The expanded clinical spectrum of anti-GABA(B)R encephalitis and added value of KCTD16 autoantibodies

Marleen Hameete, Marienke de Bruijn, E Graaff, D Bastiaansen, Marco Schreurs, Jeroen Demmers, M Ramberger*, Esther Hulsenboom, Mariska Nagtzaam, S Boukhrissi, JH Veldink, J Verschuuren, CC Hoogenraad, Peter Sillevis Smitt, Maarten Titulaer*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

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Abstract

In this study we report the clinical features of 32 patients with gamma aminobutyric acid B receptor (GABABR) antibodies, identify additional autoantibodies in patients with anti-GABABR encephalitis that mark the presence of an underlying small cell lung carcinoma and optimize laboratory methods for the detection of GABABR antibodies. Patients (n = 3225) were tested for the presence of GABABR antibodies using cell-based assay, immunohistochemistry and live hippocampal neurons. Clinical data were obtained retrospectively. Potassium channel tetramerization domain-containing (KCTD)16 antibodies were identified by immunoprecipitation, mass spectrometry analysis and cell-based assays. KCTD16 antibodies were identified in 23/32 patients with anti-GABABR encephalitis, and in 1/26 patients with small cell lung carcinoma and Hu antibodies, but not in 329 healthy subjects and disease controls. Of the anti-GABABR encephalitis patients that were screened sufficiently, 18/19 (95%) patients with KCTD16 antibodies had a tumour versus 3/9 (33%) anti-GABABR encephalitis patients without KCTD16 antibodies (P = 0.001). In most cases this was a small cell lung carcinoma. Patients had cognitive or behavioural changes (97%) and prominent seizures (90%). Thirteen patients developed a refractory status epilepticus with intensive care unit admittance (42%). Strikingly, 4/32 patients had a rapidly progressive dementia. The addition of KCTD16 to the GABABR cell-based assay improved sensitivity of the in-house fixed cell-based assay, without loss of specificity. Twenty-two of 26 patients improved (partially) to immunotherapy or chemotherapy. Anti-GABABR encephalitis is a limbic encephalitis with prominent, severe seizures, but patients can also present with rapidly progressive dementia. The co-occurrence of KCTD16 antibodies points towards a paraneoplastic origin. The addition of KCTD16 improves the sensitivity of the cell-based assay.
Original languageUndefined/Unknown
Pages (from-to)1631-1643
Number of pages13
JournalBrain
Volume142
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2019

Bibliographical note

Funding:
This research was funded by NUTS-OHRA (1104–034),
Dutch Brain Foundation (2012(1)-141), Dutch Epilepsy
Foundation (NEF, project 14–19), and Netherlands
Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO/ZonMW,
Memorabel program, and Veni incentive).

Research programs

  • EMC MGC-02-21-01
  • EMC MM-02-72-02

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