Ghosh Md Ritwik, Roy Devlina, León-Ruiz Moisés, Das Shambaditya, Dubey Souvik, Benito-León Julián
Department of General Medicine, Burdwan Medical College & Hospital, Burdwan, West Bengal, India E-mail:
Department of Neurology, Calcutta National Medical College & Hospital, Kolkata, West Bengal India.
Qatar Med J. 2022 Jul 7;2022(3):29. doi: 10.5339/qmj.2022.29. eCollection 2022.
Neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMOSD) is an autoimmune astrocytopathy against foot processes of aquaporin-4 (AQP4) water channels. Patients with NMOSD tend to have other coexisting autoimmune/connective tissue diseases. However, AQP-4-antibody-positive NMOSD coexisting with ankylosing spondylitis (AS) is rare. AS is an immune-mediated disorder, a subset of axial spondyloarthropathies, which commonly manifests as chronic inflammatory back pain in young people, and it has a strong association with HLA-B27. In this study, a 35-year-old Indian man with an undiagnosed progressive axial spondyloarthropathy (i.e., AS) is reported presenting with acute-onset longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis, a clinical subset of NMOSD. Neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMOSD), a primary demyelinating disorder of the central nervous system (CNS), is an autoimmune astrocytopathy against foot processes of aquaporin-4 (AQP4) water channels, which manifests with optic neuritis, longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis (LETM), area-postrema syndrome, brainstem syndrome diencephalic syndrome, and cerebral syndrome. Ankylosing spondylitis (AS) is an immune-mediated disorder, a subset of axial spondyloarthropathies, which commonly manifests as chronic inflammatory back pain in young people, and it has a strong association with HLA-B27. AS characteristically targets the axial skeleton, peripheral joints, entheses (connective tissues between tendons/ligaments and bones), and gut. Patients with NMOSD tend to have other coexisting autoimmune/connective tissue diseases. For example, cases with NMOSD and multiple sclerosis, which are other autoimmune primary demyelinating disorders of the CNS, have been reported. However, concurrent existence of AS and NMOSD in the same patient even over years of disease course is rare. In addition, studies describing neurological manifestations of AS are limited, and they focus on joint inflammation and long-standing bony pathology (ankylosis) related to compressive myelopathy, myelo-radiculopathy, and cauda equina syndromes. The authors present a case of a young Indian man with an undiagnosed progressive AS (misdiagnosed and mismanaged by an indigenous medical practitioner) presenting with acute-onset LETM variant of AQP4-positive NMOSD. A 35-year-old healthy, non-comorbid man from rural India came to the outpatient department with complaints of persistent tingling, numbness, and weakness of both lower limbs (right more than left) for 10 days. The clinical picture showed acute-onset urinary retention, which was relieved by urinary catheterization. An indigenous medical practitioner had prescribed drugs to treat a urinary tract infection. His weakness gradually progressed over the following week, causing him to become bedridden. During the removal of the catheter, he felt urgency, increased frequency of micturition, and overt urinary