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Daratumumab treatment for therapy-refractory anti-CASPR2 encephalitis

Authors :
Harald Prüss
Andreas Meisel
Martin Köhnlein
Christian Meisel
S. Momsen Reincke
Franziska Scheibe
Tobias Alexander
Lennard Ostendorf
Ann-Christin von Brünneck
Source :
Journal of neurology 267(2), 317-323 (2019). doi:10.1007/s00415-019-09585-6
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2019.

Abstract

The anti-CD38 antibody daratumumab is approved for treatment of refractory multiple myeloma and acts by depletion of plasma cells and modification of various T-cell functions. Its safety, immunological effects and therapeutic potential was evaluated in a 60-year old patient with life-threatening and treatment-refractory anti-CASPR2 encephalitis requiring medical care and artificial ventilation in an intensive care unit. His autoimmune dysfunction was driven by exceptional high anti-CASPR2 autoantibody titers combined with an abnormally increased T-cell activation. As he remained unresponsive to standard and escalation immunotherapies (methylprednisolone, plasma exchange, immunoadsorption, immunoglobulins, rituximab and bortezomib), therapy was escalated to 13 cycles of 16 mg/kg daratumumab. During the treatment period, clinical, radiological, histological and laboratory findings, including quantification of autoreactive and protective antibody levels and FACS-based immune phenotyping, were analyzed. Daratumumab treatment was associated with significant clinical improvement, substantial reduction of anti-CASPR2 antibody titers, especially in CSF, decrease of immunoglobulin levels and protective vaccine titers, as well as normalization of initially increased T-cell activation markers. However, the patient died of Gram-negative septicemia in a neurorehabilitation center. In conclusion, our findings suggest that daratumumab induces not only depletion of autoreactive long-lived plasma cells associated with improvements of neurological sequelae, but also severe side effects requiring clinical studies investigating efficacy and safety of anti-CD38 therapy in antibody-driven autoimmune encephalitis.

Details

ISSN :
14321459 and 03405354
Volume :
267
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4cd45ccff3c654dd74600304c0c30b5b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00415-019-09585-6