A serum autoantibody marker of neuromyelitis optica: distinction from multiple sclerosis

VA Lennon, DM Wingerchuk, TJ Kryzer, SJ Pittock… - The Lancet, 2004 - thelancet.com
VA Lennon, DM Wingerchuk, TJ Kryzer, SJ Pittock, CF Lucchinetti, K Fujihara, I Nakashima
The Lancet, 2004thelancet.com
Background Neuromyelitis optica is an inflammatory demyelinating disease with generally
poor prognosis that selectively targets optic nerves and spinal cord. It is commonly
misdiagnosed as multiple sclerosis. Neither disease has a distinguishing biomarker, but
optimum treatments differ. The relation of neuromyelitis optica to optic-spinal-multiple
sclerosis in Asia is uncertain. We assessed the capacity of a putative marker for
neuromyelitis optica (NMO-IgG) to distinguish neuromyelitis optica and related disorders …
Background
Neuromyelitis optica is an inflammatory demyelinating disease with generally poor prognosis that selectively targets optic nerves and spinal cord. It is commonly misdiagnosed as multiple sclerosis. Neither disease has a distinguishing biomarker, but optimum treatments differ. The relation of neuromyelitis optica to optic-spinal-multiple sclerosis in Asia is uncertain. We assessed the capacity of a putative marker for neuromyelitis optica (NMO-IgG) to distinguish neuromyelitis optica and related disorders from multiple sclerosis.
Methods
Indirect immunofluorescence with a composite substrate of mouse tissues identified a distinctive NMO-IgG staining pattern, which we characterised further by dual immunostaining. We tested masked serum samples from 102 North American patients with neuromyelitis optica or with syndromes that suggest high risk of the disorder, and 12 Japanese patients with optic-spinal multiple sclerosis. Control patients had multiple sclerosis, other myelopathies, optic neuropathies, and miscellaneous disorders. We also established clinical diagnoses for 14 patients incidentally shown to have NMO-IgG among 85 000 tested for suspected paraneoplastic autoimmunity.
Findings
NMO-IgG outlines CNS microvessels, pia, subpia, and Virchow-Robin space. It partly colocalises with laminin. Sensitivity and specificity were 73% (95% CI 60–86) and 91% (79–100) for neuromyelitis optica and 58% (30–86) and 100% (66–100) for optic-spinal multiple sclerosis. NMO-IgG was detected in half of patients with high-risk syndromes. Of 14 seropositive cases identified incidentally, 12 had neuromyelitis optica or a high-risk syndrome for the disease.
Interpretation
NMO-IgG is a specific marker autoantibody of neuromyelitis optica and binds at or near the blood-brain barrier. It distinguishes neuromyelitis optica from multiple sclerosis. Asian optic-spinal multiple sclerosis seems to be the same as neuromyelitis optica.
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