incontinence. He gave no history suggestive of any girdle-like sensations, root/radicular/tract pain, vertebral pain, trauma, recent vaccination, and diarrheal or febrile illness. For the last 8 months, he had a complaint of an insidious-onset, persistent, bilateral, dull aching pain in the gluteal region accompanied by low-back pain and morning stiffness up to 1 h, which markedly improved with activity and reoccurred following long periods of inactivity. He sometimes had to rise in the middle of the night because of excruciating pain, which could be relieved after moving around the room and corridors for half an hour. He was taking over-the-counter diclofenac tablets for pain relief prescribed by some indigenous medical practitioners who told him that it was due to overwork in agricultural fields, that is, mechanical back pain. He also had a normal X-ray of the lumbosacral spine. He had no addiction liabilities, and none of the family members had ever suffered from a similar kind of illness. He had never consulted any trained medical practitioner, as his previous back-pain-related symptoms responded well to the tablets prescribed by the indigenous medical practitioner(s). During examination, he was found to have recent-onset, asymmetric spastic paraparesis (right more than left) with upper motor neuron-type urinary bladder symptoms. Cognitive assessment (assessed by the Montreal cognitive assessment test) was normal, and posterior column sensations were preserved. Sensory system examination revealed no definite sensory level. Except for the paretic lower limbs, cerebellar functions were normal in other regions. Neuro-ophthalmological examinations were also normal, and no signs of meningeal irritation were observed. The history and course of the disease and clinical examinations were analyzed. Selective tractopathy (early and predominant motor and autonomic tract affection) was suggested for an intramedullary demyelinating pathology affecting the anterior central cord. This case was initially classified as acute-onset non-compressive myelopathy at the lower cervical/upper dorsal region level in a patient with a pre-existing axial spondyloarthropathy. Complete blood cell count; liver, kidney, and thyroid function tests; and plasma glucose and electrolytes were normal, except for an increased erythrocyte sedimentation rate (66 mm in the first hour). Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the spinal cord revealed a demyelinating LETM from C5 to D4 level (Figure 1). Meanwhile, an MRI of the sacroiliac joints revealed bilateral sacroiliitis. Brain and orbital MRIs were devoid of any lesions. Anti-aquaporin 4 (AQP-4) antibodies were tested by cell-based assay in serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), and both were positive. CSF further revealed lymphocytic pleocytosis and increased intrathecal protein production. Visually evoked potential recordings were also normal. In addition, anti-myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibodies were negative. Anti-nuclear antibody (ANA), ANA-profile, autoimmune vasculitis profile (c-ANCA, p-ANCA), neurovirus panel (i.e., polymerase chain reaction for adenovirus, Epstein-Barr virus, herpes simplex viruses 1 and 2, human herpesviruses 6 and 7, cytomegalovirus, enteroviruses, varicella-zoster virus, Japanese encephalitis, and