好色先生

好色先生

Explore the latest content from across our publications

Log In

Forgot Password?
Create New Account

Loading... please wait

Abstract Details

Neurological Manifestations of IgG4-related disease: To Wait Or To Mitigate?
Autoimmune Neurology
P4 - Poster Session 4 (8:00 AM-9:00 AM)
2-012

N/A

 

 

Immunoglobulin G4-related disease (IgG4-RD) is a multi-organ, relapsing fibroinflammatory disorder that can rarely involve the central nervous system (CNS). It manifests as hypertrophic pachymeningitis, hypo-physitis, and cranial neuropathies. MITIGATE Trial studied Inebilizumab's (Uplizna) efficacy for treatment of IgG4-RD and was recently approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

We managed three patients with histo-pathological confirmation of neurologically predominant IgG4-RD seen in the Neuroimmunology Clinic. Retrospective extraction of data from electronic medical records included demographics, symptomatology, neuroimaging, workup, histopathology, treatment regimens, and clinical outcomes. A comprehensive literature review was performed through PubMed, Embase, Scopus and Cochrane using keywords reporting CNS presentations and therapeutic outcomes with IgG4-RD. Data synthesis was qualitative due to heterogeneity among studies and limited sample size.

Patient 1 was a 64-year-old female presenting with monocular blurry vision, pachymeningeal enhancement and subdural hematoma. All workup was unrevealing. Biopsy demonstrated lymphoplasmacytic inflammation with IgG4-positive plasma cells. The patient was started on Inebilizumab after steroids and surgical resection ensuring symptomatic improvement. Patient 2 was a 61-year-old male with a history of pituitary IgG4-RD complicated by recurrent pituitary masses and multiple cranial neuropathies. Surgical resection and maintenance of low-dose corticosteroids achieved control. Patient 3 was a 23-year-old female with a rapidly progressive pituitary mass causing panhypopituitarism and diabetes insipidus. Histopathology demonstrated granulomatous inflammation with >100 IgG4-positive plasma cells/hpf. Post-surgical recovery was favorable, with stable postoperative imaging. Across cases, neuroimaging commonly revealed sellar/suprasellar or pachymeningeal involvement, and pathology confirmed dense IgG4+ plasma cell infiltrates. Literature review corroborated these findings, showing that early recognition and immunosuppression improve prognosis, though standardized treatment guidelines remain lacking.

Recognition of IgG4-RD requires high clinical suspicion and histopathologic confirmation. Corticosteroids remain the cornerstone of management but the emergence of Inebilizuamb poses a treatment dilemma in neurological-confined IgG4 since now there is an effective FDA approved drug available.

 

Authors/Disclosures
Shayan Marsia, MBBS
PRESENTER
Dr. Marsia has nothing to disclose.
Minahil Iqbal Ms. Iqbal has nothing to disclose.
Farah Barakat, MD, MBBS Ms. Barakat has nothing to disclose.
Sufyan Shahid, MBBS Mr. Shahid has nothing to disclose.
Ayla Barakat, MD Dr. Barakat has nothing to disclose.
Nicholas Lannen, MD Dr. Lannen has received personal compensation in the range of $5,000-$9,999 for serving as an Editor, Associate Editor, or Editorial Advisory Board Member for Genentech. Dr. Lannen has received personal compensation in the range of $500-$4,999 for serving as an Editor, Associate Editor, or Editorial Advisory Board Member for TG Therapeutics. Dr. Lannen has received personal compensation in the range of $5,000-$9,999 for serving as an Editor, Associate Editor, or Editorial Advisory Board Member for Horizon Theraputics.