Obsessive Compulsive Disorder associated with Autoimmunity in Youth: Clinical Course before and after Rituximab+/- Adjunctive Immunomodulation.

IF 2.3 4区 医学 Q2 DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY
Jennifer Frankovich, Denise Calaprice, Meiqian Ma, Olivia Knight, Kate Miles, Cindy Manko, Joseph D Hernandez, Jesse Sandberg, Bahare Farhadian, Yuhuan Xie, Melissa Silverman, Juliette Madan, Vibeke Strand, Kiki Chang, Margo Thienemann
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Multiple lines of evidence suggest that some cases of OCD are underlain by autoimmune and/or inflammatory processes that act on the brain to create neuropsychiatric symptomatology. However, studies of immunomodulatory treatments for such cases are sparse. Here we present consecutive cases of presumed-neuroimmune OCD in youth that have been treated with rituximab +/- adjunctive immunomodulatory treatments.

Methods: Of the 458 cases evaluated by our clinic between September 15, 2012 and January 6, 2023, 23 patients were treated with rituximab +/- adjunctive immunomodulation orchestrated by our team (based on evidence of autoimmunity) and were followed routinely by the outpatient clinic team. Patients who presented for a second opinion and were not diagnosed, treated, and/or followed by our outpatient clinic (n=5) or did not have OCD (n=1) are not included. We present the immunological and psychiatric profiles (prior to treatment), selection criteria for use of rituximab, rituximab treatment protocol, recovery status, and reasons for discontinuation (if applicable). Data was obtained from chart review of clinical records. Determination of recovery status was confirmed by the clinical team caring for the patients; patients were classified as: did not recover, partial recovery (PR), or full recovery (FR). Since multiple treatments (psychotherapy, psychiatric medication, and immunomodulation) together contributed to recovery, the team additionally assessed attribution of response to rituximab and details are documented.

Results: Patients were between ages of 4 and 20 at initiation of rituximab treatment. All suffered from severe, debilitating neuropsychiatric symptoms prior to rituximab initiation in the context of evidence for systemic autoimmunity. Approximately 70% had an unequivocal recovery following treatment with rituximab (+/- induction and adjunctive immunomodulation) which in most cases allowed the patients to achieve normal levels of function and cease psychotropic medications. Interpretation of attribution in many cases is complicated by the use of induction and adjunct immunomodulation. Most patients experienced transient increases in symptoms before improving; 11 experienced mild self-limited infusion-related reactions, and 14 experienced hypogammaglobulinemia. No patient had an organ or life-threatening reaction or infection following rituximab. One patient developed recurrent sinusitis following rituximab and thus rituximab was stopped despite neuropsychiatric improvements, then rituximab was restarted later due to recrudescence of psychiatric symptoms; the approval to use rituximab with IVIG permitted its use. Patients who received adjunctive immunomodulation (IVIG, methotrexate, leflunomide, etc.) had a higher likelihood of achieving recovery (FR or PR) after rituximab (Fisher's Exact Test, one-sided, p<0.0001).

Discussion and conclusions: For a small fraction of our patients, systemic autoimmunity and severe, debilitating psychiatric symptoms (including but not limited to OCD) led to a trial of rituximab. A randomized placebo-controlled trial will be necessary to objectively determine efficacy with regards to OCD/complex neuropsychiatric disease in the setting of systemic autoimmunity. Patients may have better responses to rituximab when given with adjunctive immunomodulation (IVIG, methotrexate, etc.). Reasons for the benefit of adjunctive immunomodulation is likely multifactorial: controlling infections, addressing inflammation driven by immune pathways beyond T& B cells (i.e. proinflammatory monocytes which have been linked to OCD), and preventing anti-rituximab antibodies.

青少年强迫症与自身免疫相关:利妥昔单抗+/-辅助免疫调节前后的临床过程
背景:多种证据表明,一些强迫症病例是由自身免疫和/或炎症过程引起的,这些过程作用于大脑,产生神经精神症状。然而,对此类病例的免疫调节治疗的研究很少。在这里,我们提出了连续的病例推定的神经免疫性强迫症的青年已经治疗利妥昔单抗+/-辅助免疫调节治疗。方法:在我院2012年9月15日至2023年1月6日评估的458例患者中,23例患者接受了我院团队(基于自身免疫证据)精心安排的利妥昔单抗+/-辅助免疫调节治疗,并由门诊团队常规随访。未接受诊断、治疗和/或随访的门诊患者(n=5)或没有强迫症的患者(n=1)不包括在内。我们介绍了免疫学和精神病学概况(治疗前),使用利妥昔单抗的选择标准,利妥昔单抗治疗方案,恢复状况和停药原因(如果适用)。数据来自临床记录的图表回顾。患者康复情况由临床护理团队确认;患者分为:未恢复、部分恢复(PR)和完全恢复(FR)。由于多种治疗(心理治疗、精神药物和免疫调节)共同有助于恢复,研究小组额外评估了对利妥昔单抗反应的归因,并记录了细节。结果:患者开始接受利妥昔单抗治疗时年龄在4 - 20岁之间。在系统性自身免疫证据的背景下,所有患者在开始使用利妥昔单抗之前都患有严重的、衰弱的神经精神症状。在接受利妥昔单抗(+/-诱导和辅助免疫调节)治疗后,大约70%的患者有明确的恢复,在大多数情况下,利妥昔单抗使患者达到正常的功能水平并停止精神药物治疗。在许多情况下,归因的解释由于使用诱导和辅助免疫调节而变得复杂。大多数患者在症状改善前经历过一过性加重;11例出现轻度自限性输液相关反应,14例出现低丙种球蛋白血症。利妥昔单抗治疗后,没有患者发生器官或危及生命的反应或感染。1例患者在使用利妥昔单抗后出现复发性鼻窦炎,尽管神经精神有所改善,但仍需停用利妥昔单抗,随后因精神症状复发重新使用利妥昔单抗;利妥昔单抗与IVIG联合使用的批准允许其使用。接受辅助免疫调节(IVIG、甲氨喋呤、来氟米特等)的患者在接受利妥昔单抗治疗后恢复(FR或PR)的可能性更高(Fisher精确检验,单侧,p)。讨论和结论:对于一小部分患者,系统性自身免疫和严重的、衰弱的精神症状(包括但不限于强迫症)导致了利妥昔单抗的试验。有必要进行随机安慰剂对照试验,以客观确定在全身性自身免疫的情况下治疗强迫症/复杂神经精神疾病的疗效。当给予辅助免疫调节(IVIG,甲氨蝶呤等)时,患者可能对利妥昔单抗有更好的反应。辅助性免疫调节的益处可能是多因素的:控制感染,解决由T&以外的免疫途径驱动的炎症;B细胞(即与强迫症有关的促炎单核细胞),并预防抗利妥昔单抗抗体。
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来源期刊
Developmental Neuroscience
Developmental Neuroscience 医学-发育生物学
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
3.40%
发文量
49
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: ''Developmental Neuroscience'' is a multidisciplinary journal publishing papers covering all stages of invertebrate, vertebrate and human brain development. Emphasis is placed on publishing fundamental as well as translational studies that contribute to our understanding of mechanisms of normal development as well as genetic and environmental causes of abnormal brain development. The journal thus provides valuable information for both physicians and biologists. To meet the rapidly expanding information needs of its readers, the journal combines original papers that report on progress and advances in developmental neuroscience with concise mini-reviews that provide a timely overview of key topics, new insights and ongoing controversies. The editorial standards of ''Developmental Neuroscience'' are high. We are committed to publishing only high quality, complete papers that make significant contributions to the field.
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