dengue virus), CSF-polymerase chain reaction for , angiotensin-converting enzyme, anti-phospholipid, and anti-thyroid antibodies were negative. Anti-CCP-antibody and rheumatoid factor were also negative, including creatine phosphokinase level and serum vitamin B12. Moreover, serologies for hepatitis B, C, human immunodeficiency virus, and scrub typhus were negative. However, HLA-B27 assay was positive. The final diagnosis was AQP4-positive NMOSD associated with AS. He was placed on pulse intravenous methylprednisolone (1 g/day for 5 days). Consequently, his lower limb power improved remarkably. Cyclical rituximab therapy was initiated to prevent relapses. At 3-month follow-up, he had no residual neurological deficit except for persistence of paresthesias. Neuroimaging and visually evoked potential studies revealed no active or new lesions. After 6 months of therapy, a subjective and objective improvement was observed in disease severity based on the Ankylosing Spondylitis Disease Activity Score. Our patient satisfied the new Assessment of SpondyloArthritis International Society diagnostic/classification criteria for AS and the Wingerchuk criteria for NMOSD, an association that has been rarely reported. Amid the extra-articular complications of long-standing AS, neurological manifestations are considered infrequent. However, subclinical neurological complications may be frequent in AS. Common neurological manifestations result from bony (vertebral) ankylosis, subluxation of joints, ossification of anterior and posterior longitudinal ligaments, secondary spinal canal stenosis, bony (vertebral) fractures, and subsequent compressions over nerve radicles/roots/cauda equina, and inflammation-related (entrapment) peripheral neuropathies. Acute transverse myelitis can occur as a subset of several primary demyelinating disorders of the CNS (i.e., multiple sclerosis, NMOSD, myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody disease, and acute disseminated encephalomyelitis) and various systemic autoimmune connective tissue disorders (i.e., systemic lupus erythematosus, mixed connective tissue disease, Sjögren syndrome, inflammatory bowel disease, and neurosarcoidosis). Acute transverse myelitis (short or long segment) is an infrequent extra-articular complication of AS. It has been reported to evolve either as a distinct neurological complication of AS, or it may develop secondary to TNF-alpha-inhibitor therapy for the treatment of AS. AS is a heritable inflammatory spondyloarthropathy that primarily affects the axial skeleton, which is mediated by T-cells; B-cells only play a minor role. On the contrary, the key for the pathogenesis of NMOSD is the production of autoantibodies against AQP-4 channels expressed on astrocytes, leading to complement-mediated damage, with ensuing demyelination. Myelitis usually shows high signal intensity on the tbl2-weighted image and contrast enhancement in the spinal cord. Despite the difference in molecular mechanisms, the diagnosis of these diseases in the same individual may not be coincidental. Recent evidence has shown T-cell-mediated inflammatory responses in cases of NMOSD. In particular, Th17 and Th2-related cytokines are elevated in the CSF of NMO patients. Environmental factors such as have also been proven to aggravate autoimmunity in AS and NMOSD (however, body