Jürgen Hartmut
Fazeli, Walid Ahmad
Finke, Alexander
Fitzner, Dirk
Flotats-Bastardas, Marina
Paul, Friedemann
Friese, Manuel
Gallus, Marco
Sühs, Kurt-Wolfram
Gebhard, Marcel
Geis, Christian
Gorsler, Anna
Grau, Armin
Grauer, Oliver
Groß, Catharina
Gül, Halime
Handreka, Robert
Hansen, Niels
Häusler, Martin
Wickel, Jonathan
Havla, Joachim
Ha-Yeun, Chung
Heide, Wolfgang
Held, Valentin
Hellwig, Kerstin
Hillebrand, Philip
Hoffmann, Frank
Oy, Ulrich Hofstadt-van
Ismail, Fatme Seval
Jansen, Martina
Kaufmann, Max
Kellinghaus, Christoph
Knake, Susanne
Körtvelyessy, Peter
Kovac, Stjepana
Krämer, Markus
Krogias, Christos
Lehrich, Christoph
Linsa, Andreas
Lünemann, Jan
Markewitz, Robert
Malter, Michael
Melzer, Kristin Stefanie
Menge, Til
Meuth, Sven
Meyer Zu Hörste, Gerd
Mönig, Constanze
Mono, Marie-Luise
Nagel, Michael
Neumann-Haefelin, Tobias
Obrocki, Jost
Source :
Neurology: Neuroimmunology & Neuroinflammation ; official journal of the American Academy of Neurology 8(6), e1088 (2021). doi:10.1212/NXI.0000000000001088
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2021.

Abstract

Background and ObjectivesTo determine the real-world use of rituximab in autoimmune encephalitis (AE) and to correlate rituximab treatment with the long-term outcome.MethodsPatients with NMDA receptor (NMDAR)-AE, leucine-rich glioma-inactivated-1 (LGI1)- AE, contactin-associated protein-like-2 (CASPR2)-AE, or glutamic acid decarboxylase 65 (GAD65) disease from the GErman Network for Research on AuToimmune Encephalitis who had received at least 1 rituximab dose and a control cohort of non–rituximab-treated patients were analyzed retrospectively.ResultsOf the 358 patients, 163 (46%) received rituximab (NMDAR-AE: 57%, CASPR2-AE: 44%, LGI1-AE: 43%, and GAD65 disease: 37%). Rituximab treatment was initiated significantly earlier in NMDAR- and LGI1-AE (median: 54 and 155 days from disease onset) compared with CASPR2-AE or GAD65 disease (median: 632 and 1,209 days). Modified Rankin Scale (mRS) scores improved significantly in patients with NMDAR-AE, both with and without rituximab treatment. Although being more severely affected at baseline, rituximab-treated patients with NMDAR-AE more frequently reached independent living (mRS score ≤2) (94% vs 88%). In LGI1-AE, rituximab-treated and nontreated patients improved, whereas in CASPR2-AE, only rituximab-treated patients improved significantly. No improvement was observed in patients with GAD65 disease. A significant reduction of the relapse rate was observed in rituximab-treated patients (5% vs 13%). Detection of NMDAR antibodies was significantly associated with mRS score improvement. A favorable outcome was also observed with early treatment initiation.DiscussionWe provide real-world data on immunosuppressive treatments with a focus on rituximab treatment for patients with AE in Germany. We suggest that early and short-term rituximab therapy might be an effective and safe treatment option in most patients with NMDAR-, LGI1-, and CASPR2-AE.Class of EvidenceThis study provides Class IV evidence that rituximab is an effective treatment for some types of AE.

Details

ISSN :
23327812
Volume :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurology - Neuroimmunology Neuroinflammation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3be0a72ee22665f6e611334d145b98a5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1212/nxi.0000000000001088