Clinical, paraclinical and outcome features of 166 patients with acute anti-GQ1b antibody syndrome

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Coly, Martin | Adams, David | Cauquil, Cécile | Fargeot, Guillaume | Labeyrie, Céline | Venditti, Laura | Echaniz-Laguna, Andoni | Attarian, Shahram | Delmont, Emilien | Bouhour, Françoise | Camdessanché, Jean Philippe | Carey, Guillaume | Tard, Céline | Chanson, Jean Baptiste | Chrétien, Pascale | Créange, Alain | Gendre, Thierry | Frachet, Simon | Kuntzer, Thierry | Théaudin, Marie | Maisonobe, Thierry | Michaud, Maud | Moulin, Maximilien | Nicolas, Guillaume | Noury, Jean Baptiste | Timsit, Serge | Péréon, Yann | Puma, Angela | Sole, Guilhem | Taithe, Frédéric

Edité par CCSD ; Springer Verlag -

International audience. Background & purpose: In this retrospective study, we aimed at defining the clinical, paraclinical and outcome features of acute neurological syndromes associated with anti-GQ1b antibodies. Results: We identified 166 patients with neurological symptoms appearing in less than 1 month and anti-GQ1b antibodies in serum between 2012 and 2022. Half were female (51%), mean age was 50 years (4u201390), and the most frequent clinical features were areflexia (80% of patients), distal upper and lower limbs sensory symptoms (78%), ophthalmoplegia (68%), sensory ataxia (67%), limb muscle weakness (45%) and bulbar weakness (45%). Fifty-three patients (32%) presented with complete (21%) and incomplete (11%) Miller Fisher syndrome (MFS), thirty-six (22%) with Guillainu2013Barre syndrome (GBS), one (0.6%) with Bickerstaff encephalitis (BE), and seventy-three (44%) with mixed MFS, GBS & BE clinical features. Nerve conduction studies were normal in 46% of cases, showed demyelination in 28%, and axonal loss in 23%. Anti-GT1a antibodies were found in 56% of cases, increased cerebrospinal fluid protein content in 24%, and Campylobacter jejuni infection in 7%. Most patients (83%) were treated with intravenous immunoglobulins, and neurological recovery was complete in 69% of cases at 1 year follow-up. One patient died, and 15% of patients relapsed. Age > 70 years, initial Intensive Care Unit (ICU) admission, and absent anti-GQ1b IgG antibodies were predictors of incomplete recovery at 12 months. No predictors of relapse were identified. Conclusion: This study from Western Europe shows acute anti-GQ1b antibody syndrome presents with a large clinical phenotype, a good outcome in 2/3 of cases, and frequent relapses.

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