fluid cultures for , performed in our patient, showed similar association, and they were found negative two times). Although large-scale epidemiological studies investigating the underlying pathogenesis related to these diseases are lacking, studies have demonstrated an increased incidence of optic neuritis among patients with AS. Systemic sclerosis and mixed and undifferentiated connective tissue diseases were excluded after expert opinions (from two board-certified rheumatologists and two dermatologists) because of the lack of suggestive clinical findings (e.g., absence of skin thickening, salt-and-pepper appearance, nail changes, Mauskopf facies, sclerodactyly, calcinosis cutis, Raynaud's phenomenon, other cutaneous manifestations, pulmonary arterial hypertension/interstitial lung disease, dysphagia, muscular pain/weakness renal impairments, absence of ANA, anti-centromere antibodies, anti-Scl-70, PM-Scl antibodies, anti-ds DNA, PCNA, CENP-B, anti-nucleosomes, anti-Smith, anti-U1-RNP, anti-Jo1, anti-Mi2, anti-Ro52, anti-La antibodies, and normal C3 and C4 complement levels) (The European League Against Rheumatism and the American College of Rheumatology classification criteria 2019). Finally, our patient was treated with intravenous steroids followed by rituximab infusions, a monoclonal anti-CD20 antibody directed against B-cells. In particular, this patient clinically and radiologically responded to immunomodulatory drugs, which might support a possible common pathogenic basis of the two processes. TNF-alpha inhibitors are commonly used as novel therapeutics in AS; however, they can potentially result in serious complications, that is, secondary demyelinating disorders. However, such inhibitors in this patient were not used. When used in cases of AS, they show satisfactory results. Therefore, it was decided to treat him with rituximab only without adding any second immunomodulatory. Other possible therapeutic options include cyclophosphamide and mycophenolate mofetil, but they were not used because of their low efficacy-safety balance. Moreover, plasmapheresis was not available in our specific setting, despite solid evidence that early treatment with therapeutic strategy (5-7 courses) provides good long-term outcomes in patients with NMOSD. Therefore, when dealing with a case of acute non-compressive myelopathy, history and clinical examination are important to determine the potential underlying etiology and identify an undermined systemic disorder with apparently unrelated non-specific features. Connective tissue disorders should always be considered as a differential diagnosis and be ruled out in all cases of either seropositive or seronegative NMOSD. A diagnosis of AS should be considered in relevant circumstances when dealing with a case of isolated seronegative LETM. Moreover, early diagnosis and treatment of AS are quintessential to prevent lifelong distressing disabilities. However, whether patients with AS have any extra predilection to develop NMOSD throughout their life requires further studies.
