Ilya Ayzenberg, Athina-Maria Aloizou, Clarissa Lohmann, Simon Faissner, Christiane Schneider-Gold, Dominic Borie, Thomas Mika, Roland Schroers, Jeremias Motte, Ralf Gold
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Autologous chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy has recently gained interest in the treatment of rheumatic and neuroimmunologic diseases.
Methods: We report a 62-year-old female patient with a 14-year history of treatment-refractory anti-GAD-positive stiff-person syndrome (SPS) and concomitant anti-AChR-positive myasthenia gravis. Despite a relatively stable disease course in the first 8 years, SPS dramatically progressed afterward. In 2023, she was able to walk less than 10-15 m and suffered from severe persistent stiffness in the left arm superimposed with painful muscle spasm attacks (MSAs). Numerous immunotherapies, including intravenous immunoglobulins, plasma exchange, steroids, azathioprine, and rituximab, were ineffective. Consequently, she was escalated to compassionate use of autologous anti-CD19 CAR T-cell therapy (KYV-101).
Results: From the third month post-CAR-T, we observed a substantial improvement in walking distance, pain, anxiety, and MSAs in the arm. By the sixth month, she was able to walk 500 m. The anti-GAD titers declined from 1:320 to 1:32. Side effects included grade 2 cytokine release syndrome and moderate leukopenia, without serious infections.
Discussion: CAR T-cell therapy was effective at mitigating SPS symptoms, despite the long history and severe refractory disease course in our patient. Controlled trials are needed to evaluate its potential in SPS.
期刊介绍:
Neurology Neuroimmunology & Neuroinflammation is an official journal of the American Academy of Neurology. Neurology: Neuroimmunology & Neuroinflammation will be the premier peer-reviewed journal in neuroimmunology and neuroinflammation. This journal publishes rigorously peer-reviewed open-access reports of original research and in-depth reviews of topics in neuroimmunology & neuroinflammation, affecting the full range of neurologic diseases including (but not limited to) Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, ALS, tauopathy, and stroke; multiple sclerosis and NMO; inflammatory peripheral nerve and muscle disease, Guillain-Barré and myasthenia gravis; nervous system infection; paraneoplastic syndromes, noninfectious encephalitides and other antibody-mediated disorders; and psychiatric and neurodevelopmental disorders. Clinical trials, instructive case reports, and small case series will also be featured.