视神经脊髓炎谱系障碍(NMOSD)是一种针对水通道蛋白4(AQP4)水通道足突的自身免疫性星形细胞病。NMOSD患者往往还伴有其他自身免疫性/结缔组织疾病。然而,AQP - 4抗体阳性的NMOSD与强直性脊柱炎(AS)共存的情况较为罕见。AS是一种免疫介导的疾病,属于轴性脊柱关节炎的一个亚型,常见于年轻人,表现为慢性炎性背痛,且与HLA - B27密切相关。在本研究中,报告了一名35岁的印度男性,患有未确诊的进行性轴性脊柱关节炎(即AS),表现为急性起病的纵向广泛横贯性脊髓炎,这是NMOSD的一种临床亚型。视神经脊髓炎谱系障碍(NMOSD)是中枢神经系统(CNS)的一种原发性脱髓鞘疾病,是针对水通道蛋白4(AQP4)水通道足突的自身免疫性星形细胞病,表现为视神经炎、纵向广泛横贯性脊髓炎(LETM)、最后区综合征、脑干综合征、间脑综合征和大脑综合征。强直性脊柱炎(AS)是一种免疫介导的疾病,属于轴性脊柱关节炎的一个亚型,常见于年轻人,表现为慢性炎性背痛,且与HLA - B27密切相关。AS的特征性病变部位包括中轴骨骼、外周关节、附着点(肌腱/韧带与骨骼之间的结缔组织)和肠道。NMOSD患者往往还伴有其他自身免疫性/结缔组织疾病。例如,已有报道称NMOSD与多发性硬化症共存,多发性硬化症是CNS的其他自身免疫性原发性脱髓鞘疾病。然而,同一患者在多年病程中同时存在AS和NMOSD的情况极为罕见。此外,描述AS神经学表现的研究有限,且主要集中在与压迫性脊髓病、脊髓神经根病和马尾综合征相关的关节炎症和长期骨质病变(关节强直)。作者呈现了一例年轻印度男性病例,该患者患有未确诊的进行性AS(曾被当地医生误诊和误治),表现为AQP4阳性NMOSD的急性起病LETM变异型。一名来自印度农村的35岁健康、无合并症男性因双下肢(右侧重于左侧)持续刺痛、麻木和无力10天前来门诊就诊。临床检查显示急性尿潴留,导尿后缓解。当地医生曾开药物治疗尿路感染。接下来的一周,他的无力症状逐渐加重,导致卧床不起。在拔除导尿管时,他感到尿急、尿频增加以及明显的尿失禁。他没有提示任何束带样感觉、神经根/神经根性/传导束疼痛、脊椎疼痛、外伤、近期接种疫苗以及腹泻或发热性疾病的病史。在过去的8个月里,他一直抱怨臀部区域隐匿起病、持续的双侧钝痛,伴有下背部疼痛和长达1小时的晨僵,活动后明显改善,长时间不活动后复发。他有时会因剧痛在半夜起身,在房间和走廊走动半小时后疼痛可缓解。他正在服用一些当地医生开的非处方双氯芬酸片来缓解疼痛,医生告诉他这是由于农田劳作过度导致的,即机械性背痛。他的腰骶部脊柱X线检查也正常。他没有成瘾倾向,家庭成员中也从未有人患过类似疾病。他从未咨询过任何受过专业训练的医生,因为他之前与背痛相关的症状对当地医生开的药片反应良好。检查时,发现他近期出现不对称性痉挛性截瘫(右侧重于左侧),伴有上运动神经元型膀胱症状。认知评估(通过蒙特利尔认知评估测试)正常,后柱感觉保留。感觉系统检查未发现明确的感觉平面。除了瘫痪的下肢,其他区域的小脑功能正常。神经眼科检查也正常,未观察到脑膜刺激征。对疾病的病史、病程和临床检查进行了分析。考虑为影响脊髓前中央索的髓内脱髓鞘病变导致的选择性传导束病(早期且主要为运动和自主神经传导束受累)。该病例最初被归类为一名患有既往轴性脊柱关节炎患者的下颈/上胸段急性起病非压迫性脊髓病。全血细胞计数、肝肾功能及甲状腺功能检查、血糖和电解质均正常,仅红细胞沉降率升高(第1小时为66mm)。脊髓磁共振成像(MRI)显示C5至D4水平的脱髓鞘性LETM(图1)。同时,骶髂关节MRI显示双侧骶髂关节炎。脑部和眼眶MRI未发现任何病变。通过基于细胞的检测方法检测血清和脑脊液(CSF)中的抗水通道蛋白4(AQP - 4)抗体,两者均为阳性。CSF进一步显示淋巴细胞增多和鞘内蛋白产生增加。视觉诱发电位记录也正常。此外,抗髓鞘少突胶质细胞糖蛋白抗体为阴性。抗核抗体(ANA)、ANA谱、自身免疫性血管炎谱(c - ANCA、p - ANCA)、神经病毒检测(即腺病毒、爱泼斯坦 - 巴尔病毒、单纯疱疹病毒1和2、人类疱疹病毒6和7、巨细胞病毒、肠道病毒、水痘 - 带状疱疹病毒、日本脑炎病毒和登革病毒的聚合酶链反应)、CSF聚合酶链反应、血管紧张素转换酶、抗磷脂和抗甲状腺抗体均为阴性。抗环瓜氨酸肽抗体和类风湿因子也为阴性,包括肌酸磷酸激酶水平和血清维生素B12。此外,乙肝、丙肝、人类免疫缺陷病毒和恙虫病的血清学检查均为阴性。然而,HLA - B27检测呈阳性。最终诊断为与AS相关的AQP4阳性NMOSD。给予他静脉注射甲泼尼龙冲击治疗(1g/天,共5天)。随后,他的下肢力量明显改善。开始进行环磷酰胺治疗以预防复发。在3个月的随访中,除了感觉异常持续存在外,他没有残留神经功能缺损。神经影像学和视觉诱发电位研究未发现活动性或新的病变。治疗6个月后,根据强直性脊柱炎疾病活动评分,疾病严重程度在主观和客观上均有改善。我们的患者符合AS的新的国际脊柱关节炎学会诊断/分类标准以及NMOSD的Wingerchuk标准,这种关联很少被报道。在长期AS的关节外并发症中,神经学表现被认为并不常见。然而,亚临床神经并发症在AS中可能很常见。常见的神经学表现源于骨质(椎体)强直、关节半脱位、前后纵韧带骨化、继发性椎管狭窄、骨质(椎体)骨折以及随后对神经根/神经根/马尾的压迫,以及炎症相关(卡压)的周围神经病变。急性横贯性脊髓炎可作为CNS几种原发性脱髓鞘疾病(即多发性硬化症、NMOSD、髓鞘少突胶质细胞糖蛋白抗体病和急性播散性脑脊髓炎)以及各种全身性自身免疫性结缔组织疾病(即系统性红斑狼疮、混合性结缔组织病、干燥综合征、炎症性肠病和神经结节病)的一个亚型出现。急性横贯性脊髓炎(短节段或长节段)是AS罕见的关节外并发症。据报道,它要么作为AS的一种独特神经并发症发展而来,要么可能继发于AS治疗中的TNF -α抑制剂治疗。AS是一种遗传性炎性脊柱关节炎,主要影响中轴骨骼,由T细胞介导;B细胞仅起次要作用。相反,NMOSD发病机制的关键是针对星形胶质细胞上表达的AQP - 4通道产生自身抗体,导致补体介导的损伤,继而发生脱髓鞘。脊髓炎在T2加权图像上通常显示高信号强度,并在脊髓中出现强化表现。尽管分子机制存在差异,但在同一个体中诊断这些疾病并非偶然。最近的证据表明,在NMOSD病例中存在T细胞介导的炎症反应。特别是,NMO患者的CSF中Th17和Th2相关细胞因子升高。环境因素如 也已被证明会加重AS和NMOSD中的自身免疫(然而,我们患者进行的 体液培养显示类似关联,且两次均为阴性)。尽管缺乏大规模流行病学研究来调查与这些疾病相关的潜在发病机制,但研究表明AS患者中视神经炎的发病率增加。经专家意见(来自两位获得董事会认证的风湿病学家和两位皮肤科医生)排除了系统性硬化症以及混合性和未分化结缔组织疾病,因为缺乏提示性的临床发现(例如,无皮肤增厚、椒盐样外观、指甲改变、Mauskopf面容、指硬皮病、皮肤钙质沉着、雷诺现象、其他皮肤表现、肺动脉高压/间质性肺病、吞咽困难、肌肉疼痛/无力、肾功能损害、无ANA、抗着丝点抗体、抗Scl - 70、PM - Scl抗体、抗ds DNA、PCNA、CENP - B、抗核小体、抗史密斯、抗U1 - RNP、抗Jo1、抗Mi2、抗Ro52、抗La抗体,以及正常的C3和C4补体水平)(2019年欧洲抗风湿病联盟和美国风湿病学会分类标准)。最后,我们的患者接受了静脉注射类固醇治疗,随后进行利妥昔单抗输注,利妥昔单抗是一种针对B细胞的单克隆抗CD20抗体。特别是,该患者在临床和影像学上对免疫调节药物有反应,这可能支持这两个过程存在共同的致病基础。TNF -α抑制剂在AS中常用作新型治疗药物;然而,它们可能会导致严重并发症,即继发性脱髓鞘疾病。然而,该患者未使用此类抑制剂。在AS病例中使用时,它们显示出令人满意的结果。因此,决定仅用利妥昔单抗治疗他,不添加任何第二种免疫调节剂。其他可能的治疗选择包括环磷酰胺和霉酚酸酯,但由于它们的疗效 - 安全性平衡较低而未使用。此外,尽管有确凿证据表明早期采用治疗策略(5 - 7个疗程)对NMOSD患者有良好的长期疗效,但在我们的特定环境中无法进行血浆置换。因此,在处理急性非压迫性脊髓病病例时,病史和临床检查对于确定潜在的病因以及识别具有明显无关非特异性特征的潜在全身性疾病很重要。结缔组织疾病应始终被视为鉴别诊断,并在所有血清阳性或血清阴性的NMOSD病例中排除。在处理孤立性血清阴性LETM病例时,在相关情况下应考虑AS的诊断。此外,AS的早期诊断和治疗对于预防终身痛苦的残疾至关重要。然而,AS患者在其一生中是否有任何额外的易患NMOSD的倾向需要进一步研究。